Ohio National Guardmen take aim on retreating student demonstrators on the Kent State campus. Note the officer with the pistol who may have given an order or signal to tire.
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Fifty
years ago today on May 4, 1970 Ohio
National Guard troops opened fire on student
anti-war demonstrators on the very middle
American campus of Kent State
University. Four students were
killed by the gunfire—Jeffrey Miller,
Allison Krause, William Schroeder, and Sandra
Scheuer. Only Miller was an active participant in the protests that
day, Krause and Scheuer were sympathetic
bystanders, and Schroeder was a totally non-involved ROTC student killed at a distance while walking from a class. Nine other students were injured. No Guardsman was seriously injured.
The
Guardsmen were said to have fired spontaneously
in fear of being attacked by the
demonstrators. But film evidence shows
the demonstrators were retreating and more than a 100 yards down a slope from
the troops. There is also now considerable evidence that an officer with a pistol ordered or signaled
a command to fire.
John Filo's Pulitzer Prize-winning photograph of 15 year-old Florida runaway Mary Ann Vecchio kneeling over the body of Jeffrey Miller.
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Full accounts of the
shootings, the days of unrest prior
to the fatal afternoon, the aftermath,
and the investigations can be found
in several online sources including
author William A. Gordon’s website in support of
his book Four Dead In Ohio: Was There a Conspiracy at Kent State?; the Kent May 4
Center, an off-campus resource;
Kent State’s own May 4, 50th Commemoration
site; and the handy and generally reliable Wikipedia entry.
There
are also official Ohio State and FBI investigations that must be taken
with tablespoon-fulls of salt. Among the
scores of books I still recommend the very readable Kent State: What Happened and Why
by novelist James A. Michener which
was rushed to publication in 1971.
Without the considerable evidence later uncovered, Michener concluded that the shooting was a “tragic
accident.” But the book is excellent in putting
a human face on the participants and
victims and especially in disclosing the raw
generational divide in the aftermath that had one survivor being told by
his parents that he should have been shot.
Some of those family rifts,
not only at Kent State but around the country between demonstrators and their silent majority parents have still not
healed and there were grandparents who never met their grandchildren and now aging adult children who were never welcome
at their parents’ funerals.
The paperback edition of James A. Michener's early book on the tragedy.
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The
Kent State killings and the murders of Black
Jackson State University in Mississippi
were an outgrowth of a May 4th national
Student Strike against the war. In
the wake of the Kent State massacre that strike blossomed into hundreds of
demonstrations all over the United States including university occupations, pitched
street battles, and mass
demonstrations that continued for more than a week.
A poster for the May 4th student strike against the invasion of Cambodia and on-going War in Vietnam.
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Despite
the spasm of rage and militancy, student anti-war activism subsided
considerably over the next two or three years.
Leadership of a mass anti-war movement shifted to the respectable middle class and efforts
like the Vietnam Moratorium. Ohio Governor James Rhodes and President
Richard Nixon were both convinced that the shootings successfully broke the back of student radical activism. More recently Donald Trump hinted that similar “very rough treatment” would solve the problems of Black Lives Matter and Native American anti-pipeline
protesters.
The Official Kent State University commemoration logo.
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There
would have been elaborate commemorations
today at Kent State, which now takes
pains to honor the victims, but
those fell victim to the Coronavirus
pandemic lock down. Instead several events including a virtual candle light vigil, a noon
Eastern Daylight Time ceremony, and exhibits
and panel discussions will stream
at and be made available on YouTube.
For
many of my generation Kent State and
its aftermath were central life altering
events in our lives. What follows is an account
of my own small part in those events, as best as my poor memory can reconstruct things 50 years later.
My Own Private Kent State
I must have been at my brother Tim’s (later known as Peter)
apartment on Sheridan Road near the Morse
Ave. Beach when we got the news of the shooting. Oddly, unlike other Great Events, I can’t fix in my mind
the moment I heard the news.
Rather than hopping on the L to get to my own school, Columbia
College, a small communications
college located on a few floors of a commercial
building at Grand Ave. and the Inner Drive north of the Loop, my brother convinced me to go
with him and his friends to his campus, Kendall
College in Evanston. Kendall
was then a small, private two year
college mostly drawing students from the northern suburbs. Neither the school nor my brother was
particularly politically active.
Tim was the center of acid dropping
spirituality and the self-appointed
guru to a circle of acolytes,
many of them fellow students at Kendall. He said he left the Revolution to me. When we arrived on
campus, students were in full possession
of the buildings and the administration
was nowhere to be found, although some faculty
was on hand mingling with the
students. There was no police
presence; it was as though the administration had simply abandoned the school to the students.
