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<text>
<title>
(68 Elect) Kent State:A War Within A War
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1968 Election
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
May 18, 1970
THE NATION
At War with War
</hdr>
<body>
<p> With an almost manic abruptness, the nation seemed, as
Yeats once wrote, "all changed, changed utterly." With the
killing of four Kent State University students by Ohio National
Guardsmen last week, dissent against the U.S. venture into
Cambodia suddenly coalesced into a nationwide student strike.
Across the country 441 colleges and universities were affected,
many of them shut down entirely. Antiwar fever, which President
Richard Nixon had skillfully reduced to a tolerable level last
fall, surged upward again to a point unequaled since Lyndon
Johnson was driven from the White House. The military advantage
to be gained in Cambodia seemed more and more dubious, and Nixon
found that he had probably sacrificed what he himself once
claimed was crucial to achieving an acceptable settlement: wide
domestic support, or at least acquiescence, for his policies.
Now it is the opposition that has gained strength.
</p>
<p> Both the eruption of protest and the reaction to it mocked
Nixon's still unfulfilled promise to lead the nation "forward
together." Not only were there rending, sometimes bloody
clashes between peace demonstrators and peace officers, but a
scattering of vicious brawls set citizen against citizen as
well.
</p>
<p> Morale Destroyed. Not long ago, the Administration was
considered an artful, managerial mechanism, oiled with serenity,
unanimity and self-confidence. Now it showed symptoms of severe
internal distress. Interior Secretary Walter Hickel's letter of
criticism to the President and the abrupt resignation of two
young Administration staffers were among the most tangible signs
of strain. There were also hints of basic disagreement in the
Cabinet over the Cambodian decision--hints that Nixon declined
to deny at a hastily called press conference. On Capitol Hill
dissension increased daily.
</p>
<p> The President had carefully calculated the diplomatic and
military hazards of invading the Cambodian sanctuaries. But the
more important risk involved the response at home--and in
that crucial area he has proved to be dangerously wrong. Nixon,
to be sure, could not have foreseen the Kent State shootings.
But he was sadly slow in recognizing their impact. After the
four students were gunned down, he found no reason to censure
the Guardsmen. All he could bring himself to say was: "When
dissent turns to violence, it invites tragedy." That much was
obvious. It seemed equally clear that even if the Cambodian
expedition should accomplish more than now appears likely, it
has already destroyed far more American resources of morale and
cohesion than any North Vietnamese supplies could be worth.
</p>
<p> Conciliation. By the end of the most searing week of his
presidency, Nixon had grown elaborately conciliatory. Six Kent
State students who drove to Washington on the spur of the moment
to talk with Ohio Congressmen were taken to the White House to
see Presidential Adviser John Ehrlichman. Learning of their
presence, Nixon invited them into the oval office the next
morning for an hour's conversation. Later he conferred with
eight university presidents who had previously advised him on
higher-education policy. Most of the men, including Harvard's
Nathan Pusey and William Friday of the University of North
Carolina, arrived battle-weary from their troubled campuses.
After the conference, Nixon named one of the educators,
Alexander Heard of Vanderbilt, as a special adviser on student
affairs. At the same time the President pointedly refused to see
37 other college presidents, including Princeton's Robert F.
Goheen, Notre Dame's Theodore Hesburgh and Columbia's Andrew
Cordier, who petitioned for an end to American involvement in
Indochina.
</p>
<p> At his televised press conference on the eve of the
Washington demonstration, the President looked understandably
weary and nervous. Outside the White House gates, students were
already gathering. They filled the warm evening with the
refrain of the John Lennon mantra: "All we are saying is give
peace a chance." Inside, the President told the press and the
nation: "Those who protest want peace. I know that what I have
done will accomplish the goals that they want. I agree with
everything they are trying to accomplish."
</p>
<p> Nixon was trying his best to reconstruct consensus, to
show that if he was not embittered by the protest movement,
neither was he cowed. He also attempted to display flexibility.
He was not about to muzzle anyone, he said, but he counseled
his subordinates that "when the action is hot, keep the
rhetoric cool." He defended the Cambodia decision anew, but he
also added that the troops would be coming out faster than
anticipated. While not withdrawing from his tactical rationale
for the Cambodian venture, Nixon gave an impression that was
very different from the belligerent patriotism with which he
announced the foray.
</p>
<p> Singular Odyssey. Before dawn the next morning, Nixon
impulsively wakened his valet and set off with a clutch of
Secret Service men for the Lincoln Memorial, where he talked for
an hour with a group of drowsy but astonished demonstrators. His
discussion rambled over the sights of the world that he had seen--Mexico
City, the Moscow ballet, the cities of India. When the
conversation turned to the war, Nixon told the students: "I know
you think we are a bunch of so and so's." He said to them, the
President recalled Chamberlain was the greatest man living and
that Winston Churchill was a madman. It was not until years
later that I realized that Churchill was right." He confessed
afterwards: "I doubt if that got over."
