today is the 50th commemoration of the Kent State Massacre

Some background from my life:

I went to Kent State as an early admissions high school student in 1967 and 1968, where I stood in vigils against the war as we were photographed us from the roof a building next to the student union.  We were a sure we had FBI files, but who knows? Paranoia strikes deep…

In 1968 I went to CU, Boulder, and when Nixon’s secret bombing of Cambodia was announced, at about noon the streets exploded with furious protestors: a motley crew, which included men and women in suits who’d walked off their jobs.  The rage was palpable: fists punching the air, chants of various kinds.  We marched to the city/county building, but to what effect?  None, really, save maybe a photo-op?  Later a Student Strike was called, and some of us later occupied a few seemingly relevant buildings (admin?; I’ve forgotten), but no one seemed to care.  No arrests, no notice, no nothing.  We all went home just before dawn feelin’ a bit let down, maybe even…sorta silly.

On the year of the first commemoration of the Kent State Massacre, I literally just happened to have been in Kent, and attended the services.  Except for those in service to the state and federal apparatus, there wasn’t a dry eye in the college Commons space, at the bottom of Blanket Hill below the architecture building, my old stompin’ grounds.

Due to the pandemic social distancing rules, the planned Kent State four day 50th  Commemoration has become a virtual one, dedicated to the memories of Allison B. Krause (19), Jeffrey Glenn Miller (20), Sandra Lee Scheuer (20), and William Knox Schroeder (19), May they rest in Power.  Nine other students were wounded, including one who was paralyzed from the waist down.

The Special Tributes tab includes:

Included is ‘The May 4 50th Commemoration includes the virtual noon program on May 4, 2020, and I’ll bring it when it‘s up and I hate to say it: if it’s worthwhile.  I’m hoping it’s original film footage, as all the videos I watched early this a.m. were pretty much dreck, but I did grab the best of the lot, which I’ll embed soon.  Until the video was launched, we were invited to their virtual commemoration channel on youtube, but what most of the speaks and musicians have to do with it…I can’t say.

Now Jerry Casale (the cofounder of Devo) was there, and was radicalized to the Nth degree by what he’d witnessed, and again later during the Gulf Wars when he became Jiihad Jerry of the Evildoers after Devo had broken up.  And yes, I’d known Casale well from age 15 onward when he was an art major and played bass in a funky band in the basement below an hotel that allowed teens.

Jerry Casale – 50th Commemoration of May 4, 1970

This is the best of the lot I’d found on the history: The Kent State Shootings, Explained | History

 

Aha: it’s up and on youtube, about 51 mins, although the May 1 history starting with Nixon starts at 8:58.  And it is worthwhile, imo, at least for me.

 

For further reading, these are okay…

‘How the Kent State massacre marked the start of America’s polarization;  The killing of four white students 50 years ago brought the anti-Vietnam protests global attention. The killing of black students at the same time went unnoticed’, theguardian.com, May 4, 2020

50 years ago, the Kent State shootings changed the country’, nbc news, May 4, 2020

(cross-posted from Café Babylon)

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edg's picture

I was 14 at the time and remember it vividly. Neil Young's haunting guitar riff and lyrics in the song 'Ohio' are stellar.

[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TRE9vMBBe10]

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wendy davis's picture

@edg

mr.. wd got online earlier this a.m. than i had, and blasted that version. yeah, and it's very personal to me and a hella lot of us. i've cried most of the day, i admit.

and yes, it was back in the day when i still liked neil young. : )

i'd like to correct one thing in the OP (dangit, i'm getting those C-shape eye prisms and need to get offline for a bit until they leave.) but id said the KSU video the may 1 nixon stuff and film started at about 8:58, and really the 'personal reflections' start at about 25 mins, far less interesting to me, anyway.. they actually even use some of the music on their youtube channel for some ungawly reason, including david crosby and some new group paying Ohio, jesse colin young caterwauling 'get together', and so on, but at least not jorma kokonen who'd said 'it happened, and likely will never happen again'. yeah, right, jorma.

thanks, edg. i'll be back in a bit.

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gulfgal98's picture

Back in 1970, I was not particularly politically active although I did participate two years earlier in a campus protest against censorship. But the shootings at Kent State served to both haunt me and awaken me.

These young people did not deserve to die. They did nothing wrong other than exercising their right to free speech under the first amendment.

Thank you for remembering them and posting this commemoration to the tragedy at Kent State.

