UPDATE: Please note that the May 4 50th Commemoration Weekend events originally scheduled for May 1-4, 2020, have been canceled. The commemoration will be a virtual program online. See the May 4 50th Commemoration website at www.kent.edu/may4kentstate50 for more information.

Unity, Reconciliation and Dangers of Polarization Featured Along With Special Guests and Programs Focusing on Activism, History and Legacy of May 4, 1970



Jane Fonda, Laurence Tribe and Eric Foner are among those who will participate



After months of planning, Kent State University’s May 4 50th Commemoration Advisory Committee has released details of programs scheduled for the 50th Commemoration of the May 4, 1970, shootings at Kent State.

The commemoration represents a significant milestone in the history and legacy of May 4, 1970. For the first time, Kent State students, faculty, staff and university leaders, along with May 4 survivors and family members, united around a commitment to forever honor the day when the Ohio National Guard fired on students during an anti-war protest, killing four and wounding nine. The collaboration of groups previously divided on May 4 issues personifies a spirit of unity and reconciliation that has become an integral part of the history and legacy of the Kent State shootings.

In recent years, longtime May 4 activists, survivors and wounded students began working in concert with university leaders to build a May 4 Memorial, place markers where the slain students fell, establish the May 4 Visitors Center and secure the May 4 site’s designation as a National Historic Landmark. The formation of the May 4 50th Commemoration Advisory Committee was the next logical step in reconciliation and working together to plan for this milestone event.

“It is our great responsibility and honor to welcome the nation and world to our campus,” said Kent State President Todd Diacon. “Together we will remember Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer and William Schroeder, and honor Kent State and community members who have kept their memories alive for 50 years. We will listen to, and learn from, noted speakers, experts and performers, all while we absorb the lessons of the importance of free speech, the need for civil dialogue and the dangers of polarization.”

During the current academic year, Kent State has held more than 80 educational programs, special events, speakers, symposia, conferences, exhibits and performances to help students, the community and national audiences learn about the history and legacy of May 4, 1970.

The weekend of special events for the 50th Commemoration will take place over four days from Friday, May 1, through Monday, May 4, with each day emphasizing a different focus of the May 4 story:

Friday, May 1 – The Vietnam Anti-War Movement

Saturday, May 2 – Impact of Student Activism

Sunday, May 3 – Remembering the 50-Year May 4 Legacy

Monday, May 4 – A Commemoration to Honor and Remember

The May 4 50th Commemoration Advisory Committee’s 18 members consist of faculty, university leaders, students, May 4 witnesses and survivors. The members’ experience and expertise spanned five decades and brought a variety of viewpoints to the planning table, resulting in what will be a meaningful and memorable historic event.

“We were committed to finding meaningful ways to recognize the significance of student protest in 1970 and its direct relation to the expansion of the Vietnam War into Cambodia,” said Chic Canfora, shooting survivor and member of the commemoration committee. “While our personal experiences and points of view varied, we shared a common belief in the vital role of dissent in a democracy and the university’s responsibility to promote and protect freedom of speech.”

“We developed three pillars that guided all of our planning: honoring and remembering those killed and wounded; educating about May 4, 1970, and the dangers of polarizing rhetoric and divisive discourse; and above all, inspiring current and future students to be leaders in peaceful conflict resolution and reconciliation,” said Rod Flauhaus, project manager for the May 4 50th Commemoration.

Flauhaus was also a student leader of the May 4 Task Force in the 1980s and led the group’s planning for the 15th commemoration.

Kent State’s special yearlong observance will culminate with a weekend of special events, speakers, exhibits and tours marking the 50th anniversary of the tragic events of May 4, 1970. A few programming highlights are noted below; please check the May 4 50th Commemoration website for updates and additional information.



FRIDAY, MAY 1 – FOCUS: VIETNAM ANTI-WAR MOVEMENT 1968-1970

Opening Event

Commemoration Weekend kicks off at noon on the Commons at Kent State with a program remembering two student rallies on May 1, 1970, that set into motion events that would change public opinion about the Vietnam War.

Panel: The Impact of the Anti-War Movement

As the Vietnam War continued to escalate with the invasion of Cambodia, resistance to the war grew across college campuses nationwide. In Kent, anti-war students focused their efforts on opposing the Cambodian invasion and Black United Students centered on the disparate treatment of African Americans on campus and in the wider society. This panel discussion explores how student activists as well as rank-and-file soldiers and military veterans influenced public opinion and helped force an end to the conflict and redress racial inequities.

Panel: WITNESS – The Pivotal Role of Students in Documenting the May 4 Shootings

Through this panel discussion and a companion exhibit, “WITNESS” tells the story of the events of May 4, 1970, through the eyes of the Kent State students and student journalists who experienced them. Their words and photographs offer compelling and courageous eyewitness perspectives that served as an early and essential visual history of May 4.

