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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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Figure 3. Draft papers are held up ready to be burnt (Ruffner, 1970).<br />

The events that took place during the night of May 1, 1970 were the beginning of a downward spiral<br />

which led to the National Guard occupying Kent State <strong>University</strong>’s campus, which would result in the<br />

shooting of students by the National Guard three days later. There were many young adults, including<br />

students of Kent State, clustered in and outside of the bars on North Water Street. Everyone in the bar was<br />

not talking about Cambodia. Some people were watching a basketball game. As the night progressed, many<br />

left the bars and were lingering about on North Water Street. Many acts of vandalism took place. When<br />

local law enforcement drove past the congregation, which consisted of students and non-students, they<br />

were heckled. “[B]onfires were built in the streets of downtown Kent, cars were stopped, police cars were<br />

hit with bottles, and some store windows were broken” (Hensley & Lewis, 2010, p. 55). There were also<br />

incidents of pilfering along with a great amount of property damage and some injuries. William Scranton,<br />

the head of the President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, (1970) found that “In all, 47 windows in 15<br />

establishments were broken, and two police officers were cut by missiles” (p. 243). A state of emergency<br />

was issued by the mayor of Kent, Leroy Satrom. The bars were shut down at his demand. Obviously, this<br />

put a lot more people out on the street and made them even more irate. It also raised the ire of those who<br />

were not involved in the destruction. “This arbitrary action threw a new mass of young people into the<br />

228

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