</p>
<p> Before he left, Nixon said: "I know you want to get the
war over. Sure you came here to demonstrate and shout your
slogans on the Ellipse. That's all right. Just keep it peaceful.
Have a good time in Washington, and don't go away bitter."
</p>
<p> The singular odyssey went on. Nixon and his small
contingent wandered through the capital, then drove to the
Mayflower Hotel for a breakfast of corned beef hash and eggs--his
first restaurant meal in Washington since he assumed power.
Then he withdrew to his study in the Executive Office Building
to sit out the day of protest.
</p>
<p> Considering the potential for disorder, the assembly could
have been a disaster. Instead, the main rally was something of
a letdown. So much passion had been expended during the
preceding week, so much of the verbiage was repetitive, so much
of the canned rally routine was familiar, that boredom and the
hot sun (90 degrees by midafternoon) were able to distract from
the main business at hand. Some of the less inhibited youngsters
stripped and went wading in the nearby Reflecting Pool.
</p>
<p> Coretta King, David Dellinger, Benjamin Spock and other
matriarchs and patriarchs of the movement were there, along
with newer personalities like Jane Fonda. Their audience was
made up primarily of the instant army of the young, the mobile
children who received basic protest training in the late '60s,
who can travel light and fast for the peace movement and for
their own enjoyment. Some 100,000 of them were there on the
Ellipse just south of the White House.
</p>
<p> The day was peaceful for the most part. The inevitable
sprinkling of troublemakers managed to create some problems for
the police, but the more than 6,000 regular troops and
militiamen who were being held in readiness had little to do.
</p>
<p> One of the few touches of originality was the display of
the Yippie flag (marijuana leaves against a red star on a
background). If the rally had a somewhat stale quality, it was
not without significance. Despite the frustrations of the peace
movement, its troops are still willing to turn out, to follow
the script, to attempt to wear down its adversaries. Certainly
the Administration took the event seriously. Government staffers
went among the crowd chatting with youngsters, inviting some of
them back to their offices to meet their superiors. Even
Attorney General John Mitchell, with his distaste for
dissenters, entertained a group of demonstrators. Later the
Justice Department was the target of a paint-throwing attack.
</p>
<p> Washington was only the temporary focus of an uprising
that touched every part of the U.S., from Bowdoin College in
Maine to the University of Miami, from the now familiar
volatility of such campuses as Harvard and Berkeley, to more
conservative enclaves. At the University of Nebraska in the
heart of "Nixon country," students occupied the ROTC
headquarters. The University of Arizona, like many other U.S.
campuses, had its first taste ever of student activism.
Manhattan's Finch College, Tricia Nixon's alma mater, went on
strike. At California's Whittier College, 30% of the student
body angrily protested the policies of Richard Nixon, its most
famous graduate. At the Duke University Law School, Alumnus
Nixon's portrait was removed from the wall of the moot courtroom
and stored away.
</p>
<p> Dada Contrast. All through the restive winter and early
spring, the campus atmosphere had been heavy with intimations
of bomb plots, and sometimes with actual whiffs of black powder.
Last week's actions suddenly changed much of that mood. For one
thing, dissent broadened so abruptly that in most places the
far-left fringes were simply overwhelmed. At a Columbia
University rally, Kent State Student Fred Kirsch was loudly
applauded when he told a crowd of 3,000: "Look, I read Jerry
Rubin's book. I talked about violent overthrow myself. But when
those rifle bullets cracked past my head, I suddenly realized
you can't fight pigs with bricks. Whatever we do, it's got to
be peaceful."
</p>
<p> Despite that caution, enough destructive urge remained on
scores of campuses to stir dangerous action. Fire-bombings
seemed to be the favorite tactic of extremists: ROTC facilities
were their frequent targets. Occasionally violence spilled off
the campus in a familiar pattern of window breaking, traffic
disruption and other random harassment--the same type of
activity that preceded the Kent State tragedy.
</p>
<p> At the University of Wisconsin, 83 students were arrested
after 20 major fire-bombings. Governor Warren Knowles called
out 2,100 National Guardsmen to cope with the violence. As
elsewhere, though, there was a sort of Dada contrast between
incendiary violence and collegiate languor: couples walking hand
in hand, playing tennis, spinning Frisbees, sailing across Lake
Mendota. After one of many confrontations with the National
Guard, a student shrugged nervously: "Well, I just threw my
first rock." The atmosphere was entirely different at Grinnell
College in Iowa. When protesters broke a window by accident,
they collected $14.39 to replace it.
