General Discussion
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(53,406 posts)marble falls
(62,672 posts)Diamond_Dog
(35,436 posts)My alma mater.
keithbvadu2
(40,785 posts)electric_blue68
(19,170 posts)Bernardo de La Paz
(51,767 posts)The record was mastered with the participation of the four principals, rush-released by Atlantic and heard on the radio with only a few weeks' delay (even though the group's hit song "Teach Your Children" was already on the charts at the time). In his liner notes for the Decade retrospective, Young termed the Kent State incident as 'probably the biggest lesson ever learned at an American place of learning' and reported that "David Crosby cried when we finished this take."[4] In the fade, Crosby's voicewith a tone evocative of keeningcan be heard with the words "Four!", "Why?" and "How many more?".[5]
JT45242
(3,019 posts)The twentieth anniversary of the shootings made it even more powerful.
The national guard led by a resentful bully whose glory days from high school had passed him by acted as a militarized police force to execute people they didn't like.
Not much has changed in the 53 years. We still don't talk about the massacre at the HBCU that occurred a week or later, Jackson State.
electric_blue68
(19,170 posts)raccoon
(31,530 posts)That day sticks in my mind more than 9/11/2001.
jpak
(41,780 posts)This was a true "True Reign of Nixon Terror"
Yup
electric_blue68
(19,170 posts)Senior in more liberal minded school. So yeah...
wnylib
(25,040 posts)May 4th was my father's birthday.
A good friend of mine, who was a student at Kent, avoided the shootings by going home a couple days earlier when tensions built up.
My sister later taught at Kent and talked about the memorial recognition given on campus on that date.
electric_blue68
(19,170 posts)wnylib
(25,040 posts)day of the shootings. May 4, 1970 was a Monday. My friend had gone home to her parents on Friday evening because tensions were building up on campus. The protests were against the news that Nixon had just escalated the war with carpet bombing of Cambodia, a neutral country. My friend knew that the anger and protests would get worse after local law enforcement were called and the governor announced a call up of the Guard. So she went home to her parents for the weekend. News reports from Kent and word from friends of hers still on campus indicated that things were getting much worse, so my friend's parents insisted that she should not go back for classes on Monday. She was not on campus when the shootings happened. But, she knew 2 of the dead students and never went back. She transferred to another school.
My sister was still a college student herself, in PA when the shootings at Kent happened. It was years later, after graduation and then graduate school, that she taught at Kent. So she was not there on the day of the shootings, either.
FraDon
(524 posts)and drama of the era. Later that week my mother called from Florida in a panic. She'd seen some news and horrific visuals. She was sure if I were among the four dead they would have called her. She was so worried I was among the wounded.
wnylib
(25,040 posts)Penn to Kent for war protests? It's not like Kent State was a well known school to attract people for protests. Kent is only well known today because of the shootings.
The news about Kent overshadowed so much of what went on across the country in reaction to the bombing of Cambodia, so I don't know if Penn State had its own local protests, but it seems more likely that you would have participated in protests on your own campus or at locations closer to you than an obscure (at the time) college like Kent.
FraDon
(524 posts)Mom was hard of hearing. I had to clarify, "not Kent State, Mom, PENN State". It became a family meme for years.
There was total protest at PSU. We were one of over 500 colleges across the country shut down by student protests.
wnylib
(25,040 posts)She must have been really worried.
Ptah
(33,565 posts)murielm99
(31,567 posts)I tried to explain things to my parents. They thought the students got what they deserved. It was the beginning of the end of my relationship with my parents. They were Democrats, too.
GreenWave
(9,635 posts)His book The Killings at Kent State, How Murder went unpunished is a must read.
Students had walked through a tennis court with the armed National Guard in pursuit. One of the students had a lock and locked the tennis court exit door, so our "defenders" had to go back and around having been outsmarted. THAT is when they started shooting.
Hateful RWNJs started flooded the papers with the students deserved to be killed, and other pre-Faux News hateful rants.
I met IF Stone's granddaughter at Mizzou. Mizzou later got caught in a scandal where the had invested $400,000,000 (several decades ago) in the Apartheid regime of South Africa. The students set up a shanty town in protest. During a cold November night, Bulldozers rolled in and demolished the town. They went across the monuments to the students killed at Kent State, Jackson State and the Orangeburg Massacre. The next day impromptu protest which started out as 1 , eventually became over 90 % of the University population. They were made to fix the monuments, rebuild the shanty town which they could eliminate once they had withdrawn their ill-gotten investment. I am happy to report that all the demands were met. Victory over the RWNJs, Victory!
wnylib
(25,040 posts)that the students got what they deserved for protesting.
