Praise Jesus! An actual recording of our Godly National Guard shooting and killing the wild hippies (who were at the time on a 4 day drug-induced sex-crazed riot) has been located. Of course the liebrals won't be happy until they dig up President Nixon's corpse and put it on trial for "crimes against humanity" and other such jew nonsense. Don't you just know that the ACLU is going to be beating their drums over this one!? I'm sure the demoncrats are going to use this issue to try and elect the communist Hellery Cliton to office....
I hope THIS recording is made into CD's so that we can play them at all of our Sunday School classes and Summer Gun and Bible Camp!
Notice how this whiney homer who claims to have been wrist-shot is holding his whiney news conference on the #1 commie holiday of the year.
I hope THIS recording is made into CD's so that we can play them at all of our Sunday School classes and Summer Gun and Bible Camp!
Kent State victim to release recording
CLEVELAND -- A man who was shot in the wrist when National Guard troops killed four Kent State University students during an anti-war demonstration says he has found an audiotape that reveals someone gave a command to fire.
Canfora planned to release CD copies of the recording Tuesday, May 1 at a news conference at Kent State, about 30 miles southeast of Cleveland.
Four Kent State students were killed and nine were wounded in the 1970 clash, which followed several days of Vietnam War protests. Four years later, eight Guardsmen were acquitted of federal civil rights charges.
Canfora said he recently requested a copy of the nearly 30-minute tape from Yale University, where a government copy has been stored in an archive.
He said that just before the 13-second volley of gunfire, a voice on the tape is heard yelling, "Right here! Get Set! Point! Fire!"
"I was shaking when I first heard it," Canfora said. "I shed tears."
After the shooting, the FBI investigated whether an order had been given to fire, and said it could only speculate. One theory was that a Guardsman panicked or fired intentionally at a student and that others fired when they heard the shot.
Canfora said the reel-to-reel audio recording was made by Terry Strubbe, a student who placed a microphone at a windowsill of his dormitory that overlooked the anti-war rally. Strubbe turned the tape over to the FBI, which kept a copy.
Strubbe, who still lives near Kent, keeps the original tape in a safe deposit box, said Canfora, who heads a nonprofit organization at Kent State that leads a candlelight vigil every May 4 to mark the anniversary of the shootings.
CLEVELAND -- A man who was shot in the wrist when National Guard troops killed four Kent State University students during an anti-war demonstration says he has found an audiotape that reveals someone gave a command to fire.
Canfora planned to release CD copies of the recording Tuesday, May 1 at a news conference at Kent State, about 30 miles southeast of Cleveland.
Four Kent State students were killed and nine were wounded in the 1970 clash, which followed several days of Vietnam War protests. Four years later, eight Guardsmen were acquitted of federal civil rights charges.
Canfora said he recently requested a copy of the nearly 30-minute tape from Yale University, where a government copy has been stored in an archive.
He said that just before the 13-second volley of gunfire, a voice on the tape is heard yelling, "Right here! Get Set! Point! Fire!"
"I was shaking when I first heard it," Canfora said. "I shed tears."
After the shooting, the FBI investigated whether an order had been given to fire, and said it could only speculate. One theory was that a Guardsman panicked or fired intentionally at a student and that others fired when they heard the shot.
Canfora said the reel-to-reel audio recording was made by Terry Strubbe, a student who placed a microphone at a windowsill of his dormitory that overlooked the anti-war rally. Strubbe turned the tape over to the FBI, which kept a copy.
Strubbe, who still lives near Kent, keeps the original tape in a safe deposit box, said Canfora, who heads a nonprofit organization at Kent State that leads a candlelight vigil every May 4 to mark the anniversary of the shootings.

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