Title: College Protesters
1PROTESTING
Against the Vietnam War
By Chloe Wernecke, Margie Bowen, and Alexa
Dumit-Sjoberg
2HEY, HEY, LBJ, HOW MANY KIDS DID YOU KILL
TODAY? Anti-war slogan
3Ohio was written by Neil Young after he learned
about the Massacre at Kent State University.
This song was the song of protest for the 1970s.
4As the war progressed, many people began to turn
against the government and the cause.
5Campus rallies were a huge part of the antiwar
movement.
They were powerful and intense, and the
government stopped them in any way they could.
6A common form of protest around colleges and
universities were teach-ins.
7In these teach-ins, students or other speakers
would gather on-site and hold conferences in
which they would speak out against the war.
8The Kent State Massacre was one of these college
rallies which turned wrong on May 4, 1970.
9Guards open fired on both protesters and innocent
bystanders, paralyzing one, wounding eight, and
killing four.
10Many men were against the draft and also the
unfairness of it
11Before the draft lottery, if you were rich enough
or had the right connections you could dodge the
draft.
12Yong men also protested by burning their draft
cards.
13Putting flowers in the guards guns was a
symbolic gesture that came up at protests.
14But protests werent always peaceful. Protesters
often threw rocks and empty tear gas canisters at
the policemen while swearing and harassing them.
15Police didnt treat the protesters with respect,
either. Peaceful protesters and bystanders were
often gassed and beaten before getting loaded
into police trucks and locked up.
16Controlling protesters was a problem for police
forces and national guardsmen across the country.
Many times, a peaceful protest turned very
violent very quickly.
17At rallies, protesters often chanted a phrase
over and over again to prove their point one
famous one was Hell no! We wont go!
18Not only hippies and students participated in
rallies. Many adults, even elderly people
participated.
19Even some Vietnam veterans protested against the
war.
20Marches took place across the nation, often in
big cities.
21City marches like these attracted an exceptional
number of people.
22But many protests took place on, around, or near
monuments in Washington D.C. because of the
greater attention.
23Many people were angered by the number of deaths
in Vietnam- here, protestors set up coffins in
front of the Capital.
24THE END
25Image Resources
Barr, Roger. The Vietnam War. San Diego Lucent
Books, 1991. Canafora, Alan. Kent State
Eyewitness, Victim, Expert. on-line
c2005 http//alancanfora.com/ Accessed May 25,
2005.
Crosby, Stills, and Nash. On-line Available at
http//www.therant.info/images/Album18b.jpg.
Accessed May 25, 2005.
Daugherty, Leo J. and Gregory Louis Mattison.
Nam- A Photographic History. New York Metro
Books, 2001.
Hippy Activism. On-Line Available
athttp//www.hippy.com/hippyquotes.htmprotest .
Accessed May 26, 2005
Lawson, Don. An Album of the Vietnam War. New
York Franklin Watts, 1986.
Lens, Sidney. Vietnam War on Two Fronts. New York
Lodestar Books, 1990
McCormick Louise, Anita. The Vietnam Antiwar
Movement. New Jersey, Enslow Publisher, 2000.
The National Constitutional Center. On-Line
Available at www.constitutioncenter.org/.
../cw12_12316.html. Accessed May 26, 2005
Nikosey, Tom. Crosby, Stills, and Nash.
on-line http//www.tomnikosey.com/csnlogo.htm
Accessed May 25, 2005
Times of Change Vietnam in the 60s. Iowa
Perfection Learning Co, 2001 United Media
Streaming Video. On-line Available at
http//www5.unitedstreaming.com/index.cfm .
Accessed May 24, 2005.