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  1. On May 4th, 1970, thirteen young Americans were shot down by the National Guard in a shocking act of violence against unarmed students. This sparked the largest student strikes and student protests in history that swept across 3,000 campuses nationwide, punctuated ten days later by the shooting of African American students at Jackson State ...

  2. 4 mag 2021 · A Tribute and Memoriam. To one of the longest and most hard-fought post 1960 student protests for truth, civil rights, memory and justice in America 7 years after the May 4, 1970 Shootings at Kent State. Many know the story of the shootings at Kent State.

  3. 5 mag 2020 · With Ray Brown, Chris Butler, Chic Canfora, Gerald Casale. This is the story of Kent State University students who stood up to question racism, violence against protesters, and the long American involvement in the Vietnam War. On May 4, 1970, the National Guard shot thirteen of them, killed four, and all were forever changed.

    • (24)
    • 2 min
    • Daniel Miller
  4. It represented state violence against the student voices of protest against the continuing racist violence against African Americans in the United States and the perpetration of one of the most corrupt, terrible, and violent wars in US history waged against the Vietnamese people where 58,000 US Soldiers and over 3 million Vietnamese were killed.

  5. On May 4th, 1970, thirteen of these young Americans were shot down by the National Guard in a shocking act of violence against unarmed students. Four, Jeffery Miller, Sandy Scheuer, Bill Shroeder and Allison Krause, were killed.

  6. 4 mag 2024 · Getty Images. (Credit: Getty Images) Fifty-four years ago, four students were shot by the National Guard during an anti-Vietnam War protest at Kent State university in Ohio – a tragedy that...

  7. A. The Kent State shootings, also known as the May 4 massacre and the Kent State massacre, were the killings of four and wounding of nine other unarmed Kent State University students by the Ohio National Guard on May 4, 1970 in Kent, Ohio, 40 miles south of Cleveland.