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The Bombing of Sterling Hall (The Antiwar Movement in the USA thirty four years ago today)
LeeMark Communications ^ | 2000 | Christopher J. Lee

Posted on 08/24/2004 12:49:23 AM PDT by sockmonkey

The Bombing of Sterling Hall

Text and photos copyright © 2000 Leemark Communications



Doors to the old part of Sterling Hall
The doors to the old part of Sterling Hall, as seen from Charter Street.
Early on August 24th, 1970, a van loaded with six barrels of explosives blew up just outside the East Wing of Sterling Hall at the University of Wisconsin campus in Madison. The bombing was carried out by four men in protest of America's involvement in the Vietnam War.

The bombing was directed against the Mathematics Research Center, a U.S.-Army-funded facility, which was located in the East Wing of Sterling Hall along with the physics and astronomy departments. "Army Math," as it was known, was despised by many antiwar activists who felt the center was contributing to the death and destruction in Southeast Asia through its research and had no place on a public university campus.

Ironically, the department hardest hit by the blast was not the MRC but physics, many of whose faculty were against the war. A 33-year-old physics researcher named Robert Fassnacht was one of those working

The old part of Sterling Hall as seen from Charter Street
Sterling Hall, seen from Charter Street. A van loaded with explosives was driven up what was then Lathrop Drive (shown by arrow) and parked in a loading area by the newer East Wing of Sterling.
late when the blast went off. Fassnacht was killed in the explosion, and four others in Sterling Hall were injured. Years of research work was destroyed. In addition, at least one patient was injured by flying glass in University Hospital, which at the time was located across the street.

At least 26 buildings on the campus alone were damaged in the bombing, which was heard more than 20 miles away. The explosive used was ammonium nitrate and fuel oil (ANFO), the same type that would be used in the 1995 bombing of the federal building in Oklahoma City.

Less than a week and a half after the act, the FBI had pieced together what happened and put four men on its most wanted list: 23-year-old Karleton Armstrong and his 19-year-old brother Dwight, from Madison, 18-year-old David Fine, from Wilmington, Delaware, and 22-year-old Leo Burt, from Havertown, Pennsylvania. Fine and Burt were both students at Wisconsin. Karl had been an on-again, off-again student in previous years. The Armstrongs and Fine were eventually caught, convicted and served time in prison. Leo Burt has never been found.

Looking northwest toward the East Wing of Sterling Hall
Scars from the bombing can still be seen in the newer brick used to repair the side of Sterling Hall. The area in front of the concrete wall (shown by arrow) was once Lathrop Drive. It is now a raised walkway. The loading area was next to this side of the building. The old part of Sterling Hall is at the left of the photo.

The Sterling Hall bombing is still a painful memory for many in Madison. There is no physical public memorial to Robert Fassnacht's death, either in Sterling Hall or on the campus. Yet a number of buildings are scarred from the bombing or other antiwar unrest during the '60s.

Despite the Sterling Hall bombing's far-reaching effects, a number of people today, especially younger people, don't even know it happened. What's more, many of those involved in the event have died during the 1990s, leaving fewer sources to tell the story.



TOPICS: Culture/Society; Extended News; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: Wisconsin; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: 19691231; 1970; 197008; 19700824; america; ammoniumnitrate; anfo; anniversary; answer; antiwarmovement; armorygymnasium; armstrong; armymath; avgas; badgerordinance; badgerordinanceworks; baraboo; burt; davidfine; davidsylvanfine; domesticterrorism; drugs; dwightarmstrong; eugenefieldston; eurgenefieldston; fassnacht; fieldston; fueloil; karlarmstrong; karletonarmstrong; lawdegree; lefties; leoburt; loosejuice; newyearsgang; nion; notinourname; oregon; oregonbar; primateresearch; protestmovement; radicalrye; redgym; robertfassnacht; sterlinghall; terrorism; thewarathome; vietnamwar; wisconsin

1 posted on 08/24/2004 12:49:24 AM PDT by sockmonkey
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To: sockmonkey
Sterling Hall Bombing

Before most students graduate from the University of Wisconsin, they will run into numerous references to the Sterling Hall bombing. This event has become a legend of the University and is almost surreal, but for those on campus in the late summer of 1970, the event was very real. Four young men known as the New Years Gang, plotted and carried out the bombing of the Army Mathematics Research Center, which was located in Sterling Hall, as a protest to the Vietnam War. Karl Armstrong came up with the idea and convinced his younger brother, Dwight Armstrong, as well as David Fine and Leo Burt to participate in the bombing.

