OHIO’s founders successfully lobbied not only for the first university in the Northwest Territory but encouraged schools and the means of education as essential to the success of self-government. In Ohio University, 1804-2004: The Spirit of a Singular Place, Betty Hollow, MED ’77, documents the first student “riot” at OHIO occurring in 1826 when President Robert Wilson returned a literary society member’s unsatisfactory composition for correction. Decades of OHIO students from the 1970s through the 1990s likely remember lively debates on the College Green with the evangelist known as Brother Jed. In 2019, OHIO debuted its Challenging Dialogues for Contemporary Issues Lecture Series, seeking to foster understanding of complex issues and challenge our worldviews.
On OHIO’s campuses today, students can be found voicing their concerns on issues at the University, organizing and participating in annual Take Back the Night marches and Pride Month events, and championing the Me Too and Black Lives Matter movements.
In advocating for justice and change, OHIO students of the early 21st century are continuing the fight for causes that 50 years ago this past spring culminated in the closing of hundreds of campuses across the nation.
Then-President Claude Sowle announce the closing of Ohio University on May 15, 1970 – 11 days after members of the National Guard opened fire on a crowd at Kent State University protesting the Vietnam War, killing four students, injuring nine others and sparking increasingly violent protests at college campuses nationwide. An apex in one of the most contentious eras in modern American history, the protests were about much more than an escalating and unpopular war and an increasing mistrust of government. From 1968 through May 1970, students were demanding to be heard on issues that mattered to them.
A look back at two years of student activism that culminated in a history-making end to the school year