</p>
<p> New Coalescence. At the University of New Mexico,
dissenting students fought with "straights" over whether the
flag should be lowered to half-staff to honor the Kent State
dead. Three of the dissenters came away with knife wounds. One
confrontation at U.C.L.A. was often something of an absurdist
frolic, with students advancing on and retreating from the
police--the "blue meanies"--in a sort of Keystone Kops
ballet. Police would chase kids frantically past heedless
couples smooching on benches. When one shift of police went off
duty, the students shouted: "Manana, pigs!" A cop would smile
and wave goodbye.
</p>
<p> On far more campuses, though, tens of thousands of
moderate students brought a new seriousness coupled with a kind
of wounded pride to the revived antiwar movement. Said Ted Gup,
of the National Lobby Committee: "We're not bums and we don't
like to be called bums. We'd like to show Mr. Nixon that we can
work within the system."
</p>
<p> The new coalescence of the young represented a movement
from the left back toward the center, toward the principle of
effecting change within the system. And the almost awesome
pervasiveness of the student uprising, with its new sense of
outrage, imparted, for the moment, a truculent confidence.
</p>
<p> The confidence derived partly from the fact that the young
no longer saw themselves confronting a monolithic
Establishment. At dozens of campuses, university presidents
supported student demands for an end to the Cambodian venture
and a withdrawal from Indochina. Oberlin College President
Robert Carr simply canceled final exams, gave all his students
credit for their courses and turned over the campus to antiwar
planning. James Farmer, Assistant Secretary of Health, Education
and Welfare, spoke out in support of the students. The defeat
of G. Harrold Carswell for the Supreme Court persuaded many that
the system could be responsive to protest. Nor was the anger of
so many Washington legislators lost on the young. They realized
that for the moment at least it was Richard Nixon who looked
isolated.
</p>
<p> With that in mind, clean-cut, often freshly barbered
students in ties and jackets swarmed over Capitol Hill,
visiting sympathetic Congressmen, obtaining audiences with
willing members of the Administration. Illinois Republican
Charles Percy told one group: "A lot of candidates this fall
will be more attentive if they know that there are going to be
thousands of young people out working for or against them."
</p>
<p> In New Haven, Yale seniors began organizing a "counter-
commencement," planning to have nearly 1,000 members of the
graduating class wear suits and ties to commencement and donate
their $8 cap-and-gown fees to a fund for the benefit of antiwar
candidates. A group called Action for Peace collected 60,000
signatures in the New York City area in two days to support a
Senate amendment to curtail the Indochina war; the group began
mailing petitions to high schools and colleges across the
country for more signatures. Williams College students began
organizing "Pause for Peace," a national work stoppage set for
May 27 between 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. Williams students are asking
alumni to spread the protest. Some 400 faculty members from four
western Massachusetts campuses have voted to invite Spiro Agnew
to speak at their campuses; they reason that once the Vice
President arrives, he can be indicted for crossing state lines
to incite a riot, which would surely break out if Agnew came to visit.
Another student movement would have the young boycott soft
drinks for the duration of the war--"You've got a lot to
live," the motto goes, "and Pepsi's got a lot to lose." When
Indiana's Senator Birch Bayh addressed a delegation of 1,000
students on Capitol Hill, he said: "We can make this system
responsive from within instead of trying to destroy it from
without." The students reacted with a standing ovation.
</p>
<p> Exercising Muscle. Even at Berkeley, which had witnessed
three weeks of promiscuous "trashing" (random destruction) and
cop-baiting, students rallied behind a faculty-student committee
intent on raising protest above rampage and turning the vast
resources of the university against the war. At a rally of
15,000 in the university's Hearst Greek Theater, talk of
militance and confrontation was booed. Chicago Seven Defendant
Tom Hayden turned up and tried to blend the war, the Black
Panthers and the Kent State murders into one rhetorical attack
on the U.S. His audience was not moved. Berkeley Law Professor
Frank Newman received more sympathy when he recommended action
to pass state antiwar laws and congressional measures to cut off
funds for the Cambodian war.
</p>
<p> The Berkeley crowd enthusiastically applauded U.C.L.A. Law
Professor Michael Tigar when he said: "We must confront the
President and force him to withdraw from Vietnam and leave the
people there to determine their own fate. In the course of
history, genocide and imperialism will be stopped. We have to
decide whether you and I will liberate this country from the
inside or whether it will be liberated from abroad." More than
ever, there was a feeling among the dissidents that they formed
a coherent bloc capable of exercising political muscle.
</p>
<p> Last week's sentiment was not confined to the leftist
young. Peter Winnen, 27, a Kent State junior and an Army veteran
of Khe Sanh, appeared at a Cleveland rally. "I saw enough
violence, blood and death and I vowed, 'never again, never
again.' What I saw on campus was the same thing again. Now I
must protest. I'm not a leftist, but I can't go any further.