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Do I hear the sound of guillotines being constructed?

“Those who make peaceful revolution impossible will make violent revolution inevitable." ~ President John F. Kennedy

wendy davis's picture

@gulfgal98

and it's so good to hear the event awakened you further. and thank you for the video from long ago.

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the school newspaper to get some photos of a demonstration against the shootings on Wall St. a couple of days after. Turned out the WTC union iron workers held a counter demonstration for some real hippie punching.

https://philebersole.wordpress.com/2011/11/14/wall-street-protests-then-...

I saw what looked like a real, official, dressed in suit news photographer climb on the roof of a news stand and start taking pictures with a really long lens (lens envy). He had "business length" long hair. An iron worker climbed and snuck up behind him, then chucked him off, 8-9 feet to the pavement where all these real men proceeded to kick and stomp him while he was down. I tried to find out what happened to him but couldn't. I thought he was dead. Ef the unions.

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@Snode Way back in the day, I was a member of the Steelworkers Union. There was a strong pro-right wing reactionary streak among union members at the time. The industrial trades were not for me and off to college I went. I suppose the current state of unions can we seen with wildcat teacher strikes that went against the union bosses.

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wendy davis's picture

@Snode

heart for the link to your site and extra links below, but my apologies, but my left eye can't read right yet. so...later it is for me.

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wendy davis's picture

@Snode

i'd provided in the OP had reported this:

That division [associating the protestors w/ the Weathermen, who knows if their bombing stats were even close?] was made all too clear as hundreds of anti-war protesters marched through New York City four days after Kent State. A large group of construction workers taunted them as anti-American and then attacked with crowbars in what became known as “The Hardhat Riot”. Dozens were injured but President Richard Nixon understood the political advantage of siding with blue collar workers against students he called “bums”.

David Paul Kuhn, author of The Hardhat Riot: Nixon, New York City and the Dawn of the White Working-Class Revolution, said America is still living with the divisions laid bare in that first week of May 1970.

“If there’s an era when the tribalisation of the Trump era began, it’s this time,” he said. “Between Kent State and the hardhat riot you have the best microcosm that there is of the beginning of the polarisation that haunts America today.”

though i can't reflexively buy into his equivalence of the portion i've bolded.

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@wendy davis This is the point it became us and them, and it's only gotten worse. I had a friend that got drafted and went over. He came home and to a lousy economy, grew his hair out some and just wanted to fit in again. When his father, also a vet took him down to the VFW(?) he got hassled about his hair, called a pussy, for his generation was the first to lose a war. His father had to listen to this from one of his half drunk ww2 buddies, and a lot of hurt got laid on that night all around. And it never ended.

I didn't mean to hijack the memorialization of the 4, but for me was the beginning of where we are today. Chuck Colson deserves his recognition for it. I don't give a fuck what he did with his life after, he never paid for what he did.

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wendy davis's picture

@Snode

you'd brought it all up (esp. w/ your union hippie-punching iron workers vignette), but i've sat staring at your comment for 15 minutes with my mind reeling back in time and forward into the future, my heart clutching all the while. esp. after reading some akron beacon journal coverage of the massacre early this a.m., and the photos.

quite the horror story you've told about your returning friend and the VFW whooosh. i seem to recall hearing that VN vets weren't all that welcomed into VFWs was fairly common. and the whole 'hippies spitting on returning vets' seems to be an urban legend, as well.

i understand your cleaver metaphor, and i sincerely wish more did; the young uns? ancient history, yes? it was why from then on i became an avid anti-imperialist, and spent fifteen (?) years blogging against the Western Imperium and NATO/Africom. believe me, for a female to earn any chops blogging anti-amerikan FP was not an easy thing. but as obomba opened the door wide for trump...here we still are. the most-feared Terrorist Nation on the planet. who will stop 'us'? those who can...and must.

casale was right: nothing's changed over these 50 years, save maybe for the worse. and that's the meaning of Devo: 'we've Devolved, not Evolved, as we sixties hippies had hoped. conversations with human consciousness spiraling upward toward the heavens, and so on. i can still see the hand gestures.

now chuck coulson, what a flash from the past: 'nixon's hatchet man', watergate burglar...

thank you, snode.

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@wendy davis After My Lai (a real massacre) vets were being dumped into a recession, and nobody wanted to hire a vicious dope sodden baby killer, at least in the capitalists view. They mostly got pushed into police and security work, if that.

