Author Topic: I sent this request in  (Read 9846 times)

ggould

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I sent this request in
« on: May 04, 2005, 07:43:26 AM »
for 'Ohio'  by CSNY, since it's the anniversary of the shooting at Kent State University in Ohio, (1970). It started as a protest against the war in Vietnam, when a platoon of National guardsmen, for reasons nobody knows, turned and fired into a crowd of students and killed four of them. There was never a trial, and no one was ever disciplined.

info from http://writersalmanac.publicradio.org/
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mshray

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I sent this request in
« Reply #1 on: May 04, 2005, 09:53:03 AM »
More specifically it was a protest over the recent disclosure that the US had been bombing and sending troops into Cambodia, a country that we not only had not declared war against & but with whom we supposedly had a good diplomatic relations and were even calling an ally in the war against the Viet Cong.  In terms of international law this was completely illegal, and more to the point, Nixon had been categorically denying it.  This was the first concrete undeniable proof that Tricky Dick was a L I A R.  Shortly thereafter The Pentagon Papers came out, and that fragile species called faith in your government became extinct.

Last note: one of the 4 dead in Ohio shared my surname - Schroeder- but not a distant relation.

For more details check out ths chronology I found :
1970
April 30 -
President Nixon announces the invasion of Cambodia, triggering massive protests on many of the nation's campuses.
May 2 - Ohio National Guardsmen are sent to Kent State after the University's Army R.O.T.C. building is burned down.
May 3 - Ohio Governor James A. Rhodes personally appears on campus and promises to use "every force possible" to maintain order. Rhodes denounces the protesters as worse than brownshirts and vows to keep the Guard in Kent "until we get rid of them."
May 4 - Four students are killed and nine others are wounded when a contingent of Guardsmen suddenly opens fire during a noontime demonstration.
July 23 - Key portions of a secret Justice Department memo are disclosed by the Akron Beacon Journal. The memorandum describes the shootings as unnecessary and urges the Portage County Prosecutor to file criminal charges against six Guardsmen.
July 31 - Attorney General John Mitchell says that both students and Guardsmen apparently violated federal laws and hints that a federal grand jury may be convened "if Ohio authorities do not act."
August 3 - After consulting with top Guard officials, Governor Rhodes orders that a "special" state grand jury be empaneled.
October 4 - The President's Commission on Campus Unrest concludes: "The actions of some students were violent and criminal and some others were dangerous, reckless, and irresponsible." The shootings are branded as "unnecessary, unwarranted, and inexcusable."
October 16 - The "special" state grand jury exonerates the Guardsmen, but indicts 25 individuals, mostly students, for a variety of offenses that occurred on campus before the shootings.
Late October-November - Demands for a federal grand jury mount after it is revealed that the "special" state grand jury ignored key evidence and that one of the "special" prosecutors told a newsman he felt the Guardsmen should have shot more students.
November 30 - Assistant Attorney General Jerris Leonard confirms that the Justice Department is reviewing the evidence to determine if a federal grand jury should be convened. Leonard promises a decision before the year is over.

1971
January - 28
A federal judge upholds the state's indictments of the students, but orders the state grand jury's report to be expunged from the record and physically destroyed due to its bias.
April 30 - The first major book on the shootings, Kent State: What Happened and Why, by James Michener, is released. Michener says he was unable to uncover proof that there was a conspiracy to fire. However, Michener writes: "It seems likely that some kind of a rough verbal agreement had been reached among the troops" to fire.
June 22 - A conspiracy report written by Peter Davies is submitted to the Justice Department. Davies alleges that there definitely was a conspiracy and that a sergeant, Myron Pryor, started it all by firing a pistol as a signal.
August 13 - Attorney General John Mitchell closes the case, dismissing the conspiracy allegations as not credible and claiming "there is no likelihood of successful prosecutions of individual Guardsmen."
October 20 - A 10,000-signature petition urging President Nixon to overrule the decision is submitted to presidential aide Leonard Garment at the White House.
December 8 - The "special" state grand jury is even further discredited when Ohio officials dismiss charges against 20 of the 25 individuals indicted by the grand jury. Ohio prosecutors claimed they had insufficient evidence to convict any protesters.

