By Frank Gormlie
Monday, May 4 – Introduction
For at least an entire generation of Americans, the day May 4, 1970, will always be associated with the shootings of unarmed students by National Guardsmen on the campus of Kent State University in Ohio. Four students were killed – two had nothing to do with the protests, one was an ROTC cadet – and nine others were wounded, including one permanently paralyzed. The shootings will be eternally remembered as a grim stain upon US history.
Kent State University – Ohio
Students just waking up Monday morning or coming onto the Kent State campus for the first time since the protests the week before, were shocked and angered to find their school occupied by hundreds of uniformed and armed National Guardsmen. Guard troops were positioned at campus entrances, at buildings and at the remains of the ROTC building that had been torched and destroyed Saturday night during protests. Late in the morning, an informal, word-of-mouth call to assemble at the Commons area for a noon rally spread like wildfire. When the Victory Bell rang at 11:58, 2,000 to 3,000 students – including Jeff Miller and Alison Krause – gathered to continue the protest of the war and to protest the presence of National Guardsmen on their campus. Another 1,000 students were also in the area, either in between classes like Sandy Scheuer or on their way to lunch. Some, like Bill Schroeder, an ROTC cadet on the way to class, had stopped by to check out the demonstration.
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By Colleen O’Connor
The leaked draft of the U.S. Supreme Court’s tentative decision to overturn Roe v. Wade may have just doomed the GOP and uplifted the Democrats.
At its base, the Justice Alito decision is not just an assault on the “rule of law,” the sanctity of legal precedence, and the appearance (if never the reality) of an unbiased Court bench, but it has now eclipsed the news coverage of the brutal Ukraine war; the omnipresence of Donald Trump-isms; and to what end?
The legal, cultural, economic, race and gender-biased ghosts—still lingering from the 1850s U.S. Civil War—are rising from their graves—to fight again.
Watch as these Civil War brawls play out in present day 2022 and beyond.
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By Joni Halpern
Very few Americans know the history of the Roe v. Wade decision, either legally, socially, or medically.
But the short history is that throughout the evolution of the human species, women have never been the sole determinants of whether they become pregnant. Instead, they have most commonly been treated as the wrongdoers, the flawed, the negligent, the sinful perpetrators of unwanted births.
Yet, from ancient times, the real determinants of pregnancy have been religion, culture, and law, which have either kept women ignorant of their bodies or burdened them with guilt at the mere thought of saying “no” to men under religious or cultural norms that expected them to acquiesce to unprotected intimacy or outright efforts to assault or impregnate them.
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by Ernie McCray
I don’t know if there is anything like the joy of being on stage.
Such were my thoughts after the last time I was on one, doing “Still, We Rise,” a Poetry and Jazz Show, at the Conrad Prebys Music Center at UC San Diego, with some amazingly talented people the world should know.
Cecil Lytle, a concert jazz pianist of renown and professor emeritus at UCSD, produced and performed in the show.
The Rob Thorsen Quartet and jazz vocalist, Steph Johnson, did most of the music for the show.
Brilliant local actor, Walter Murray, did a cameo that added a nice touch to the show.
Yolanda Franklin, one of the most talented thespians I know, and I, read our poetry and the poems of Langston Hughes, Amanda Gorman and Maya Angelou – along with a few words from Martin Luther King’s heart and soul.
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Most Americans say the Supreme Court should uphold Roe v. Wade, the landmark ruling that established a constitutional right to abortion, a Washington Post-ABC News poll conducted last week finds.
With the Supreme Court poised to overturn the right to abortion, the survey finds that 54 percent of Americans think the 1973 Roe decision should be upheld while 28 percent believe it should be overturned — a roughly 2-to-1 margin.
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