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Commemorative cannon fire disrupted class

Students and faculty should have been warned about cannon salute

By By Brandon Beifuss

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Published: Friday, November 20, 2009

Updated: Friday, November 20, 2009

Last Wednesday, I almost ran out of my class. Numerous deafening explosions caused the building and windows in Orson Spencer Hall to shake while dramatically silencing the class discussion at hand. My first thought was that a soon-to-be unemployed construction worker had gone rampant and was removing the floor beneath me, tactfully forgetting I was on it. That didn’t seem very likely, but my experience in demolition is limited. I was halfway out of my seat, backpack in hand looking longingly toward the door, when my professor told me, in between detonations, that the army was having an honorary 21-gun salute for Veteran’s Day.

Oh, of course it was Veteran’s Day. Why wouldn’t the army fire cannons in the heart of a university?

On second glance, the U has been holding Veteran’s Day ceremonies since 1998 and just like previous ceremonies, this year’s was a blast. This year’s commemoration went all day, with a morning ceremony honoring  11 individuals who represent Utah’s many veterans and it was during their ceremony that the honorary cannon salute took place in the free speech plaza outside the Union.

Firing cannons in close proximity to classrooms has the effect of creating a deafened moment of silence, as regular speech cannot be heard. Typically, in sporting events or other proceedings, an announcement is made that a moment of silence will occur. No such warning was given in the barrage that took place on the eleventh.

Beyond the silencing effect, the cannons also convey the real presence of a local bombing. It could be said that this is mitigated by the ordered timing of the explosions, but how does an ordered firing make you feel better if you have already presumed the worst?

“While it might have caused pause, I think it’s important that students understand what their fellow students are going through,” said Remi Barron, public relations specialist for the U. Pause is an underestimation as the floor, walls and windows shuddered with the concussive force of a M1A1 75mm Pack Howitzer.

That said, veterans deserve more than one day commemorating a sacrifice the majority of us will never have to consider because of their effort. The 21-gun, or in this case cannon, salute is but another gesture honoring them. This is not problematic in and of itself, but having it occur in the middle of the day, during classes and without warning is cause for question.

A notice given to the faculty was embedded in an FYI newsletter. The reference was, “a full dress military ceremony and 21-gun salute (11:00 a.m.)” There is no reference to cannons or a warning about the possible disruption. In discussing the event, the students I spoke with did not know what caused the sound, but made after-the-fact guesses as to its cause.

“We hope word gets out,” Barron said. Students were, according to Barron and Rachael Kaneko, informed as part of an outsourced effort by the U Marketing and Communications department to Absolute Communication, a high level mass communication class that awards credit based on participation in the public relations firm of the same name. Word was passed out to history and political science clubs, but the remaining study body was left out of the information.

“We didn’t know if we could send a mass email,” Kaneko said. Absolute Communication ended up informing the students who might be interested instead of the whole student body.

Honoring veterans by firing cannons very near to the center of a research institution, with minimal warning, seems akin to shooting a hornet’s nest to see if they will buzz. Letting faculty and staff know through the Campus Alert System would have made those at the U aware that the ceremonies were taking place in lieu of worrisome inference.

Veterans deserve to be honored every day of the week, especially on a day devoted to their commemoration, however the U should have made the public fully aware before it tested the earthquake integrity of its buildings with the concussive air blasts from Howitzers.

letters@chronicle.utah.edu

 

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6 comments

Jeff
Mon Nov 23 2009 04:42
I bet the author didn't need advanced warning to remember to get wasted the day of Oktoberfest.
k9uprising
Fri Nov 20 2009 15:16
Beifuss once again says WAAAAAAAAAAAAA!!!! every article he writes makes me think of him as more and more of a big baby.
Your name
Fri Nov 20 2009 12:48
Interesting reaction. So, Veteran's Day is established to honor those who have served or are serving our country in the military. Our government thought that recognizing these individuals was important enough to establish a federal holiday to remind us of their service. Celebrated on 11/11, the day many countries around the world celebrate Armistice Day, the hallmark of that celebration is a moment of silence at 11:00 am, the hour in which the treaty to end World War I was signed.
In my personal experience, this moment of silence was observed each year of elementary and junior high, and by some teachers in high school. So, when you hear cannons firing at regular intervals at 11:00 am on November 11th, doesn't it immediately connect that it must be to commemorate the fallen among our armed forces? And if not, then perhaps for the unprepared the cannon fire accomplished what the holiday was intended to do - to serve as a reminder for those who have forgotten the sacrifices made by our military in protection of our freedoms.
Chrony reader
Fri Nov 20 2009 11:53
Good article. I enjoyed reading it, light hearted enough to entertain, yet informative.
RB
Fri Nov 20 2009 11:25
Hey putts... the cannon have been fired for Veterans Day for more years. Get over yourself wuss...
Mesaman
Fri Nov 20 2009 11:17
Bout made you pee your pants, did it? You'll do well in uniform.






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