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wendy davis's picture

@Snode

and we can credit sy hersh for true crime reporting on the Mi Lai massacres; another flashback in time.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

my first 'quarter' as student in Mexico City (later, Puebla). Walked out of my 11:00 class to a courtyard adjoining the Student Union, to see a Bud holding an English language newspaper with the blaring headlines about the Kent State Massacre.

Stunned shock and disbelief--all of us.

Also, very much relieved to be 'anywhere but the US.'

Appreciate the tribute to the fallen students.

Blue

THANK YOU America's Physicians & Nurses, All Medical Personnel, First Responders, To Include Medical (EMT/Paramedics/Ambulance), Pharmacy Personnel, Fire Depts, Police Depts, Retailers/Grocers--Especially, To Marginally-Paid Frontline Retail Cashiers & Clerks.

Last, but not least,

THANKS to America's Truckers/Delivery Persons, Especially, To Over-The-Road/Long Haul Truckers Who Obviously Have The Capacity To Shut Down The Entire Country, If They Were To Choose To Sit Out The Current Public Health Crisis, In Order To Protect Their Own.

You are all truly heroes.

Godspeed. Give rose

“If there are no dogs in Heaven, then when I die, I want to go where they went.”
~~Will Rogers, Actor & Social Commentator

“Love makes you stronger, so that you can reach out and become involved with life in ways you dared not risk alone.”
~~Author Unknown, Save Our Street Dogs (SOSD) Website

“In a world where you can be anything–be kind.”
~~Author Unknown

“I think dogs are the most amazing creatures; they give unconditional love. For me, they are the role model for being alive.”
~~Gilda Radner, Comedienne

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

wendy davis's picture

@Unabashed Liberal

indeed, and of course jorma was wrong! it's still happening in the USA and will happen again.

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@Unabashed Liberal anywhere but the U.S" while in Mexico City in 1970, but just 2 yrs before, 10 days before the opening of the Mexico City Olympics, gov't security forces killed many student protesters advocating for various things including political speech. The official death count of university students was 44, but most know this is a deliberately undercounted figure put out by the repressive PRI Mexican gov't and seconded at the time by the repressive Nixon U.S. gov't. According to this account of the massacre, the actual number killed by security police may have been closer to 300-400.

Likely not only the actual killed number but also the whole awful story of gov't police insane overreaction was downplayed or misrepresented by gov't censorship, and this may well have been the case continuing into 1970 and beyond.

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Unabashed Liberal's picture

@wokkamile

the huge public university where that student movement began, so, maybe that's one reason I never heard anything about it.

(of course, was a young teenager during the 1968 Olympic Games--so, didn't catch a whole lot of international news in those days Smile )

Mollie

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Everyone thinks they have the best dog, and none of them are wrong.

snoopydawg's picture

coverage with lots of photos.

Paul Street is one of my favorite writers.

I was 11 when this happened so the whole anti war movement was just on the sidelines of my life. I remember going to Hill Air Force Base and we all wore MIA bracelets, but even that was a fad thing for me and my friends to take part in. I have educated myself since then am I am always left with much sadness and beyond appalled that it happened. And being honest I can see it happening again. Actually it already is isn't with the cops getting away with murdering over 1,000 a year without any consequences. And if they don't kill you they will harass mostly minorities who are then saddled with felony records and a life time of debt against the system. F this country's sociopathic leaders!!

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Which AIPAC/MIC/pharma/bank bought politician are you going to vote for? Don’t be surprised when nothing changes.

wendy davis's picture

@snoopydawg

grabbed the RT.com link and title to prove my point that it's still happening, and will happen again in the future.

he done good, yes?

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Cassiodorus's picture

-- attending The Ohio State University in the Nineties, I was told by an old guy within my department that Jim Rhodes, the governor of Ohio at the time of the shootings, was the type of guy who would call out the National Guard at a moment's notice, and be sure the guns used by said Guard were fortified with live ammo, real bullets in other words.

I gathered from my friend's story that it was because he wanted to kill people -- you know, same reason the head honchos in the US effort in Vietnam, Westmoreland and whomever replaced him under Nixon, pursued an attrition "strategy" within southern Vietnam without the slightest clue as to who the enemy was. So the various divisions of the Army would go in, kill a bunch of people in various places, and harden the resolve of most of the population to get rid of the imperialist enemy. I'm sure the ARVN was full of moles throughout that period, too.