I'll do damn near anything to stop the war now." The League of
Women Voters, holding a convention in Washington, departed from
nonpartisanship to hold an antiwar rally on the steps of the
Capitol.
</p>
<p> Almost as if the new emphasis on peaceful protest and
political action cloaked a new danger from the left, reaction
from the right was quick and angry. Some of the worst
counterviolence of last week was organized in Manhattan by
helmeted construction workers, who assaulted student
demonstrators in the Wall Street area. More than 200 workers
bearing American flags, cheering and singing the Star-Spangled
Banner, set upon student demonstrators with fists and lead
pipes, sending at least 20 to the hospital. New York's Mayor
John Lindsay had ordered the city hall flag lowered to
half-staff in memory of the Kent State dead. The workers
demanded that it be raised to the top again. While Lindsay spent
part of the day addressing antiwar rallies elsewhere in the
city, the flag was hoisted to the top of the flagstaff after
police reported that they could not (or would not) defend the
building against the workers. As the construction men withdrew
down Wall Street, they were showered with tickertape like
returning astronauts. In Seattle, members of a vigilante group
called HELP (Help Eliminate Lawless Protest) were reported to
have set upon students with clubs.
</p>
<p> Rising Reaction. There were other signs of anger against
the gathering protest. At Northwestern University, a student
waved an upside-down American flag, urging some 2,500 others
to strike. A hefty man in work clothes tried to grab the flag,
shouting: "That's my flag! I fought for it! You have no right
to it!" The students began arguing with him. "To hell with your
movement," the man responded. "There are millions of people like
me. We're fed up with your movement. You're forcing us into it.
We'll have to kill you. All I can see is a lot of kids blowing
a chance I never had." It was not an isolated sentiment.
</p>
<p> Nixon's Silent Majority may be bewildered and
unenthusiastic about Cambodia, but the demonstrations are moving
its members to rally behind the President. Many of them argue
that "the President knows all the facts--he must know what he
is doing." Even more of them express frank hostility toward the
students. Says a Chicago ad salesman: "I'm getting to feel like
I'd actually enjoy going out and shooting some of these people.
I'm just so god-damned mad. They're trying to destroy everything
I've worked for--for myself, my wife and my children."
</p>
<p> Nixon's Insulation. During the 1968 presidential campaign.
Richard Nixon said: "We must listen to the voices of dissent
because the protester may have something to say worth listening
to. If we dismiss dissent as coming from 'rebels without a
cause,' we will soon find ourselves becoming leaders without an
effect. By its neglect, by its insensitivity, by its arrogance,
our present leadership has caused an unprecedented chasm to
develop in our society."
</p>
<p> Much of Nixon's present trouble stems from not heeding his
own warning. Like Lyndon Johnson before him, he has tended to
shut himself away even from many in his Administration and
listen almost exclusively to John Mitchell and to White House
Aides John Ehrlichman and Robert Haldeman. "They encourage his
anger," says one disaffected White House staffer. "They tell him
he is right and everybody else is wrong."
</p>
<p> Before the Black Panther rally at New Haven two weeks ago,
the Army's domestic intelligence network, which monitors the
protest movement, concluded that no federal troops would be
needed at the demonstration. Richard Kleindienst, Deputy
Attorney General, ignored the decision and ordered up 4,000 of
them. A recommendation from the same intelligence unit saying
that federal forces would not be required in Washington last
Saturday was simply dropped from the Pentagon briefing prepared
for White House officials.
</p>
<p> "Nixon gets very little firsthand," says a former White
House staff member. "He doesn't read the papers raw very much."
Observes TIME's Washington Bureau Chief Hugh Sidey: "There is
about Nixon's presidency the feeling of theater. When the
performance is over and the lights go out, there is an eerie
nothingness--no heart, no feeling of movement or national
momentum."
</p>
<p> All through the week reports surfaced that communications
within the Administration are only somewhat better than Nixon's
relations with the young. Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird
admitted to reporters that he had not even been aware that the
U.S. had made four, not three air strikes over North Vietnam.
The raids were styled "reinforced protective reaction"--a
phrase which itself represents a style of noncommunication.
</p>
<p> As the Pentagon tried to paper over that lapse, it also
had to contend with stories that Laird, like Secretary of State
William Rogers, had opposed the Cambodia decision. Laird denied
it as vigorously as he could, and his denial was technically
accurate. In fact, Laird had serious reservations about the
move. Rather than disagree directly, he stressed arguments about
the negative political repercussions that would follow. All
along Laird has been particularly sensitive to the opposition's
mood--more so, it seems, than has the President.
