Former Tuskegee Airman, Daily News Columnist Dies

Longtime journalist and educator Charles Sumner ``Chuck'' Stone Jr. has died. Stone, 89, is a former Philadelphia Daily News columnist and Tuskegee Airman.

Allegra Stone said that her father died Sunday at an assisted living facility in Chapel Hill, N.C. He'd been a journalism professor at the University of North Carolina for 14 years starting in 1991.

Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter recalled his impact on the city.

"Chuck Stone was a leader, a pioneer and a friend to me and so many others across the country. He wrote about those who were often ‘written off’ in life, neglected or given no chance at success. He spoke truth to power and didn't care who was offended or upset by his eloquence or targeted use of the English language," said Nutter.

"He had a particular impact on the local political scene in his former neighborhood of Wynnefield, as I lived around the corner from him in our neighborhood. Stone influenced politics and community engagement at the local, state and national level."

After serving as a Tuskegee Airman in World War II, Stone was a writer and editor at influential black publications in New York, Washington and Chicago through the early 1960s, using his writing to urge the Kennedy administration to advance the cause of civil rights. Subsequently, he served as an adviser to U.S. Rep. Adam Clayton Powell of New York.

His reputation grew after he was hired as the first black columnist for the Philadelphia Daily News, where he worked as a columnist and editor from 1972 to 1991. He was known for being outspoken on discrimination, police brutality and racism.

Despite the grave subject matter he tackled, he was a joy to be around in the newsroom, said novelist Pete Dexter, who worked alongside Stone as a columnist at the Daily News.

``He was one of those people who makes you feel good just to bump into him when you came into the office because he was so happy where he was and doing what he did,'' Dexter said.

Dexter said Stone's work resonated with the Daily News' black readership in a time of racial strife in the city.

``I can't tell you how divided racially Philadelphia was when I got there. It was nothing like it is now,'' Dexter said.

Stone's family said dozens of suspects turned themselves into Stone before the authorities because of his efforts to hold the criminal justice system accountable. He was also credited with helping to negotiate the release of six guards at a Pennsylvania prison who were held hostage by inmates in 1981.

``I damn near had a nervous breakdown,'' Stone later told The Philadelphia Inquirer. ``I spent two days negotiating and they released the hostages after the second day. So then when people got in trouble and there were hostages . . . they said, `call Chuck Stone to get us out of this.'''

Stone was born in St. Louis in 1924 and raised in Connecticut. After his time in the military, he graduated from Wesleyan University and earned a master's degree in sociology from the University of Chicago.

Before UNC, Stone also taught journalism at the University of Delaware. Books he wrote include ``Black Political Power in America'' and the novel ``King Strut.''

Many who helped launch the National Association of Black Journalists credited Stone as the driving force behind its founding, said the association's current president Bob Butler. 

``Chuck chaired the first meeting and became the first president. He provided the rudder that steered NABJ at a time when being a member was not always easy. Some employers back then told members to choose between their jobs and NABJ,'' Butler said in a news release. 
 

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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