Later, the collapse of the regime in southern Vietnam in 1975 was chronicled most articulately in a book called "55 Days," by a fellow named Alan Dawson who was a UPI correspondent in Vietnam. I think he said something about the mole problem within the ARVN in that book. If you look it up on Amazon, it's out of print. I have a copy, but the book-binding is falling apart, the glue losing its consistency.

I was eight years old when all of the Kent State stuff happened.

James Michener's book "Kent State," which I read in high school, has it that public opinion turned greatly against high school students at the time of the strikes. Reading that book was one of the things that convinced me that I lived in a nation of idiots. Well, maybe "idiots" wasn't quite the word for it -- but something like that.

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"The war on Gaza, backed by the West, is a demonstration that the West is willing to cross all lines. That it will discard any nuance of humanity. That it is willing to commit genocide" -- Moon of Alabama

wendy davis's picture

@Cassiodorus

killer. he was quoted as saying on May 1 that the rioters who torched the ROTC building (never proven) were "the worst type of people that we harbor in America" and called in the national guard. i'd forgotten that had been campaigning for a senate seat at the time.

at the time, i'd read every book i could on the history, including micheners; thanks for reminding me of the cliffs note version. so long ago i can scarcely remember it. but the NBC link i'd provided included a book by Howard Means titled "67 Shots: Kent State and the End of American Innocence", reminding me of the murder of amadou diallo with '41 shots', memorialized by bruce springstein. but i'd never read that one, never will by now.

apparently different folks have kept long lists of how many students struck after the kent state massacre, and the numbers are impressive as hell. (steve early at P for one) even nixon's commission took note, even more interesting.

The report Nixon commissioned on campus unrest after it said that "a nation driven to use the weapons of war upon its youth is a nation on the edge of chaos" — and Americans were feeling that "chaos."

thanks, cass.

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thanatokephaloides's picture

@Cassiodorus

I was eight years old when all of the Kent State stuff happened.

I was 11 myself -- and had just participated in my first protest, against the bombing of Cambodia, just like the wounded and killed in Ohio.

It is a source of personal dignity to this day.

Nihil umquam in oblivione est, sorores et fratres mei! (Nothing is ever forgotten, my sisters and brothers!)

Give rose

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"US govt/military = bad. Russian govt/military = bad. Any politician wanting power = bad. Anyone wielding power = bad." --Shahryar

"All power corrupts absolutely!" -- thanatokephaloides

Creosote.'s picture

@Cassiodorus
Forget A-monopoly - go to BookFinder.com

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Cassiodorus's picture

@Creosote. Still available, but apparently out of print.

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"The war on Gaza, backed by the West, is a demonstration that the West is willing to cross all lines. That it will discard any nuance of humanity. That it is willing to commit genocide" -- Moon of Alabama

@Cassiodorus about Kent State over the years, after a couple of analysis of the audio brought up questions. I can't find where I read it, but the police were recruiting student informers, junior "narcs" to snitch on drug use. One of them, Terry Norman, wanted a gun, and for some reason the cops gave him one. Long story short, he ended up getting called out during the demonstration and he pulled the gun. I don't remember if he fired or people just yelled he's got a gun, but there was some conjecture that was the trigger for it.

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wendy davis's picture

@Snode

bingling, and found this from kentwired.com, nov. 16, 2010:

Who is terry norman? He's the man who some say could answer many of the persisting questions about May 4. He's also not talking. (with a photo of norman and his gun)

Two years later, Norman was an FBI informant being paid to photograph student protesters for government records. Past statements and a new analysis of an audio recording place him in the center of a congressional inquiry into his role in the May 4, 1970, shootings.

The Ohio National Guard opened fire on student protesters that day after being taunted with rocks and banter. Four students died and nine were wounded. New evidence has prompted some to wonder whether Norman’s actions led to the shooting.

Norman was the only civilian known to be carrying a weapon May 4 — a .38-caliber Smith & Wesson revolver. While his testimonies indicate he never fired the gun, witnesses say otherwise. Some question whether his alleged shots incited the Guard to fire.

'Agent Provocateur'

the whole think formats very incoherently on msn...might be better on firefox.

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@Cassiodorus @Cassiodorus about authorities acting in stupid ways guaranteed to greatly risk people getting killed

Jim Rhodes, the governor of Ohio at the time of the shootings, was the type of guy who would call out the National Guard at a moment's notice, and be sure the guns used by said Guard were fortified with live ammo, real bullets in other words.

it's interesting to note that 3 yrs before, in 1967, at the time of a massive antiwar protest at the Pentagon, where far more people were congregating than at Kent, the SecDef, Rbt McNamara, gave the order that federal troops were to have bayonets at the ready but NOT have live ammunition. IIirc, no protesters were killed that day in October by US forces.