</p>
<p> Rogers was put in a position that was at best embarrassing
and at worst untenable. Last week portions of Rogers' April 23
testimony before a House appropriations subcommittee were
leaked to the press. In that appearance, less than a week before
Nixon ordered Americans into Cambodia, Roger stated flatly: "We
recognize that if we get involved in Cambodia with our ground
forces, our whole program is defeated." Then he added: "I think
the one lesson that the war in Vietnam has taught us is that if
you are going to fight a war of this kind satisfactorily, you
need public support and congressional support." After the
Cambodian attack became known, Democratic Representative
Clarence Long said: "If I were Rogers, I would resign."
</p>
<p> Henry Kissinger was also said to have dissented and took
pains to deny the rumor. Last week a group of Kissinger's old
Harvard colleagues, including Edwin Reischaur and Adam
Yarmolinsky, told him in effect that unless the
Administration's policies change, or Kissinger resigns, he will
not be welcome back at Harvard. Kissinger listened to the
message, then told his friends quietly: "I want you to
understand that I hear you."
</p>
<p> Congressional Conflict. The distinction between Congress'
power to declare war and the President's ability to wage war on
his own has been a historic source of controversy. By one count,
U.S. Presidents ordered undeclared acts of war 149 times up to
World War II. The list begins with the hostilities between
France and the U.S. in 1798; as another example, Thomas
Jefferson informed Congress months after he had ordered small
squadron of frigates into the Mediterranean in 1801 to protect
U.S. shipping from the Barbary states.
</p>
<p> Even so, Nixon's failure to advise Congress before he
decided upon the Cambodian mission seemed a gratuitous affront.
Led by William Fulbright, the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee immediately requested a meeting with the President.
Nixon responded by inviting the committee over to the White
House late one afternoon last week; but he also issued
invitations to the less prestigious, less dovish House Foreign
Affairs Committee, and scheduled an earlier meeting with the
House and Senate Armed Services committees as well. Fulbright
and other Senators such as Vermont's George Aiken had planned
a confrontation. Nixon deftly transformed it into a routine
briefing.
</p>
<p> Operation Talk. The growing antiwar factions on Capitol
Hill began searching for legislative leverage to exert on the
President. The Senate Foreign Relations Committee has reported
Charles Mathias resolution to repeal the Gulf of Tonkin
resolution and is bringing it to the Senate floor this week.
Oregon's Mark Hatfield and South Dakota's George McGovern are
pushing for an amendment that would cut off military
authorizations for Cambodia immediately, and for South Vietnam
by the end of 1970. Chances for that measure seem slim. More
likely to pass next week is an amendment that would cut off
funds for the Cambodian mission by July 1--which is precisely
when the President promised the troops would be out of Cambodia
anyway.
</p>
<p> Antiwar members of the House tried last week to force the
President out of Cambodia with legislation. They fought for a
series of amendments to the military procurement authorization
bill, but were easily defeated, and the week of planned
congressional confrontation on constitutional issues dissolved
in bitter argument. Yet there was no doubt that the President
had badly damaged his standing with Congress. In one exercise
of ineptitude, the White House allowed Senate Republican Leader
Hugh Scott to pledge, on assurance from the Administration,
that bombing of North Vietnam would not be resumed. Next morning
the bombings were in the headlines. Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield is now making no pretense, as he did under
Lyndon Johnson, that he supports the war. He is actively
searching for the legislative means to attack the President.
</p>
<p> Richard Nixon can ill afford such alienation either in
Washington or in the rest of the nation--a fact that he now
seems to realize. For months, the President did nothing to tone
down Spiro Agnew's divisive statements. After Nixon's meeting
last week with the eight college presidents, the word went out
that Agnew would be sedated. Nixon promptly denied it, as he had
to in order to avoid humiliating the man he has praised so
handsomely in the past. Agnew also insisted that he was not to
be "muzzled." Nonetheless, in a speech at Boise, Idaho, Agnew
excised some harsh phrases about "choleric young intellectuals"
and "tired, embittered elders" that had appeared in his advance
text. He was similarly subdued when he dedicated a Confederate
monument at Stone Mountain, Ga.
</p>
<p> At all levels, the Administration is now engaged in what
might be termed Operation Talk. Herb Klein, Nixon's
communications director, sent out the word last week that
officials were to appear on as many television programs as
possible. Cabinet officers and White House aides were inviting
meetings with groups of students, faculty members and others.
Tricia Nixon had two Finch College demonstrators into the White
House for a chat. The press conference, only the second this
year, and Nixon's sunrise socializing were part of the same
Administration tactic.
</p>
<p> It is to Nixon's credit that he sought to avoid the
impression that he was withdrawing from the criticism aimed at
him. During last fall's Nov. 15 march on Washington, he
studiously ignored his tormentors. Last week's conciliatory
gestures may help a little; at least they will not increase the
damage done by the Administration's recent polemics of
polarization.
</p>
<p> Perhaps, too, the spasms of protest will relax as summer
disperses the students, as the troops come out of Cambodia and
as the U.S. force levels in South Vietnam continue to decline.
