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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region Forums79 haunting photos from the Kent State University shootings you've likely never seen before
From todays Cleveland Plain Dealer.
https://www.cleveland.com/news/2020/05/79-haunting-photos-from-the-kent-state-university-shootings-youve-likely-never-seen-before.html
One of the photographers, Chuck Ayers, was one of my art teachers, and former political cartoonist for the Akron Beacon Journal. He also collaborated with Tom Batiuk drawing the comic strips Funky Winkerbean and Crankshaft.
I wasnt there when this happened, I started my classes in 1974, but this event was so much a part of the history there. Upon seeing all the familiar landscapes in these photos, I cant imagine seeing the heavy military presence, just boggles my mind.
LakeArenal
(28,863 posts)We were teargassed so often just going to school. Armed swat teams lined the sidewalks. It was a ferocious time.
Ohiogal
(32,122 posts)What was it like to be teargassed?
LakeArenal
(28,863 posts)A bit of disorientation but not enough to forget who just tear gassed you.
BUT.... not bullets.
Thats why the Move over Boomers pisses me off.
Talk about disenfranchised youth. Also todays youth has financial college debt.
We had the draft. Talk about not knowing what the future looked like......
All Vets tend to have lifelong problems associated with war. For life.
sinkingfeeling
(51,483 posts)teeth.
https://www.thelantern.com/2010/05/1970-protests-erupted-across-ohio-tear-gas-at-osu/
And here are more photos from the spring of 1970 in Ohio.
https://www.dispatch.com/photogallery/OH/20171005/NEWS/428009998/PH/1
Ohiogal
(32,122 posts)Thank you for sharing these.
Aristus
(66,481 posts)Just as an aside, the caption writer seemed unable to distinguish between an armored personnel carrier and a tank. There were no tanks in those pics. Just the M-113 Armored Personnel Carrier, and in one of the early pics, an M-577 Command Post vehicle, painted blue for some reason.
Those Ohio National Guardsmen and their commanders should have been ashamed of themselves. Poorly-trained, poorly-led, willing to commit extra-judicial murder. With that incident, turning armed soldiers on unarmed civilians, the U.S, joined the League of Ordinary Nations.
Ohiogal
(32,122 posts)I remember many adults at that time, my parents included, saying things such as, Those damn radicals were taunting and throwing rocks at armed soldiers! What did they expect?
I dont think anyone expected deadly gunfire into a crowd of unarmed students, some of whom were just on their way to class.
Its such a black eye for our countrys history, and sometimes I wonder if weve learned anything at all from it.
I guess well never know who authorized the bullets and the permission to fire. Many sources say it was Gov. James Rhodes.
Aristus
(66,481 posts)Not that that should matter. No one deserved to die.
Ohiogal
(32,122 posts)Although a lot of people who thought the same way back then probably would have blamed those radicals for causing innocents to die.