Here by contrast is Gov Rhodes:

At a news conference in Kent, Ohio, on Sunday May 3, 1970, the day before the Kent State shootings, he said of campus protesters:

They're worse than the Brownshirts, and the Communist element, and also the Night Riders, and the vigilantes. They're the worst type of people that we harbor in America.[10]

Rhodes strikes me as a crude, barely educated midwestern WWC type with very low tolerance for dissent, someone who would have been among the "Hardhats" busting up antiwar protests elsewhere in America at the time. Very much a similar type to another prominent Ohio figure then, OSU football coach Woody Hayes. Both ended their careers with a dark stain on their records.

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wendy davis's picture

that gerald casale's personal twitter account has been shadow-banned, but this was on the Devo Account. @Gv3Casale is gerald vincent casale.

casale's correct, of course; general canterbury gave the troops the order to shoot if those who would attempt to clear the commons failed after 5 minutes.

[video:https://youtu.be/njfZQG0g_jw?t=1455]

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I was hanging around the pool hall,The Golden Cue, in the Hilltop building on 'the Hill' by the University and when I heard what was brewing on the campus I left the poolroom with a few students to join in.
I'd been at other rallies, including one protesting the ROTC on campus that turned violent and had cops on horseback rushing the crowd with a lot of people getting sprayed by teargas,and when all the glass was broken out that big bookstore 'on the Hill'(I took no part in that act). I'd been too so many protests on that campus, even tho I was no student, some times I get the protests mixed up but I was certainly in the one about the Kent State crime.

One close friend of mine at the time, Mark Ward, was a recently returned 'Vietnam veteran' a term on which he would correct people by saying he'd spent almost his whole time in Cambodia, not Vietnam.

There he said he came across a lot of rusted out planes in the jungle that showed the US had been there a long time, they hadn't just invaded the place, so he thought the outrage at Nixon/Kissinger invading Cambodia showed how little people really knew about the war.

Very lively times.

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wendy davis's picture

@aliasalias

multitudes down broadway and end up...(where?), all raged up with no place too go? i keep meaning to hunt for images of the city/county buildings, to see which building.

i lived on university ave. just off broadway, and down that avenue was my path to campus events.

i'd never even heard of the post-ROTC teargassing, po-po on horseback, and the smashed windows on the hill, oddly. a drugstore was on broadway and ninth? but of course i remember the U booktore opposite it, the goden cue and head shops (annie __ owned one, although i knew her husband better )along the way. brillig works books, of course (howard, tim, and girlie), as well.

fascinating tale from returning cambodia vet mark ward. i reckon he'd thought our ignorance was epic. and of course...it was. nixon finally owned up to 'the secret bombing of cambodia, which ended, iirc, with Khmer Rouge in power.

makes the ruling elite's Domino Theory and viet nam even more absurd.

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@wendy davis where they did marching drills and we were heckling them while the Police were off to side on horseback, then one guy with very long hair went up to the marching line and dropped one cadet with one punch.
That's when the chaos started with the police using the horses to break up the crowd and even some students that weren't part of the protest but just happened to be walking from one building to another, were also chased. You could see protesters running to the buildings because the horses couldn't follow, and as the crowd protesting go broke up into smaller groups many, including me decided it was time to get away and avoid arrest.

As far as the bookstore goes a lot of people assume that big bookstore by Broadway always looked the way it does (or still did when I visited in the early 90's) but at one time it used to have big glass windows.

Things changed on 'the Hill' when they put a police substation in the Hilltop building, it certainly put a crimp in the drug dealing (LSD was a big seller at one time and people came from other States to make deals to profit from when they went home).

I also knew a lot of the STP Family, even knew STP John, which is a story in itself.

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wendy davis's picture

@aliasalias

boulder and the hill; thank you. i don't think i've been there since massage therapy school in...1977? it had been pretty gentrified by then, greeks were on the rise again, streets blocked downtown for walking malls blooming, and tra la la. one STP fellow who called himself 'deputy dawg' was a common menace in my life. i was glad when the weather turned cold and they headed for warmer climes. ; )

but yes, it was the country court where we'd headed and stopped.