Some folks had gone over to join Northwestern students at barricades erected on Sheridan Road. Others milled about trying to figure out what
to do. One student was working a Ham
Radio and gathering information
from actions at campuses across the country. We soon realized that this
could become an asset.
Phone
connections were somehow made with students
from campuses across the Chicago area and we fed them news gleaned from the Ham
operator. Not all of that information was reliable, some turned out to be wild rumor, but enough was good so that it became apparent that we
were part of a spontaneous nationwide
student uprising that was growing by
the hour.
Besides participating in the phone
network, I started posting the news
on large sheets of paper, updated regularly throughout the night to keep
students informed. I called them the Joe
Hill Memorial Wall Posters and had about a dozen of them lining hallways by
the time the night was over.
There were also informal discussions all night. I was considered a real live activist because of my
connections with the Industrial Workers
of the World (IWW) and my input was probably given more credence than I deserved. By morning I had agreed to return
to campus later and set up some educational
programs, which I did do, although Kendall never became a hot bed of radicalism.
In the morning, running on adrenalin, I headed down to Columbia. Columbia was
a commuter school specializing in communications and the arts—broadcasting, photography,
theater, dance, and writing.
With no one living on our non-existent
campus, I was not sure what I would find. There were no classes but it wasn’t exactly a strike either because the administration was totally supportive of the student
cause and offered the facilities of
the school free to the movement.
I headed down to the print shop in the basement, where I worked as one of two printers. We ginned up
our little A.B. Dick 360 and Multilith 1250 offset presses and were
soon turning out hundreds, even thousands of flyers, posters, handbills, and other material advertising actions
across the city and region.
This banner hanging from an occupied campus building somewhere in
America summarized the mood of outrage and defiance that swept campuses.
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I have no recollection of how, but I was selected as one of two representatives from Columbia to a city wide student strike committee.
I believe it was Wednesday when a couple of hundred folks met at the Riviera Theater in Uptown to plan coordinated
actions.
The meeting was a perfect example of
sometimes chaotic participatory
democracy, but a consensus was
arrived at to have a unified, city wide
march and demonstration downtown
on Saturday. I was named to the demonstration
organizing committee with students from University of Illinois Circle Campus, University of Chicago, and Roosevelt, among other schools.
Many of the others members were in SDS.
Others were Trotskyites, who made something
of a specialty of organizing big demonstrations.
There was a sprinkling of Anarchists
as well. But the ideological wars that
wracked campuses were suspended—mostly—in
the face of the common emergency.
Another meeting the following day was held at Circle Campus.
Again, I have no memory of how, but
I was selected to try and negotiate
with Chicago Police in what most
felt was the vain hope of avoid an attack by authorities the day of the
March. Given the background of the Police
Riots against demonstrators during the 1968
Democratic Convention, at protest marches connected to the trial of the Chicago 7, and the virtual
street warfare around the Days of
Rage in October ’69 there was little
reason to hope for a better outcome.
Late Thursday afternoon I was
escorted through an eerily quiet Police Headquarters to the office of Deputy Superintendent James Riordan. I
believe I may have been taken through a route
intended to keep rank and file police from seeing that the brass was meeting “the enemy.” Riordan was cordial. We shook
hands. We both clearly
understood the potential volatility
of the situation. I told him that organizers intended an entirely
peaceful march and pointed to some earlier
mass marches that had gone off without
a hitch. I also pointed out that there had been no significant acts of violence on any of the Chicago area campuses
even at Northwestern with its barricades or the building occupations at other schools. I said that we would
have marshals to keep our
demonstrators in line and moving and to discourage break away marches. Although others were trying to
obtain a parade permit, I said that
we intended to exercise our free speech
rights and march with or without one.
Riordan said he understood and
said that the police did not want to provoke
a confrontation and would be as “restrained
as possible.” I told him that we expected
police would line the rout of march, but that putting those officers in full riot gear or having them stand with batons conspicuously exposed might
be provocative under the
circumstances. Riordan made no explicit promises but indicated that if we
kept our people in line there would be a kind
of truce. I got the distinct impression
that higher-ups had already decided to
try to avoid more bad national press.
A peaceful Kent State student strike march much like the one in Chicago.
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All during this period, although I
was known to be a Wobbly, I was not acting
in any way as a representative of the
union. I did inform the Chicago
Branch of developments and the branch decided to participate in the march. That Saturday rather than joining
other “leaders”—and I use that term
in the loosest possible manner—in
the front of the march or joining with Columbia or Kendall college contingents,
I marched as a rank-and-file member of the IWW behind our black and red banner. Although riot equipped police were on
hand, they were kept largely out of
sight. Officers lining the route wore standard blouses and soft
caps. Their batons were kept under their coats. The march and
rally went off without a serious hitch or any violence, which is more than can be said of marches in other
cities.
Later, I reported on the events in
the pages of the Industrial Worker.
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