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Reason against the unreasonable

We must do better talking about, treating mental illness

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He was also cruel to livestock — the torture of animals is often a step on the path to homicide — and one story had him beating a horse to death.

Then on May 18, 1927, he beat his wife to death. Then he set fire to his farm and drove to the school where he served as caretaker. Kehoe had been busy for more than a year, secretly setting bombs of dynamite and explosive chemicals.

He ignited the first wave of bombs, and when townspeople ran to help, he set off the second wave, which claimed his life as well. Authorities later found an unexploded 500-pound bomb in the rubble.

One of the survivors was Willis Cressman, who was interviewed by National Public Radio in 2009 when he was 97.

“You wouldn’t think a church member could do such a thing, would you?” said Cressman. “He was the caretaker. … In fact, I saw him that morning. He was working on a door, and he smiled at us as we walked in.”

Though Willis Cressman was an old man, you could imagine him as a boy once, outside his school, a child survivor of another man’s demons.

My guess is that he also stood like that little Connecticut boy in the photo from Sandy Hook, the way other children stood outside a school in Winnetka years ago, or at Northern Illinois University, Virginia Tech and Columbine, hands covering the face in the universal human expression of horror, eyes wide open, disbelieving.

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John Kass is a columnist for the Chicago Tribune. He can be e-mailed at jskass@tribune.com. Follow him on Twitter @John_Kass.

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