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"Super-Right" Heavy Beef "Super-Right" Heavy Beef "Super-Right" "Super-Right"
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16
Wednesday, May 6, 1970
Campus ;
At Kent
Deserted
By ROBERT E. CORBETT
KENT, Ohio (UPI)-The Na
tional Guardsmen didn’t want
to come. The campus didn’t
want them. But four Kent State
University students are dead.l
and investigators today still:
were trying to find out why.
On the campus, deserted;
except for the guardsmen,;
police and sheriffs deputies,
investigators dug for clues into -
what triggered the fatal shoot- ‘
ing by guardsmen of four ’
students Monday at an antiwar '
demonstration.
About half the 800 guardsmen;
were to pull out today. No one;
would say when the rest would;
leave, or when Kent State will
open again.
“We should not reopen until
normalcy prevails,” said
Robert I. White, the university
president. His faculty, 150 of
whom met in a church Tuesday
night, say they will not teach
“in circumstances which are
likely to lead to the death and
woundings of our students.”
Investigations Started
The investigations have start
ed, and they may be lengthy.
In Washington, the Justice
Department confirmed it had
personnel on campus to deter
mine if any federal laws were
violated.
The National Guard, police
and university all were investi
gating.
It was not yet determined
whether a shot from a sniper
set off the fatal response from
the National Guard, although
Brig. Gen. Robert Canterbury,
commander of the campus
troops, said Tuesday “we know
the troops were shot at.”
Separate funeral arrange
ments have been made for the
victims, Allison Krause, 19, of
Pittsburgh; Sandra Lee
Scheuer, 20, of Youngstown,
Ohio; Jeffrey Miller, 19, of
Plainview, N.Y., and William
K. Schroeder, 19, of Lorain,
Ohio.
Ten Hospitalized
Three of 10 wounded students
remain hospitalized in guarded
condition at Robinson Memorial
Hospital in nearby Ravenna.
The American Civil Liberties
Union asked for the dismissal
of Adjutant General Sylvester
T. Del Corso, commander of
the Ohio National Guard. The
ACLU, in a letter to Gov.
James A. Rhodes, charged the
guardsmen “were specifically
acting contrary to accept
military practices and regula
tions.”
But, said Ist Sgt. Charles
Householder, “we didn’t come
here to kill.”
“I’ve never seen any human
being act like those students
did,” Householder said. “I feel
sorry for the president of this
university and the professors if
these are the caliber of people
they have to deal with.”
Taft
Leads
Glenn
By United Press International
Alabama’s voters will have to
go to the polls again next
month to pass on George C.
Wallace’s political future.
Ohio’s voters gave a slim lead
to U.S. Rep. Robert Taft Jr.,
and chose a Cleveland million
aire over former astronaut
John Glenn in picking the
lineup for November’s Senate
race.
The Alabama and Ohio races
topped a round of primary
elections Tuesday which also
saw Indiana’s 11 incumbent
congressmen nominated to
stand for reelection in the fall.
Taft, held the lead over j
Ohio’s two-term Gov. James A. I
Rhodes in a battle to represent I
the Republican party for the j,
seat Taft’s father once held for j
18 years.
On the Democratic side, I
wealthy attorney Howard Metz-1
enbaum came from behind to I
edge space hero Glenn. The I
seat is currently held by Sen. |
Stephen M. Young, a Democrat, |
who is retiring.
Ohio’s gubernatorial lineup in I
the fall election will be state I
Auditor Roger Cloud for the)
Republicans, and former Rep. j
John J. Gilligan for the!
Democrats.
Alabama’s seven-way race to!
pick a Democratic candidate!
for governor would wind up|
with no one candidate getting*
enough votes. The leading!
candidates turned out to bS
Wallace, the former governo®
and 1969 third party president
tial candidate, and the current
governor, Albert Brewer.