Most Americans still want to believe in their President.
Nonetheless, apprehension persists that the substance, if not
the appearance, of leadership is absent from the White House.
Says Correspondent Sidey: "The presidency as a positive force
is a concept which has escaped Nixon. His Administration has an
aura of negativism." For many citizens weary of tumult,
negativism may be enough. But if last week showed anything, it
showed that the part of the nation which demands more than
negativism cannot be silenced for long.
</p>
<p>Kent State: Martyrdom That Shook the Country
</p>
<p> It took half a century to transform Kent State from an
obscure teachers college into the second largest university in
Ohio, with 21,000 students and an impressive array of modern
buildings on its main campus. But it took less than ten
terrifying seconds last week to convert the traditionally
conformist campus into a bloodstained symbol of the rising
student rebellion against the Nixon Administration and the war
in Southeast Asia. When National Guardsmen fired
indiscriminately into a crowd of unarmed civilians, killing four
students, the bullets wounded the nation.
</p>
<p> Paradoxically, the turn toward violence at Kent State was
not inspired by the war or politics. The first rocks thrown in
anger were hurled through the muggy Friday night of May 1 by
beery students who could not resist the urge to dance on a Kent
street. Hundreds of students were drinking at the bull-and-beer
spots that flourish in most college towns. Spirits were light.
A crowd swarmed into the warm night, blocking busy North Water
Street, responding to the rock beat.
</p>
<p> "Get Out". One irate motorist gunned his car's engine as
if to drive through the dancers. Some students climbed atop the
car, jumped on it, then led a chant: "One-two-three-four, we
don't want your war!" A drunk on a balcony hurled a bottle into
the street--and suddenly the mood turned ugly. Students
smashed the car's windows, set fires in trash cans, began to
bash storefronts. Police were called, Kent Mayor LeRoy Satrom
had ordered a curfew, but few students were aware of it. Police
stormed into bars after midnight, turning up the lights,
shouting "Get out!" Some 2,000 more students, many of whom had
been watching the Knicks-Lakers basketball game on TV, were
forced into the street. Police and sheriff's deputies pushed the
youths back toward the campus, then fired tear gas to disperse
them.
</p>
<p> Saturday began quietly. Black student leaders, who had
been demanding the admission next year of 5,000 more blacks to
Kent State (it now has about 600), and leaders of the mounting
antiwar sentiment on campus talked of joining forces. They got
administrative approval to hold a rally that evening on the
ten-acre Commons at the center of the campus. There, despite
the presence of faculty members and student marshals, militant
war protesters managed to take complete charge of a crowd of
about 800, many still smarting from the conflict of the night
before. They disrupted a dance in one university hall, then
attacked the one-story Army ROTC building facing the Commons.
They smashed windows and threw lighted railroad flares inside.
The building caught fire. When firemen arrived, students threw
rocks at them and cut their hoses with machetes until police
interceded with tear gas. Without bothering to consult Kent
State authorities, Mayor Satrom asked for help from the National
Guard. Governor James Rhodes, still engaged in his tough--and
ultimately unsuccessful--campaign for the Senate nomination,
quickly ordered Guardsmen transferred from points of tension in
a Teamster strike elsewhere in Ohio.
</p>
<p> Within an hour, about 500 Guardsmen, already weary from
three nights of duty, arrived with fully loaded M-1
semiautomatic rifles, pistols and tear gas. They were in time
to help police block the students from charging into the
downtown area. Students reacted by dousing trees with gasoline,
then setting them afire. Order was restored before midnight. On
Sunday, Governor Rhodes arrived in Kent. He made no attempt to
seek the advice of Kent State President Robert I. White and told
newsmen that campus troublemakers were "worse than Brown Shirts
and Communists and vigilantes--they're the worst type of
people that we harbor in America." He refused to close the
campus, as Portage County Prosecutor Ronald Kane pleaded;
instead, he declared a state of emergency an banned all
demonstrations on the campus. Late that night, about 500
students defied the order and staged a sitdown on one of Kent's
busiest intersections. Guardsmen, their number now grown to 900,
moved into the face of a rock barrage to arrest 150 students.
</p>
<p> "Our Campus". On Monday, the campus seemed to calm down.
In the bright sunshine, tired young Guardsmen flirted with leggy
coeds under the tall oaks and maples. Classes continued
throughout the morning. But the ban against mass assemblies was
still in effect, and some students decided to test it again. "We
just couldn't believe they could tell us to leave," said one.
"This is our campus." At high noon, youngsters began ringing the
school's Victory Bell, normally used to celebrate a football
triumph but rarely heard of late. About 1,000 students, some
nervous but many joking, gathered on the Commons. Another 2,000
ringed the walks and buildings to watch.
