Yahoo Suche Web Suche

Suchergebnisse

  1. Suchergebnisse:
  1. David Victor Harris (February 28, 1946 – February 6, 2023) was an American journalist and activist. After becoming an icon in the movement against the Vietnam War, organizing civil disobedience against military conscription and refusing his own orders to report for military duty, for which he was imprisoned for almost two years ...

  2. David Harris (* 28. Februar 1946 in Fresno, Kalifornien; † 6. Februar 2023 in Mill Valley, Kalifornien [1]) war ein US- amerikanischer Journalist und Autor. Er ist vor allem wegen seines Protests gegen den Vietnamkrieg der USA in den 1960er und 1970er Jahren bekannt, im Speziellen gegen die Wehrpflicht in den USA während des ...

  3. 7. Feb. 2023 · David Harris, an activist and journalist who in the late 1960s became a national figure for encouraging young men to resist being drafted to serve in the Vietnam War — and who went to jail...

  4. 28. Feb. 2023 · David Harris, 1946-2023: “I dodged nothing”. David Harris at an anti-war protest at the Presidio in San Francisco, 1968. Photo by Jim Marshall, Wikimedia Commons. David Harris, who died earlier this month at his home in Mill Valley, was an enormously courageous and impactful leader of the nationwide nonviolent resistance to the ...

  5. 4. Nov. 2019 · Few resisters from the Vietnam antiwar era had a bigger impact than David Harris, who inspired generations to have the courage of their convictions. Now dying of cancer, he wants his message heard again. By Alan Goldfarb Published: Nov 4, 2019.

    • david harris (protester)1
    • david harris (protester)2
    • david harris (protester)3
    • david harris (protester)4
    • david harris (protester)5
  6. 23. Feb. 2023 · IPRA Peace Search. David Harris and the politics of draft resistance. The life and words of David Harris offer key lessons on the importance of making our own history and the deeper aims of draft resistance. Edward Hasbrouck February 23, 2023.

  7. Photo: The Boys Who Said No documentary. Harris, ’67, Stanford student body president and face of the Vietnam draft resistance movement, died February 6 at his home in Mill Valley, Calif., of lung cancer. He was 76.