
It was a huge school and we really didn't know each other but I knew when I was joining the University of Florida, he was enlisting in the Marines Corps. After combat in Viet Nam, receiving two Purple Hearts and numerous citations, he came home and enrolled in the University Florida as well. Not long after, he joined the peace movement and the Viet Nam Veterans Against the War.
It was the actions of him, and thousands of people like him, that led to the end of that fifty-year-old conflict that killed millions.
Scott Camil is fairly well-known for being one of the "Gainesville 8", a group of 'Nam veterans who were charged with conspiring to violently disrupt the 1972 Republican Convention.
When I spoke with Scott yesterday, who I had not seen in 54 years, I thanked him for all he has done, and for all he continues to do. The mile-long roadside cemetery, he says, shows the public the cost of war. They plan to display it every year until all wars end.
He could only talk with me briefly. He had a mission to accomplish and like a good soldier, he went off to get ice for his men.
______________________________