Student protest at Illinois Institute of Technology, 1970
12018-03-22T17:19:13+00:00Rachel Boyled2c46c4488e60c5e71cd5e6aeda2b0759286c9e671Photograph of Illinois Institute of Technology president John Rettaliata at an open meeting with students and faculty regarding the student protests that occurred on IIT's campus following the fatal shooting of four students at Kent State University by the Ohio National Guard on May 4, 1970.2018-03-22T17:19:13+00:00Chicago (Ill.)Kent State ShootingsKentOhio1970; College students--political activity; Illinois Institute of Technology--Student strike1970; Chicago (Ill.)0240509_0021970John T. Rettaliata student protest photographs, Illinois Institute of TechnologyIllinois Institute of TechnologyRachel Boyled2c46c4488e60c5e71cd5e6aeda2b0759286c9e6
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1media/IIT cropped.jpgmedia/IIT cropped.jpg2018-03-22T17:19:01+00:00Illinois Institute of Technology, 197019image_header2018-03-27T21:07:41+00:0041.834249, -87.6278271970
Challenging Order on Campus
IN THE POSTWAR PERIOD, THE ILLINOIS INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY (IIT) EXEMPLIFIED MODERNIST IDEALS. The university gained national attention for its research and engineering programs and boasted a campus designed by none other than Ludwig Mies van der Rohe. Although African Americans (like elsewhere [link]) pushed the predominantly-white institution to engage with the needs of black students and the surrounding Bronzeville neighborhood, the campus remained relatively free of protest through the 1960s. That ended on May 4, 1970, when Ohio National Guardsmen opened fire on anti-war student protestors at Kent State University, killing four students and injuring nine more. Outrage swept campuses across the nation, including IIT. ON MAY 7, IIT STUDENTS BEGAN OCCUPYING the hallway in front of President John Rettaliata's office, urging the university to take a definitive stand in opposition to the Vietnam War and the violence at Kent State. Rettaliata spoke with students but refused to issue a statement. The following day, students continued staging protests against the modernist backdrop of Perlstein Hall. Rettaliata agreed to an open meeting that afternoon in the building's auditorium, where he answered student questions and upheld his refusal to deliver a political statement on behalf of IIT. Afterward, Rettaliata secured an injunction against protest leaders, even alleging that some of them were outside agitators. The protests quickly dissipated. RETTALIATA RECEIVED PRAISE from trustees, faculty, parents, and newspapers for maintaining order. The Chicago Tribune contrasted the peaceful IIT campus with the student unrest happening across the country. The article reflected a continuingnarrative of chaos that conflated strategic and reactive protests and attributed disruptive efforts to undisciplined youth or professional agitators. The discord of protest, however, did not belong in the rational, modern world envisioned by the leadership of IIT.
"Elsewhere, student strikes and demonstrations, often accompanied by vandalism and arson, spread thru scores of university and college campuses…but not I.I.T.'s modern complex." – Chicago Tribune, "Rettaliata's 'No' Saved I.I.T.'s Peace,” July 5, 1970.