Members of the 两性色午夜 University community and people around the world will gather virtually for the 51st Commemoration of May 4, 1970, the day the Ohio National Guard fired on 两性色午夜 students during an anti-war protest, killing four students and wounding nine other students. Due to the global pandemic, this year鈥檚 May 4 Commemoration events will again be virtual.
To honor and remember the events that occurred on that tragic day, virtual programming hosted by 两性色午夜 students, faculty and staff is scheduled from April 30 through May 4 and will feature virtual screenings of 鈥淔ire in the Heartland: 两性色午夜, May 4 and Student Protest in America,鈥 panel discussions with special guest speakers, PeaceJam keynote speaker and Nobel Peace Prize winner Rigoberta Mench煤 Tum, and a presentation from the student leaders of the May 4 Task Force.
View the full schedule of events on the May 4 Commemoration website.
The May 4 Candlelight Walk and Vigil first occurred in 1971 and are a cornerstone of the May 4 Commemoration. This year, the university will honor these traditions virtually. Details regarding the virtual May 4 Candlelight Vigil can be found on the May 4 Commemoration website.
The virtual May 4 Commemoration will be a special video tribute premiering at noon Tuesday, May 4, on the May 4 51st Commemoration site. The video will focus on the nine wounded students: Alan Canfora, John Cleary, Thomas Grace, Dean Kahler, Joseph Lewis, Donald Mackenzie, James Russell, Robert Stamps and Douglas Wrentmore. The video features nine new markers that have been installed on the May 4 site indicating where each of the wounded students was located when hit by gunfire.
The markers for the nine wounded students join the four markers installed in 1999 in remembrance of Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer and William Schroeder, the four students killed on May 4, 1970. Other physical markers on the May 4 site include the B鈥檔ai B鈥檙ith Hillel Marker, the May 4 Memorial, the Ohio Historical Marker, the May 4 Visitors Center, the May 4 Walking Tour, the National Register of Historic Places plaque and the National Historic Landmark plaque.
鈥淭oday we unveil markers for students wounded on May 4, 1970,鈥 两性色午夜 President Todd Diacon said. 鈥淭hese markers represent the latest addition to the National Historic Landmark site and provide greater insight to the events that happened on May 4, 1970.鈥
Roseann 鈥淐hic鈥 Canfora, Ph.D., a May 4 witness, also expressed the importance of the new markers.
鈥淥ne of the residual effects of being a shooting survivor is the re-emergence of the sights, sounds and memories of our traumatic experience when we gather for vigils or memorials,鈥 said Chic Canfora, whose brother, Alan, was one of the nine wounded students. 鈥淥ur annual commemorations on May 4 have served as a path to healing for many of us, and milestone markers on the shooting site have enabled us to set in stone and to manage the heartbreak we will carry for a lifetime.鈥
The virtual commemoration will also remember and recognize Alan Canfora, who died in December 2020 at the age of 71. Over the past 50 years, Alan Canfora was the primary voice of May 4, never allowing the shootings and the four killed to be forgotten. To honor his life and legacy, the has been created. (Read about the inaugural recipients of the Alan Canfora Activism Scholarship.)
鈥淭his year will be the most difficult for me personally, and I imagine it will be for Tom Grace and many others, because it will be our first commemoration without Alan,鈥 Chic Canfora said. 鈥淢ore than anyone, my brother made sure we gathered every year to commemorate and educate the world about May 4. He embodied and modeled for us the strength it takes to turn our pain into purpose.鈥
The virtual commemoration will also include a special recognition of gratitude to the faculty marshals 鈥 Seymour Baron, Stan Christensen, G. Dennis Cooke, Norman Duffy, Glenn Frank, John Hubbell, Harold Kitner, Jerry Lewis, Myron Lunine, Milton Manes, Carl Moore, Raymond Myers, Steven Sharoff and other faculty members 鈥 whose heroic efforts prevented more bloodshed on May 4, 1970.
For more information about May 4, 1970, visit www.kent.edu/may-4-1970.
For more information about the virtual May 4 Commemoration events, visit www.kent.edu/may-4-1970/51st-commemoration.
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Media Contacts:
Eric Mansfield, emansfie@kent.edu, 330-672-2797
Emily Vincent, evincen2@kent.edu, 330-672-8595