Gardner said when the speeches were done, the two men called, “On to action!” and someone at the front of the crowd screamed, “On to Carr’s Hill!”
The crowd started to move and there was very little security evident. A graduate student who was serving as a student marshal recognized Gardner and ran to him. “Will you come up to Carr’s Hill with me? I think there could be some bad stuff happening,” he said.
They sprinted the mile to the president’s residence, looked behind them, and spied through the spring foliage a mass of people approaching with torches. “We stood there and watched as hundreds and hundreds we could perceive beyond the leaves coming towards us,” he said. As the crowd drew closer to Carr’s Hill it became apparent there were about 1,000 people, including students and others.
鶹ƽ president at the time, Edgar Shannon, had three young children Gardner believed were inside the residence. He and the other approximately 30 assembled students, including several varsity athletes, formed a human chain in front of the house. “As we were doing this, the crowd was moving up the steps to Carr’s Hill and then they got about 10, 15 feet away from us and stopped,” Gardner said.
Kunstler was in the crowd with a bullhorn “just stirring the pot and trying to create as much of a frenzy as he could in the crowd,” he said.
The two sides drew near to each other, staring each other down. Then, a person defending the house approached the mob and said, “Look, the president’s family is in there. He has a number of small children. I think you’re really frightening them very much. It would be in everybody’s interest for you to go elsewhere tonight before something really bad happens,” Gardner said.
The person rejoined the human chain and “everybody, I can remember, tensed up. I could feel our arms locked. Everybody was tense,” he said. Eventually, Gardner heard a voice in the mob call, “On to Maury Hall!” At the time, the building was the headquarters of 鶹ƽ Navy ROTC unit and had been a target of previous anti-war demonstrations.
The crowd withdrew from Carr’s Hill and marched to Maury Hall. They were stopped by police as they attempted to burn down the building, setting a mattresses in the basement on fire.
“That was an incredible evening and one that I remember like it was yesterday,” Gardner recounted. “But, it’s also an evening that resonates with what is going on, I believe today, on Grounds and on many college campuses. Where these campuses have become politicized and where people’s agendas, political and social agendas, have taken precedence over collegiality, community and camaraderie.”
Gardner said he thinks is very important that everyone understand “intelligent people are not necessarily going to agree with one another.
“We in the community hopefully have more in common than the differences we have,” he said, adding it is worthwhile for everyone to be civil and to listen to one another. “Because that’s what we’re here for I think as a university, aren’t we? We’re here to hear different points of view and hopefully find common ground.”
President Jim Ryan concluded the program by thanking Gardner and all of the speakers who participated in Double Take and embraced the theme of bridge building “during a time when we need it most.”
The entire program can be viewed .
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