1972
May 4 -
The second anniversary of the shootings passes without any response to the petition.
July 6 - In a letter to the parents of the slain students, Garment says that the new attorney general, Richard Kleindienst, will not reverse Mitchell's no grand jury decision.
October 12 - The parents of the slain students file suit in U.S. District Court in Washington. They ask for a court order compelling the Justice Department to conduct the grand jury investigation.

1973
April 30 -
The spreading Watergate scandal shakes up the Nixon administration. Elliot Richardson becomes Nixon's third attorney general and Garment is elevated to the position of Nixon's counsel.
May 1 - The parents of the slain students renew their grand jury demands. The students at Kent announce they will resubmit the petition.
May 10 - In a meeting with the student petitioners, K. William O'Connor, a high-level Justice Department official, admits that the Justice Department already has sufficient evidence to prosecute six Guardsmen.
May 25 - In an apparent attempt to pre-empt a reversal of the no-investigation policy by incoming attorney general Elliot Richardson, the White House closes the case a third time.
June 13 - Richardson reopens the case anyway, by announcing the Department is reviewing the Kent State file.
June 15 - The Akron Beacon Journal confirms reports that a House Judiciary subcommittee is quietly investigating the Justice Department's handling of the Kent State investigation.
August 3 - Assistant Attorney General J. Stanley Pottinger announces that the Justice Department will officially conduct a new inquiry. Senator Birch Bayh follows Pottinger's announcement by releasing a letter he received from one of the Guard's company commanders. On the basis of that letter Bayh charges that armed FBI informant Terry Norman may have been "the fatal catalyst" for the tragedy.
October 20-November 1 - Richardson resigns during the Saturday Night Massacre. Nixon nominates Ohio Senator William B. Saxbe, a former colonel in the Ohio National Guard, to be his fourth attorney general. Saxbe promises to terminate the new investigation if his nomination is approved by the Senate.
November 1-7 - The parents of the slain students, the student petitioners, and others demand that Saxbe disqualify himself because of several conflicts of interest.
December 11 - In an unusual 8:30 announcement on the eve of Saxbe's confirmation hearings, Pottinger announces that a federal grand jury will be empaneled in Cleveland.
December 12 - Saxbe cryptically promises to keep his hands off the investigation "if they have, as a result of this grand jury, further proceedings."

1974
February 8 -
Word leaks out from the grand jury that at least seven Guardsmen invoked their Fifth Amendment rights against self- incrimination and refused to testify.
March 28 - The federal grand jury indicts eight Guardsmen on charges they deprived the students of their rights to due process. No conspiracy is alleged, and no indictment is returned against Terry Norman or any Guard officers.
April 17 - The U.S. Supreme Court overturns a series of lower court decisions dismissing civil damage suits filed by the parents of the dead students and the nine surviving victims. The ruling paves the way for a civil trial to be held after the criminal proceedings.
October 7-17 - Attorneys for James A. Rhodes unsuccessfully try to block the release of Rhodes's deposition in the civil case until after the Ohio gubernatorial election. The deposition reveals that Rhodes's attorney, in a move reminiscent of the Watergate cover-up, offered into evidence an incomplete transcript of Rhodes's May 3, 1970, press conference. Among the remarks deleted was a comment by an official that the Guard would resort to shooting if necessary.
October 29 - Opening statements are delivered in the prosecution of the eight Guardsmen.
November 5 - Rhodes is elected governor of Ohio again.
November 8 - Federal Judge Frank Battisti dismisses the criminal charges against the Guardsmen, ruling that the prosecutors failed to prove their case beyond a reasonable doubt. Battisti suggests the Guardsmen should have been tried instead by state officials.

1975
May 28 -
A three-month-long wrongful death and injury trial begins. It provides the first opportunity to consider the evidence, five years after the killings.
August 27 - After hearing highly conflicting testimony--and after considerable controversy over rulings excluding and including certain evidence--the jury decides not to award damages to the parents of those killed and the nine surviving students.