</p>
<p> From their staging area near the burned-out ROTC building,
officers in two Jeeps rolled across the grass to address the
students with bullhorns: "Evacuate the Commons area. You have
no right to assemble." Back came shouts of "Pigs off campus! We
don't want your war." Students raised middle fingers. The Jeeps
pulled back. Two skirmish lines of Guardsmen, wearing helmets
and gas masks, stepped away from the staging area and began
firing tear-gas canisters at the crowd. The Guardsmen moved
about 100 yards toward the assembly and fired gas again. A few
students picked up canisters and threw them back, but they fell
short of the troops. The mists of stinging gas split the crowd.
Some students fled toward Johnson Hall, a men's dormitory, and
were blocked by the L-shaped building. Others ran between
Johnson and nearby Taylor Hall.
</p>
<p> Leaderless. A formation of fewer than 100 Guardsmen--a
mixed group including men from the 107th Armored Cavalry
Regiment based in neighboring Ravenna, and others from a Wooster
company of the 145th Infantry Regiment--pursued fleeing
students between the two buildings. The troopers soon found
themselves facing a fence and flanked by rock-throwing students,
who rarely got close enough to hit anyone. Occasionally one
managed to toss a gas canister back near the troops, while
delighted spectators, watching from the hilltop, windows of
buildings and the roof of another men's dorm, cheered. Many
demonstrators were laughing.
</p>
<p> Then the outnumbered and partially encircled contingent of
Guardsmen ran out of tear gas. Suddenly they seemed frightened.
They began retreating up the hill toward Taylor Hall, most of
them walking backward to keep their eyes on the threatening
students below. The crowd on the hilltop consisted almost
entirely of onlookers rather than rock throwers. The tight
circle of retreating Guardsmen contained officers and noncoms
from both regiments, but no single designated leader. With them
in civilian clothes was Brigadier General Robert Canterbury, the
ranking officer on the campus, who said later: "I was there--but
I was not in command of any unit." Some of the troops held
their rifles pointed skyward. Several times a few of them
turned, pointed their M-1s threateningly at the crowd, and
continued their retreat.
</p>
<p> When the compact formation reached the top of the hill,
some Guardsmen knelt quickly and aimed at the students who were
hurling rocks from below. A handful of demonstrators kept
moving toward the troops. Other Guardsmen stood behind the
kneeling troops, pointing their rifles down the hill. A few
aimed over the students' heads. Several witnesses later claimed
that an officer brought his baton down in a sweeping signal.
Said Jim Minard, a sophomore from Warren, Ohio: "I was harassing
this officer, I threw a stone at him, and he pointed a .45-caliber
pistol at me. He was brandishing a swagger stick.
He turned away. He was holding his baton in the air, and the
moment he dropped it, they fired." Within seconds, a sickening
staccato of rifle fire signaled the transformation of a
once-placid campus into the site of an historic American
tragedy.
</p>
<p> Like a Firing Squad. "They are shooting blanks--they are
shooting blanks," thought Kent State Journalism Professor
Charles Brill, who nevertheless crouched behind a pillar. "Then
I heard a chipping sound and a ping, and I thought, 'My God,
this is for real.'" An Army veteran who saw action in Korea,
Brill was certain that the Guardsmen had not fired randomly out
of individual panic. "They were organized," he said. "It was not
scattered. They all waited and they all pointed their rifles at
the same time. It looked like a firing squad." The shooting
stopped--as if on signal. Minutes later, the Guardsmen assumed
parade-rest positions, apparently to signal the crowd that the
fusillade would not be resumed unless the Guardsmen were
threatened again. "I felt like I'd just had an order to clean
up a latrine," recalled one Guardsman in the firing unit. "You
do what you're told to do."
</p>
<p> The campus was suddenly still. Horrified students flung
themselves to the ground, ran for cover behind buildings and
parked cars, or just stood stunned. Then screams broke out. "My
God, they're killing us!" one girl cried. They were. A river of
blood ran from the head of one boy, saturating his school
books. One youth held a cloth against the abdomen of another,
futilely trying to check the bleeding. Guardsmen made no move
to help the victims. The troops were still both frightened and
threatening. After ambulances had taken away the dead and
wounded, more students gathered. Geology Professor Glenn Frank,
an ex-Marine, ran up to talk to officers. He came back sobbing.
"If we don't get out of here right now," he reported, "the Guard
is going to clear us out any way they can--they mean any way."
</p>
<p> In that brief volley, four young people--none of whom was
a protest leader or even radical--were killed. Ten students
were wounded, three seriously. One of them, Dean Kahler of
Canton, Ohio, is paralyzed below his waist by a spinal wound.