In the early morning hours of August 24, 1970, the New Years Gang loaded about 2,000 pounds of ammonium nitrate soaked in aviation fuel into a stolen Ford. The group parked the van below the Army Mathematics Research Center, in a driveway of Sterling Hall. At 3:42 A.M. the bomb exploded. It was powerful enough to knock out windows six blocks away, and police found pieces of the Ford van on top of an eight-story building nearby. Residents of Belleville, thirty miles from Madison, reported hearing echoes from the explosion. In all, the bomb caused approximately six million dollars in damages but it did surprisingly little harm to the Army Mathematics Research Center. The greatest causality of the bombing, however, was not the physical damage, but the death of Robert Fassnacht. The New Years Gang did not intend on killing anyone and thought the surrounding buildings would be empty on a Sunday night. Fassnacht, a physics post doc student, however, was working late that evening to finish an experiment. His death left the campus shaken with grief and three children without a father.

The Sterling Hall Bombing was not the first attack by the New Years Gang to protest to Vietnam War. The name of the group originated from a failed bombing of the Badger Ordinance Works outside Baraboo, Wisconsin on December 31, 1969 by Karl and his brother Dwight. The Armory Gymnasium (a.k.a. the Red Gym) and the UW Primate Research Center were cites attacked by Karl Armstrong as well, but the Sterling Hall bombing was his last assault.

The entire New Years Gang fled to Canada the evening of the explosion. Over the next several years, the police eventually found and arrested three of the four members; only Leo Burt has never been found. After Karl Armstrong was released from prison in 1980, he returned to Madison and opened the Loose Juice cart that serves fruit drinks during the summer on Library Mall.

Though the Sterling Hall bombing becomes ever more distant with the passage of each year, it will always have an impact on Madison. Some local video stores still rent the documentary, The War at Home, which discusses the Sterling Hall bombing. Additionally, at least two books have been written on the Sterling Hall bombing: The Madison Bombing by Michael Morris and Rads by Tom Bates. The anti-war protests of the 1960s and early 1970s have ended in Madison, but their impact lives on in movies, books, and Sterling Hall.

LINK

2 posted on 08/24/2004 12:58:29 AM PDT by Dane (Trial lawyers are the tapeworms to wealth creating society)
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To: Dane

Thanks for your post. In taking a trip down memory lane via the internet tonite, I saw that Armstrong now runs Radical Rye, a sandwich shop/smoothie bar.

David Sylvan Fine signed the "Not in Our Name" petition recently. He has a law degree, but I am not sure that he has been admitted to the bar anywhere because of questions about his moral character, and changing story regarding the bombing. I know that he was turned down by the Oregon Bar when he applied. I read somewhere else that he works at UMW which I would find shocking, if true.

I would not have been making this trip down memory lane if not for John Kerry.

I would not vote for someone whose vain-glory and total lack of common sense has re-opened (at least for me) a wound on my soul, and (IMHO) a wound on the soul of America.


3 posted on 08/24/2004 1:16:34 AM PDT by sockmonkey
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To: Dane

That's interesting. I was only 15 years old when this happened, but I kinda remember hearing about it, livin' in Chicago and all. Karl Armstong only got 10 years. Wonder how long the other 2 scumbags got. They killed a man. They all shoulda got life imho.


4 posted on 08/24/2004 1:17:49 AM PDT by Musket
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To: sockmonkey
Reminds me of the bombing of the Federal Building in Rochester, NY.

bump until I clarify the facts.

5 posted on 08/24/2004 1:21:04 AM PDT by RIGHT IN LAS VEGAS
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To: Musket; sockmonkey
I went to the UW-Madison for a year in the early 80's. Think that I even had a Physics class at Sterling hall.

As the article stated no memorial and no one talked about it. It was kinda of funny watching the leftover 60's hippy leftists march down State St. when Grenada was liberated.

6 posted on 08/24/2004 1:24:40 AM PDT by Dane (Trial lawyers are the tapeworms to wealth creating society)
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To: sockmonkey

This kind of thing needs to be remembered. Not just for the sake of remembering, but to show that there was and still is an enemy within this country. We can't afford to have this kind of thing happen again in this country. People that destroy in this manner aren't protesting, they are committing war. As such, they should be treated as the enemy combatants that they are.