1977
July 29 -
Ignoring pleas from the families of the victims and current KSU students who set up a makeshift Tent City on the practice football field, Kent State proceeds with the construction of a gymnasium annex over a large part of the site of the May 4 confrontation. 192 protesters are removed from the site and arrested. Subsequent protests are similarly unsuccessful.
September 12 - The Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati overturns the decision of the 1975 civil jury on the ground that Judge Donald Young mishandled an incident involving jury tampering.
 
1978
December 9 -
The second civil trial begins amid rumors that there might be a compromise out-of-court settlement.

1979
January 4 -
The victims settle out of court. The state of Ohio awards them a total of $675,000, to be split 13 ways, and the defendants sign a "statement of regret." Some victims claim the statement is an apology, but the defendants and their attorneys dispute that.

1982
October 4 -
The major litigation officially ends with a Supreme Court decision paving the way for the release of court documents sealed seven years earlier at the request of KSU and Ohio officials.

1990
May 4 -
KSU dedicates a memorial to "the events of May 4" (not the victims). At the dedication ceremonies, Ohio Governor Richard Celeste apologizes to the families of the four slain students and the nine surviving victims.
"Music is the Earth, People are the Flowers, and I am the Hose."

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ggould

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Let's not forget Jackson State
« Reply #2 on: May 04, 2005, 11:05:22 AM »
a couple of students were killed there too, around the same time, but since they're black, they don't merit as much ink.

On a related note, when I was more involved in the guitar business, I was backstage with Joe Walsh showing him a guitar (he opened for Stevie Nicks) and he somehow got to talking about Kent State, where I think he was a student.  Even though Joe was pretty wasted and goofy after his set, he got real serious talking about that day.
Don't stand in the way of LOVE!

mshray

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Re: Let's not forget Jackson State
« Reply #3 on: May 04, 2005, 11:11:23 AM »
Quote from: "ggould"
a couple of students were killed there too, around the same time, but since they're black, they don't merit as much ink.

On a related note, when I was more involved in the guitar business, I was backstage with Joe Walsh showing him a guitar (he opened for Stevie Nicks) and he somehow got to talking about Kent State, where I think he was a student.  Even though Joe was pretty wasted and goofy after his set, he got real serious talking about that day.


I often say the same thing about Jackson State, 2 black students = a lot less than half 4 white students.

Chrissie Hynde also went to Kent State just a couple years later.
"Music is the Earth, People are the Flowers, and I am the Hose."

--Carlos Santana, 2010

ggould

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Re: Let's not forget Jackson State
« Reply #4 on: May 04, 2009, 01:22:46 PM »
Quote from: ggould
a couple of students were killed there too, around the same time, but since they're black, they don't merit as much ink.

On a related note, when I was more involved in the guitar business, I was backstage with Joe Walsh showing him a guitar (he opened for Stevie Nicks) and he somehow got to talking about Kent State, where I think he was a student.  Even though Joe was pretty wasted and goofy after his set, he got real serious talking about that day.

I often say the same thing about Jackson State, 2 black students = a lot less than half 4 white students.

Chrissie Hynde also went to Kent State just a couple years later.
I was reminded of this by a coworker, who plays a specific song before each class, and writes title on board.  I asked what he was playing today, and he said "May 4, 1970, what else is there?"  He had gone to Kent State a few years later.
Don't stand in the way of LOVE!

Gazoo

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Re: Let's not forget Jackson State
« Reply #5 on: May 04, 2009, 11:01:37 PM »
Quote from: ggould
a couple of students were killed there too, around the same time, but since they're black, they don't merit as much ink.

On a related note, when I was more involved in the guitar business, I was backstage with Joe Walsh showing him a guitar (he opened for Stevie Nicks) and he somehow got to talking about Kent State, where I think he was a student.  Even though Joe was pretty wasted and goofy after his set, he got real serious talking about that day.

I often say the same thing about Jackson State, 2 black students = a lot less than half 4 white students.

Chrissie Hynde also went to Kent State just a couple years later.
I was reminded of this by a coworker, who plays a specific song before each class, and writes title on board.  I asked what he was playing today, and he said "May 4, 1970, what else is there?"  He had gone to Kent State a few years later.

I'll be sure to observe on my blog on May 14.
“The choir of children sing their song.  They've practiced all year long.  Ding dong.  Ding dong.  Ding dong.”