</p>
<p>The Fatalities
</p>
<p> WILLIAM K. SCHROEDER, 19, a psychology major from Lorain,
Ohio, was the second-ranking student in Kent State's Army ROTC
unit. A friend recalled that he was "angry and upset" that the
ROTC building had been burned down. A former Eagle Scout, high
school basketball and track stand-out, he was the image of the
clean-cut, academically conscientious Middle American boy. He
apparently was only a spectator at the Monday rally. Even so,
he illustrates the fact that youth's sentiment is shifting too
rapidly to permit any student to be neatly tabbed. "My son was
very opposed to the Vietnam War," said William Schroeder's
mother, "and his feelings against the war were growing."
</p>
<p> SANDRA LEE SCHEUER, 20, a junior from Youngstown, Ohio,
was walking to a class in speech therapy (her major) when she
was caught in the Guardsmen's fire. A bubbly girl and an honor
student. Sandy seemed too gregarious and full of laughter to
take much interest in politics or protest. Although she
sympathized with the peace movement, she did not join her
college friends when they went to work for Senator Eugene
McCarthy's presidential campaign. "Sandy lived for what everyone
else lived for--to find someone to love and someone who loved
her," said her best friend, Eileen Feldman.
</p>
<p> JEFFREY GLENN MILLER, 20, a transfer student from Michigan
State, where he found fraternity life a lot of "adolescent
nonsense," was no militant activist either. But he did call his
mother in Plainview, N.Y., to say that he felt he had to join
the demonstrations. He wore his hair long, liked bell-bottoms,
love beads and rock music. A psychology major, he was, according
to acquaintances, "a great believer in love." "I know it sounds
like a mother," said Mrs. Elaine Miller, "but Jeff didn't want
to go to war, not because he'd be hurt, but because he might
have to hurt someone else."
</p>
<p> ALLISON KRAUSE, 19, a quiet, almond-eyed beauty, was more
of a listener than a talker: she never preached about her
deeply held views. She opposed the war, and with her boy friend
Barry Levine, was among the spectators caught in the rifle
shoot. An honor student interested in the history of art, she
believed in protest but not in violence. She had placed a flower
in a Guardsman's rifle at Kent State and said softly: "Flowers
are better than bullets." "Is dissent a crime?" asked Allison
Krause's father. "Is this a reason for killing her? Have we
come to such a state in this country that a young girl has to
be shot because she disagrees deeply with the actions of her
Government?"
</p>
<p>Flimsy Excuse
</p>
<p> Multiple investigations at federal and state levels are
under way to determine why anyone was killed at Kent State. Far
worse disorders have been controlled at other campuses without
fatalities. Many of the students had obviously committed
lawless acts during that long weekend. Apparently they thought
that they could do so with impunity.
</p>
<p> General Canterbury and his superior, Ohio Adjutant General
Sylvester Del Corso, at first sought refuge in a flimsy excuse
for uncontrolled gunfire. They said that their men had been
fired upon by a sniper. By the end of the week, even Del Corso
conceded that there was no evidence of any such attack.
</p>
<p> A more plausible explanation was fear that bordered on
panic. "Each man made the judgment on his own that his life was
in danger," said Canterbury. "I felt, that I could have been
killed out there." A number of the men believed that the crowd
was going to engulf them, perhaps take away their loaded
weapons and turn the M-1s on the troopers. Some had been hurt
by thrown objects--but none seriously enough to require
hospitalization. Though the units had served in riot situations
before, most of the lower-ranking enlisted men had no war
experience. The Guardsmen at Kent had apparently not paid much
attention to whatever training they had been given. "Some in my
platoon," said one of the troopers, "have never handled a rifle
and hardly know how to load it." Some of the younger men had
enlisted in the Guard to avoid regular military service and the
hazards of Viet Nam. Said the wife of one Guardsman: "My husband
is no murderer. He was afraid. He was sure that they were going
to be overrun by those kids. He was under orders--that's why
he did it. He said so."
</p>
<p> Whose orders? At week's end there was still no answer.
Canterbury insisted that "no one gave an order." That statement
strains credibility. By Canterbury's own count, 16 or 17 men
fired 35 rounds. They started at virtually the same moment and
stopped at the same moment. Many civilian spectators at the
scene and some officials seeking to reconstruct the event are
convinced that an order was given. And someone made the initial
mistake of ordering live ammunition distributed to all the men
and permitting them to load their rifles--a procedure that is
contrary to regular Army practice in civil disturbances. Once
weapons are loaded, says one Pentagon officer, "you have
effectively lost control of that unit. You have given them the
license to fire." The Ohio Guard officers contend that loaded
weapons have a deterrent value. No doubt. But no one informed
the demonstrators that the troops had live ammunition. Nor were
any warning shots fired. Those facts, together with the totally
inadequate tactical leadership of the group that felt it was
entrapped raise serious doubts about the Guards' professionalism--and
about the wisdom of the decision to employ them.
</p>
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