I also remember hearing and reading that some of the students thought the Guard had rubber bullets until they saw people drop to the ground bleeding.
And NONE of the 4 dead students were participating in the protests.
electric_blue68
(19,170 posts)lastlib
(25,061 posts)Your bit about Mizzou hits close to home for me. As a Missourian,I almost went there for undergrad and did get accepted to their law school after college.
FakeNoose
(36,193 posts)He was a freshman at Kent State and he took part in the anti-Vietnam protest. A large part of the undergrad enrollment was participating that day. My friend always says it could easily have been him who got shot.
electric_blue68
(19,170 posts)bluescribbler
(2,277 posts)I was somewhere in the Pacific, serving aboard a US Navy destroyer when I heard the news. I remember hearing a senior petty officer say, "We should just kill them all," and thinking, wait, what about the right peaceably to assemble and to petition the government for redress of grievances? I think that really was the beginning of my radicalization.
WhiteTara
(30,262 posts)I believed that our parents still loved us and that notion was shattered on the spot. I became anti war and that began my first protest march. I've been to so many since then. When * started the Iraq War I was in SF demonstrating and in the crowd, some of my early protest marching friends appeared. We held each other and cried all the way to the end.
Nothing has changed except I am now an apostate.
lastlib
(25,061 posts)...and I was only 12. Later, in high school I read James Michener's book Kent State: What Happened And Why, and together with Nixon's criminal acts in the news, I became even more so.
bluescribbler
(2,277 posts)I thought he did a fine job, presenting the facts in a balanced way.
wnylib
(25,040 posts)She went home the Friday before the shootings because tensions were building up. She kept in touch, through friends who had stayed, on what was happening all weekend and missed the shootings on Monday because she stayed home.
I still remember how surprised I was the first time I heard Four Dead in Ohio on the car radio. I was surprised because it was so soon after the shootings, and because the mood and tone of the song were so direct, a firm line in the sand. Anti war protests had been largely a counter culture thing, but now they had gone grimly main stream on radio stations across the country.
ashredux
(2,698 posts)I was a college student, and during the protest we had after the shootings. The state police formed a line just behind a large gathering on our mall. You could feel the electricity in the air. Before it was over, there was no shooting, but quite a bit of teargas. You dont forget those thing.
Paladin
(29,079 posts)The screaming young lady, kneeling in the dead student's blood.
Godawful incident that helped turn the tide against the Vietnam War.
H2O Man
(75,925 posts)JohnnyRingo
(19,495 posts)I was about to post, but you spared me the trouble. It does my heart good to hope the tragedy will not fade away when we're gone.
May 4th 1970 in 24 seldom seen pictures:
https://allthatsinteresting.com/kent-state-massacre
Kid Berwyn
(18,610 posts)The Howard Zinn Education Project is an excellent resource:
https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/kent-state-massacre/
MyOwnPeace
(17,283 posts)He was a member of the Yearbook Staff in high school and NEVER was seen without a camera i his hands at school. He then became a student at Kent State and took those iconic pics. He scrambled from there with the film, took a taxi 150 miles to go to his hometown newspaper and get the pics out on the wire nationally.
He won a Pulitzer Prize for his work and ended up with a career with the Associated Press.
yardwork
(64,942 posts)McKim
(2,412 posts)That changed me! I learned something valuable and the nice mask was off the face of our government. I became a Leftist Activist and I am still going strong.
flying_wahini
(8,044 posts)Still remember this day too.
lastlib
(25,061 posts)It profoundly affected me, as it did so many of you, though it took awhile to take hold. I remember seeing Cronkite reporting it on the evening news; I was 12 at the time, in junior high.I think I was a high school junior when I read a Reader's Digest account from James Michener that really turned me, and then a high-school teacher further educated me--I've been a flaming liberal ever since.
"Four Dead in O-Hi-O! How many more?"
for Bill
for Alison
for Sandy
for Jeffrey
for the wounded
for American freedom and justice.
quaint
(3,661 posts)Kahler, meanwhile, is keenly watching this new generation of college students demand an end to military action, and wondering if colleges are making some of the same mistakes.
I question whether college administrators and trustees of colleges have learned any lessons from the 70s, Kahler said in an interview at his home outside Canton, Ohio. I think theyre being a little heavy handed, a little over the top.
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