Documentary Film Series

“The War at Home” – Glenn Silber, Co-Director

“Fire in the Heartland” – Danny Miller, Director

Screenings of the documentaries will be hosted by the respective filmmaker and will be followed by an audience discussion. Both films also will be shown throughout the weekend.



SATURDAY, MAY 2 – FOCUS: IMPACT OF STUDENT ACTIVISM

Global Voices of Student Activism at Kent State

After returning to their home countries, many international students translate their Kent State learning experiences into social engagement and activism. This panel discussion showcases extraordinary stories of students and alumni who have contributed to solving environmental issues and social conflicts at home.

Untold Personal Stories of May 4, 1970

Kent State alumni and former students share their previously untold personal stories of May 4, 1970, in a compelling panel discussion.

50th Commemoration Concert to Benefit the May 4 Legacy Scholarships

Kent State will hold a special benefit concert with proceeds to support the newly created May 4 Legacy Scholarships honoring the four students killed on May 4, 1970. More details and artist lineup will be announced soon.



SUNDAY, MAY 3 – FOCUS: REMEMBERING THE 50-YEAR LEGACY OF MAY 4

Dedication Ceremony: Markers Honoring the Nine Students Wounded on May 4, 1970

Kent State dedicates the installation of nine individual bronze markers remembering the wounded students – Alan Canfora, John Cleary, Thomas Grace, Dean Kahler, Joseph Lewis, Donald MacKenzie, James Russell, Robert Stamps and Douglas Wrentmore – and marking the location where each was shot on May 4, 1970.

Keynote Luncheon Speaker: Eminent Historian Eric Foner

Eric Foner, DeWitt Clinton Professor Emeritus of History at Columbia University, will be featured. He is one of the nation’s leading historians and a Bancroft, Lincoln and Pulitzer prize-winning scholar on divisive conflicts in American history.

Educational Forums and Panels

Several panel discussions during the day will focus on topics including the evolution of the May 4 Task Force, the 1985-1990 May 4 Memorial process and the legal aftermath of the May 4 shootings.



Presidential Speaker Series: Activist and Actress Jane Fonda

Activist and Academy Award-winning actress Jane Fonda is the featured Presidential Speaker for the May 4 Commemoration weekend. She will discuss her life in social activism and reflect on the history and legacy of the events of May 4, 1970. The event is free and open to the public, but advance reserved tickets are required.

Annual Candlelight March and Vigil

The annual candlelight march and silent vigil have been meaningful traditions since 1971, honoring the students who were killed or wounded on May 4, 1970. The candlelight march begins at 11 p.m., and the silent vigil is held from midnight until the noon May 4 Commemoration ceremony.



MONDAY, MAY 4 – FOCUS: 50TH COMMEMORATION TO HONOR AND REMEMBER

Honoring the Faculty Marshals and Faculty of 1970

This special breakfast honors the faculty marshals and the faculty of 1970 who prevented further bloodshed on May 4 and assisted students in continuing their studies after the closure of the university. Their courage, sacrifice and support continue to inspire to this day.

Commemoration Ceremony

The yearlong 50th Commemoration of May 4, 1970, culminates in this meaningful ceremony honoring and remembering lives lost and forever changed. This milestone program pays homage to the May 4 legacy and includes reflections; special recognitions; tributes to fallen students Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer and William Schroeder; the reading of the chronology; music; and a symbolic moment of reflection at 12:24 p.m., the exact time when the shootings occurred.

Keynote speaker is Laurence H. Tribe, the Carl M. Loeb University Professor and Professor of Constitutional Law at Harvard University, who is widely regarded as one of the world’s foremost experts on constitutional law.



ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

Details of the 50th Commemoration weekend can be found on the 50th Commemoration website and Facebook page. A web app is also available on iTunes and the Google Play app store by searching “Kent State May 4th.”

Please check the website often for updates and releases of additional programming. Most events are free and open to the public. Guests seeking lodging are encouraged to book reservations early at area hotels. For ticketing and general event information, please call 330-672-50TH (5084) or email may4ksu@kent.edu.

For information and interview/speaking requests related to the 50th Commemoration, May 4 milestones, May 4 survivors, victims and family members, please contact:

Rod Flauhaus

Project Manager, 50th Commemoration of May 4, 1970

rflauha1@kent.edu

330-672-2423

Roseann “Chic” Canfora

May 4 Eyewitness and Survivor

rcanfora@kent.edu

For information and interview/speaking requests for Kent State leaders and staff, university protocols during May 4 weekend and media credentials, please contact:

Eric Mansfield

Executive Director, University Media Relations

emansfie@kent.edu

330-672-2797

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