Wednesday, May 12, 2010

Annals of American Ingenuity: Term-limited memorials -- for when we get tired of remembering!

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Tired of remembering, you know, lots of old stuff that just takes up space in your brain and you didn't really care about that much to begin with? College of DuPage (COD) could be just the place for you!

by Ken

Just last week we were remembering the slaughter of students protest the American incursion into Cambodia at Kent State University by panicked (and carelessly -- or worse -- commanded) National Guardsmen on May 4, 1970. Our friend Bil has called attention to a wonderful little substory, from the suburban Chicago Daily Herald, with this note:
COD, College of Dupage in Illinois is arguably the largest junior college on the planet (Jim Belushi attended here) and they just CUT DOWN 4 trees planted as Kent State Memorials to MAKE WAY for a $225 million new project/building for "Homeland Security Training." CREEPY. They say the trees were "sickly" from some previous underground work, I don't believe it. And I suggest that aging trees were PERFECT MEMORIALS to the 4 who were cut down.

Here's the story:
College of DuPage removes Kent State memorial trees

By Jake Griffin | Daily Herald StaffContact writer
Published: 5/11/2010 11:22 AM

Four trees planted 40 years ago at the College of DuPage to honor students killed by National Guard troops at Kent State University in Ohio were recently removed.

College officials said the silver maples were dying and will be replaced. They were located next to where the college's new Homeland Security Education Center is being constructed, but college officials said Tuesday the trees' removal were not necessitated by the construction.

"Our landscaping team had found previous underground work had damaged their root structure," said Joe Moore, COD's associate vice president of external relations.

The college removed the trees three days after the 40th anniversary of the shootings that galvanized the country.

The trees were about 20 inches in diameter at the time they were cut down, Moore said. The homeland security building is the first phase of a proposed $225 million complex intended to make COD a public safety training hub.

Moore said COD President Robert Breuder met with three art faculty members to discuss using the trees to create a more permanent memorial. Moore added the college has committed $10,000 to pay for the creation of a new memorial and will match up to $5,000 more as well as plant four new trees to memorialize the May 4, 1970 tragedy.

The trees were planted on the western edge of the college's Glen Ellyn campus by COD faculty members following the shooting deaths of four unarmed Kent State students protesting the U.S. invasion of Cambodia during the Vietnam War. The Ohio National Guard also wounded nine others after being called in to quell the campus unrest by then-Gov. James Rhodes, according to the university's website. More than 60 bullets were fired in a 13-second period. Kent State students Jeffrey Miller, Allison Krause, Williams Schroeder and Sandra Scheuer were slain.

Plans for the permanent Kent State memorial at COD are in the "initial planning stages," said art professor Chuck Boone.

Boone and others were asked to find an artist to create the memorial that will use the wood from the silver maples. They will also help decide where the new memorial will be displayed. Boone said this is the first time the college has commissioned a sculpture or art piece with requirements on what material is to be used. Creation of the memorial is expected to begin in the fall.

Boone said the memorial itself will be a teaching tool.

"It's important to remember what happened at Kent State, not just the four people's lives that were lost, but what brought us to that shooting," he said. "That shooting was based partly on fear of dissent and that's something we need to teach to."

We humans aren't really all that good at remembering, nor are we by and large all that keen to remember. The COD people are pioneers here. Just think how this might resonate through history.

"Remember the Maine -- for a while"

"December 7, 1941, a date that will live in infamy, leastwise for a few years"

"Never forget . . . uh, what were we talking about?"

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4 Comments:

At 8:34 PM, Anonymous Bil said...

Thanks Keni,

These trees were planted on teh edge of the COD property and were called "within the footprint" of the $225 "Homeland Security Training Building" construction project. Knowing a little about construction workers, they HATE working around things and prefer to raze everything down past the topsoil to clay if you let them.

I note also that they waited until after May 4 to cut them down- the day the school paper closed May 7, and school is largely over.

I think the idea of a permanent memorial of course is timely NOW and I believe the story was updated to ADD that wood from the trees had been saved for the possible art/memorial permanent memorial project. We will see.

It just hit me WRONG. That a Memorial to one of the most horrible US shooting/massacres committed by the National Guard/State is cut down TO MAKE WAY for a "Homeland Security Training Building", which in theory would do everything POSSIBLE to try and PREVENT a similar Kent State Disaster. In fact you would like to think that the Homeland Security People would WANT that memorial there to remember?

onward...

 
At 4:00 AM, Blogger Bula said...

Not surprising,

DuPage County is as Red as it gets.

Those damn Hippies got what they deserved!

 
At 10:19 PM, Anonymous Bil said...

Has Keni gotten appropriate Props for this "annals" title? Great title in total.

Well Done man! I am going to formally release you from all the long hair prizes I have won that you have never sent me:)

 
At 11:42 PM, Blogger alf said...

how is death getting what hey deserved when the were protesting the secret killing of others by "the governement of the people"

 

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