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On the sign:
DYING IN
dying on the grass in front of the chancellor’s building for Charlie Schwartz’s anti-weapons protest
brings back confused memories of the wartime sixties hitting the dirt before we realized
these were just wooden bullets and then walking back through tear gas to teach a class
lying here and watching the neutral passers-by scale the vertical asphalt
I feel neither the old embarrassment at being at right angles to most people
with brief-cases nor, and this is the spooky part that steam of comprehending anger
only the warm smell of the grass beside my nose saying, come back here every now and then
Berklee’s poetry Walk was laid in October 2003 along Edison Street between Shattuck and Milvia Streets. The route includes 128 metal plates with excerpts from songs, each of which is related in one way or another to the city of Berkeley.
The plaque features a poem by the poet, academic and diplomat born in Canada (1929) who was known for his strong opposition to the Vietnam War, and who lectured at the University of Berkeley in 1961, the year the demonstrations against the war took place in Berkeley.