(note: this is a repost for the Freshman Orientation Open Call originally written May 4, 1970, the 40th Anniversary of Kent State)
May 4, 1970. A spring day for a Freshman in college at the University of North Dakota. I was 18 and enjoying being in college. Then...the reports started to come in.
A demonstration at a small college in Ohio protesting Nixon's sending troops into Cambodia. No one had ever heard of Kent State before. The National Guard had been called out. We were kind of used to that kind of report from the media by then. There had been lots of riots. President Nixon was constantly invoking the phrase "outside agitators". Maybe there were. Nobody really knew.
We heard about shots being fired. About students being killed. Students? Wow! I was a student. These were kids just like me.
The most famous image of May 4, 1970 from Kent State University
I went home that night. I didn't live on campus my Freshman year. I lived at home at the local Air Force Base. I watched the news and was appalled at the black and white images of students running from tear gas and of bodies left behind.
When my father, an Air Force Master Sergeant, got home that night we got in a discussion about it which turned into an argument which turned into me getting punched and held against the wall with his hand on my throat and his fist cocked. I remember my father's rage. And I remember that the only point I was trying to make was that these were students just like me.
Well, not quite. This is where it gets a bit interesting. The next morning I left for school--with a black eye. It was Tuesday. I had AFROTC class. I was trying to get a scholarship. Not because I wanted to go to 'Nam. But because I wanted to serve and to fly.
Classes were cancelled. A crowd was gathering near the ROTC Armory. I went inside with some of my friends from ROTC. We decided that if the crowd were to storm the building then we would fight. We were ready. We weren't going to let things happen here that had happened on other campuses. A friend and I noticed something right across the street from the Armory on the flag pole just outside the Administration Building.
Someone had raised the Viet Cong flag and it was flying above the American flag. We went running out and lowered the flags. Then we quickly decided that the best thing was to put the American flag on top with the Viet Cong flag beneath it. No way was the American flag going to fly lower and we didn't want to inflame tempers by doing what our first instinct told us--which was to throw the Viet Cong flag in the trash.
Col. Woodard and UND President Tom Clifford on the steps of the ROTC Armory on May 5, 1970
Anyway, the ROTC Armory was the center of a protest that morning. My friend and I were threatened by a University Administrator with arrest if any violence occured because of what we had done with the flag. And ultimately the Armory was "bombed". Except in true pacifist style, it was bombed with paper airplanes and marshmallows. That was anti-war protest at the University of North Dakota.
I never truly understood what had so incensed my father. Maybe he was worried that I would find myself in the middle of something that I couldn't get out of. Maybe he too was confused.
I do remember that all the planes on the flightline of the base were moved away from their usual place near the highway to the other end of the runway--just in case. Dad and I used to joke though at how easily someone who had just a bit of local knowledge could get on the flightline. We even joked about doing it and putting tags on a plane that said "Boom!".
And, as the week of protests and the "spring of our discontent" rolled along we all changed. I think my relationship with my father changed even though we went back to throwing the ball in the yard and going out fishing together. But I don't think I trusted him as much. And it was the last time he ever hit me.
My American Legion baseball coach called me one night. He was the head of the base's Office of Special Investigations. He knew I was a student and was active on campus. He asked me to keep an eye out for military personnel participating in demonstrations or unrest and to let him know. I didn't want to "narc" but agreed to do that even though I really didn't. I think what he really meant was to let him know especially if there were any "black" airmen conspicuously hanging out with demonstrators.
And within a week the campus was back to normal. I was playing JV baseball that year and just trying to have fun.
But, I'll never forget that day. Four dead in Ohio. Every young man and woman in college remembers that day I think. It changed how we view the world. Four dead in Ohio. And it changed our world, too.


Salon.com
Comments
You done good.
These days, the kids (like most of my peers in that timeframe) seem to have no idea what's going on around them of importance. They know what Britany Spears is doing, or Lindsay Lohan's latest gaffe. They're aware of the latest video games and which kids in school are cool -- or not.
In my time, it really wasn't that much different at that age.
This piece reminds me of how my dad would act up at the TV with the Vietnam reports and the local/national news when he was home. He was in the Navy and spent a lot of time onboard ships patrolling the Gulf of Tonkin.
This was around the time I started to worry (perhaps a bit unrealisticially, but hey, I was nine) that my oldest brother, who was then just turned fourteen, might have to worry about going to Vietnam himself if the war didn't end soon.
--r--
Tin soldiers and Nixon's coming
We're finally on our own
This summer I hear them drumming
Four dead in Ohio...
(still gives me chills)
You know, when I saw this prompt I toyed with the idea of writing about all of this, but then that same feeling of sadness overcame me and I knen....once again....I would never fit in.
Congrats, my dear friend, upon the EP, it is well deserved.
Thanks for writing this from another point of view.
I was 28 and had done four years in the Army. I put down my weapon and left. I haven't touched a gun since. Vowed I never would.
R
Sadly, ironically, I miss those days when America spoke up as a nation. One year later I would be "drafted" into this horrible war. I never went. And I'm glad your dad never hit you again.
It's important that young people today know the various social changes that have taken place in our country, in each decade. I attended Kent State from 1974-1978, wandering under the trees on Bunker Hill where the Guard stood to take their shots. It happened once, it could happen again, we much work harder on dialogue and conflict resolution, at home, at work, and in government.
Rated and shared on Facebook.
Don't forget Jackson State either.
And thank you.
Don't forget Jackson State either.
And thank you.
Kent State is emblazoned on my brain pan as the most devestating event of that era next to the Cuban Missle Crisis (when JFK nearly got us all killed.)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fW3R9c0eaUg&feature=related
I know there was a Civil war, but somehow it didn't touch me like riots in my lifetime.
Interesting post. Write on!
Marc--I am utterly saddened to say that I concur with what you are saying with one exception. When you say, the sooner the better, I hope against all hopes that you are wrong. But I fear that you may be right. And I ask myself--what am I going to do when it comes?