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@wendy davis in the STP Family, I drank with them at parties and even got into a couple of fights with a couple of them.

I recognize that Courthouse picture and just out of sight to the left in that picture was the County jail and there you'd meet the STP family members but also protesters sentenced for some violation of the law, like a few other protesters that got 15 days for disturbing the peace etc.. I was part of a protest one time but I wasn't arrested for that, I was only there because I was given 15 days for stealing a sandwich.

So it was an eclectic group in there and one time protest chants going so loud the guards locked everyone in their cells away from the communal day room, then the jailers sneaked around to find out who was dumb enough to still be making the most racket, and then throwing the fool into the padded cell for a few days.

I didn't that place it a bit, but when I got put back into the general population in the day room it was mostly upbeat hippies talking about where everyone was from, or music, or dope or the next idea for a protest.
The general feeling was 'go ahead' , march, protest, do what you want and you may get thrown in jail, but so what? in a week or two they'd be throwing you out, at least as long it wasn't drug charges or a violent crime.

Rinse and repeat.

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wendy davis's picture

@aliasalias

fascinating. i will say that i'd had deputy dawg in my karma in very bad ways, but the apex was when i was visiting a friend who lived in aground floor room, and the filthy sod climbed in through an open window. i can't remember what came next, but my guess is that it wasn't pleasant.
; )

i'd visited a denver musician, nathan warner, in that jail once (for weed possession, iirc), and he reported that most of them were meditating and havin' an easy time of it. someone said he'd asked us to bring him cigarettes, we did, but the po-po wouldn't let him have them.

i did get to wondering if i'd even gone up to the hill when i was there for massage school, but i can't recall that i had. the live music had moved downtown, although Tulagi had some awesome music for a long time, including lottsa old bluesmen.

thanks for such an interesting discussion, aliasalias.

15 days for stealing a sandwich; whooosh; guess it could have been worse (jean valjean). how long were you living in boulder (at the time called: The Peoples Republic of Boulder), then? sounds as though you were immersed in the culture.

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@wendy davis
They did get good acts, one night there was 'The Johnny Otis Show' bus out front and you could hear out the street the great guitar riff of the 15 or 16 year old Shuggie Otis.

Then funny story is about when 'Commander Cody and His Lost Planet Airmen' were playing at the Tulagi one night and the police raided the place.

Fortunately there were no arrests because no one was in possession of any drugs or paraphernalia (rolling paper, pipes etc.) as everyone was searched as they had to exit the front door.
Then when they turned on all the lights they saw drugs and paraphernalia all over the floor, so much they pushed the tables aside and used a janitor's broom to push it all together in one big pile.

Needless to say the Tulagi wasn't open the next night but I don't remember how many days they were shut down.

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wendy davis's picture

@aliasalias

what a great story!!!! thanks, amigo.

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wendy davis's picture

yesterday, and this i hadn't known this:

The troops were in the vicinity already because they had been mobilized by Rhodes in an attempt to smash a strike by Teamster truck drivers in Akron. They arrived in Kent within hours, accompanied by armored personnel carriers, and immediately clashed with more than a thousand demonstrators. The 900 troops began firing hundreds of rounds of tear gas and threatening the crowd with their bayonets, wounding one student. More than 100 students were arrested, the majority for violating the 8 p.m.-to-dawn curfew imposed by the city government.

he'd also added this:

The nationwide impact of the killings

The Kent State massacre had a politically galvanizing effect upon millions of young people, who reacted to the killings with outrage and anger. An unprecedented nationwide student strike erupted, involving an estimated 4.3 million students, shutting down or disrupting more than 900 college campuses. The National Guard was dispatched to 21 campuses, while police battled students at another 26. University officials closed down 51 campuses for the remainder of the term. The Kent State campus remained closed for six weeks.
The White House blamed the killings on the students themselves. Nixon’s press secretary Ron Ziegler, speaking on behalf of a president whose hands were dripping with the blood of the Vietnamese people, said that the deaths were a warning that “when dissent turns to violence, it invited tragedy.”

On the following weekend, well over 100,000 people demonstrated in Washington, DC. Nixon administration officials huddled in their offices, with National Security Advisor Henry Kissinger declaring that the US capital “took on the character of a besieged city.” Nixon himself fled to Camp David, while armed soldiers of the 82nd Airborne Division were stationed inside the Executive Office Building, supposedly to protect it from assault by antiwar protesters.

for posterity, this has to be the closing song:

[video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=omEX35pbelI]

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