Video: May 4 Witness, Tucson Shooting Victim Speaks at Kent State

                                by Megan Rozsa, kent.patch.com
May 5th 2011                                                                    
                                                                                
         

As the world around him went gray, and people morphed into scrambling blobs, 
Randy Gardner remembered where he watched this scene unfold before.

Gardner spoke Wednesday at the 41st commemoration of the May 4, 1970, shootings 
at Kent State University. Gardner witnessed the May 4 shootings, where four 
students — Sandra Scheuer, Bill Schroeder, Allison Krause and Jeffrey Miller — 
were killed and nine were wounded. He escaped unhurt.

Gardner became a victim 40 years later during the Jan. 8 shooting of Arizona 
Sen. Gabrielle Giffords.

His reason for coming to Kent State University to study was simple. He wanted 
to get away from home, and he didn't want to be in the Vietnam War.

"I remember finding myself running through that practice football field," 
Gardner said. "When the (Ohio) National Guard turned around in unison and began 
shooting, the disbelief, shock and horror ... We scrambled."

Gardner and his classmates learned what bullets can do to bodies that day, and 
he realized that the war had come home to Kent.

"How did I deal with it? Intelligence and maturity helps," Gardner said. "I 
know I carried around a low level of anger for many years. Sometime after my 
sophomore year, I felt more and more embittered and resentful to Kent State and 
Ohio."

Sometime after that, Gardner moved out to Oregon with his significant other, he 
said. He had always wanted to move out West, and his anger was a good enough 
reason to leave.

Soon after, he moved his family to Tucson, AZ. Forty years passed.

"I had heard that Gabrielle Giffords was going to be out at a supermarket and I 
wanted to see her," Gardner said Wednesday. "As I was walking up to get in 
line, she was walking up beside me and she nodded at me. She was beautiful and 
attractive."

Once in line, Gardner struck up an engaging conversation with an elderly woman. 
They lost track of the world around them.

"We weren't paying attention to the environment and then I heard a 'pop' and 
several more 'pop, pop, pops,'" Gardner said. "I remembered her asking what was 
going on and I told her 'we've got to get out of here.'"

An emotional Gardner recalled his state of panic and said his "vision collapsed 
and everything disappeared." He paused.

"People were falling and crying," he said, pausing again. "I turned around and 
got shot in the foot. I thought that if I tried to turn around to see what was 
going on, I would get shot. So I hunkered down and walked out of the area.

"Three people died in front of me. Three people died behind me," he said.

Suddenly, Gardner saw color again and he watched people scrambling to hide 
behind cars when he realized "I've seen this before."

Eventually, the bullets stopped flying and a Walgreens worker helped Gardner to 
safety. Today he walks with a barely noticeable limp.

"We tolerate violence in America to a point that is unacceptable," Gardner 
said. "We need to get off thinking we can't do anything about this. We can 
tighten laws."

After Tucson, one of the wounded victims of May 4 reached out to Gardner and 
helped him cope and reconcile his feelings toward Kent State.

"This is truly important that we remember," Gardner said of the May 4, 1970, 
shootings. "When death is caused by human design and accountability goes 
unanswered for decades, our heartache is just prolonged."

Other speakers at the commemoration included:Erin McKay, who gave a tribute to 
Sandra Scheuer; Jim Mueller, who gave a tribute to Bill Schroeder; Jennifer 
Schwartz-Wright, who gave a tribute to Allison Krause; William Whitaker, who 
gave a tribute to Jeffrey Miller; Stuart Allen talked about audio forensics; 
and Idris Kabir Syed, who gave a tribute to Gene Young.

                                                                                
                                                                                
                                                        

Original Page: 
http://kent.patch.com/articles/video-may-4-witness-tuscon-shooting-victim-speaks-at-kent-state

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