Miller had taken part in the protests that day and had volleyed a tear gas canister back at the Ohio National Guardsmen who had originally fired it. The protests, initially against the expansion of the
Vietnam War into
Cambodia, had escalated into a protest against the presence of the Ohio National Guard on the Kent State campus. Miller was unarmed when he was shot; he had been facing the Guardsmen while standing in an access road leading into the Prentice Hall parking lot at a distance of approximately . A single bullet entered his open mouth and exited at the base of his posterior skull, killing him instantly.
John Filo's
Pulitzer Prize-winning photo features
Mary Ann Vecchio, a 14-year-old runaway, kneeling over Miller's dead body. Three other students were shot and killed at Kent State on that day:
Allison Krause,
Sandra Scheuer, and
William Schroeder; nine others were wounded, including one who was paralyzed for life. These and other shootings led to protests and a national
student strike, closing hundreds of campuses. The Kent State campus remained closed for six weeks. Five days after the shootings, 100,000 people demonstrated in
Washington, D.C., against the war and the
military–industrial complex and protesting the killing of unarmed student protestors by American soldiers on a college campus. Eleven days after the Kent State shootings, on May 15, 1970, two students were
shot and killed and 12 were injured at
Jackson State University by the
Jackson Police and
Mississippi Highway Safety Patrol officers. Miller was cremated and his ashes were placed in a niche in the community mausoleum (Unit 7, Alcove H-O, Column O, Niche 1) at
Ferncliff Cemetery in
Hartsdale, New York. A memorial was erected at
Plainview – Old Bethpage John F. Kennedy High School, the high school that was built in the mid-1960s in the same town as Miller's high school in
Plainview, New York. Miller's mother had been a secretary to the principal of John F. Kennedy High School in the 1960s. There is a Kent State Memorial Lecture Fund at
MIT established in 1970 by one of Miller's childhood friends. The university has also placed a memorial at the spot where Miller died. ==References==