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Volu m e II - Purdue University Calumet

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There was a clear misunderstanding and miscommunication of the role the National Guard was<br />

supposed to play. There was also increasing resentment towards the Guardsmen as the days had progressed,<br />

as cited in the President’s Commission:<br />

Many students felt that the campus was their “turf.” Unclear about the authority vested in the<br />

National Guard by the governor, or indifferent to it, some also felt that their constitutional right to<br />

free assembly was being infringed upon. As they saw it, they had been ordered to disperse at a time<br />

when no rocks had been thrown and no other violence had been committed. (U.S. President’s<br />

Commission on Campus Unrest, 1970, p. 267).<br />

The congregation continued to toss rocks at the National Guard. Canisters of tear gas continued to be<br />

launched by the National Guard and then returned by students. Jeffrey Miller was one of the men who<br />

partook in casting back canisters of tear gas (U.S. President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, 1970). As<br />

the tension between the National Guard and students increased and conditions became worse, some<br />

students took the opportunity to leave the scene.<br />

More stones were tossed at the Guard. Then, the National Guard gunned down students. Four students<br />

died and nine students were injured. “Altogether between 61 and 67 shots were fired in a thirteen-second<br />

period” (Hensley & Lewis, 2010, p. 56). The four students who were killed were Jeffrey Glen Miller,<br />

William K. Schroeder, Sandra Lee Scheuer (Sandy), and Allison B. Krause. The nine students who suffered<br />

injuries were Joseph Lewis, Jr., Thomas V. Grace, John R. Cleary, Allen Michael Canfora, Dean R. Kahler,<br />

Douglas Alan Wrentmore, James Dennis Russell, Robert Follis Stamps, and Donald Scott Mackenzie.<br />

The National Guard claimed that they shot the students because they were in fear of their lives.<br />

However, many researchers have proven that all the students who suffered fatalities and injuries were<br />

nowhere near the Guardsmen at the time. The main members of the National Guard who did the shooting<br />

were Company A and Troop G (U.S. President’s Commission on Campus Unrest, 1970). The thirteen<br />

casualties by name, distance from National Guard, as well as deaths and injuries sustained were:<br />

241

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