7 posted on 08/24/2004 1:26:51 AM PDT by meyer
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To: Musket
Wonder how long the other 2 scumbags got. They killed a man. They all shoulda got life imho.

I think the Armstrongs got 10, Fine got 7, and Burt was never apprehended.

I posted this because it's the Anniversary of Fassnacht's death, and many years ago when I lived in Austin, and was acquainted with those in the anti-war movement (VVAW, CCI, SDS, Black Panthers-I helped with their free breakfast program,) some folks I knew who were associated with either SDS or Weather Underground alluded to the fact that they were hiding David Sylvan Fine out in Austin.

It was not a good time in America-bombs planted by those in the Antiwar Movement were going off on American soil at about the rate of 20 a week in places like California during the summer of 1970.

After, the bombing in Madison, many people dropped out of the antiwar movement. Sometimes I think that those who stayed involved all became Politicians (Tom Hayden, John Kerry) or College Professors.

8 posted on 08/24/2004 1:39:26 AM PDT by sockmonkey
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To: meyer
This kind of thing needs to be remembered. Not just for the sake of remembering, but to show that there was and still is an enemy within this country. We can't afford to have this kind of thing happen again in this country. People that destroy in this manner aren't protesting, they are committing war. As such, they should be treated as the enemy combatants that they are.

I agree completely, and think that because of recent events on the political front, people will come to that realization.

Something I realized taking my trip down memory lane via the internet is that many of those who are "retellers" of the story, are presenting it with a sympathetic bias, and romanticizing the events of the time. They present those who were involved with radical, and extremist groups that engaged in criminal and violent acts as folk heroes who were driven to such actions by an oppressive American government.

9 posted on 08/24/2004 2:18:27 AM PDT by sockmonkey
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To: sockmonkey

Incredible post!


10 posted on 08/24/2004 3:11:42 AM PDT by The_Media_never_lie
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To: sockmonkey
After, the bombing in Madison, many people dropped out of the antiwar movement

Yeah, it's all 'fun and games' till people start getting blown up. Hope it doesn't come to that again. This time the protesters are even bigger idiots 'cause there's no draft, so there's really nothing to protest at all. Clueless fools.

11 posted on 08/24/2004 3:27:15 AM PDT by Musket
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To: Musket

Correcting my previous post:
For causing the death of Robert Fassnacht, and millions of dollars worth of damage ...
Fine was paroled in 1979 after serving three years. Karl Armstrong served seven years and his brother four.


12 posted on 08/24/2004 3:46:47 AM PDT by sockmonkey
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To: Wally_Kalbacken

Today is the Anniversary of Robert Fassnacht's death at Madison Ping.


13 posted on 08/24/2004 4:10:13 AM PDT by sockmonkey
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To: Dane
The name of the group originated from a failed bombing of the Badger Ordinance Works outside Baraboo, Wisconsin on December 31, 1969 by Karl and his brother Dwight.

My brother-in-law was working at the Badger Ordinance Works the night they tried to bomb the place--with a small plane, if my memory serves me right. The terror is something he'll never forget.

IIRC, Fassnacht left a wife and very young twins.

14 posted on 08/24/2004 5:00:03 AM PDT by Catspaw
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Comment #15 Removed by Moderator

To: sockmonkey
BTTT, and thanks for the reminder.

I went to Madison. I wasn't in town that summer, but many of my friends and relatives were. If those a__holes had made the fuse a little longer or lit it two or three hours later...

16 posted on 08/24/2004 1:54:56 PM PDT by Flatus I. Maximus
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To: Dane

I was at UW-Madison from 74 to 77 - when memories of the
bombing were still fresh but most of the protests and
the violence had been replaced by a focus on football,
beer and girls.

My memory is that the Armstrongs were more reviled than
idolized in that 74-77 timeframe. Has revisionist history
taken hold and now they are portrayed as some sort of
anarchist heroes?


17 posted on 05/23/2011 8:19:31 AM PDT by 2 Kool 2 Be 4-Gotten (Welcome to the USA - where every day is Backwards Day!)
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To: sockmonkey; Cindy

Sterling Hall bomber Armstrong arrested after $800,000 cash found in vehicle
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/2888674/posts


18 posted on 05/28/2012 12:47:57 AM PDT by piasa (Attitude adjustments offered here free of charge)
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