Senator Gravel read the Pentagon Papers aloud at a hearing at a time when newspapers were barred from publishing them.

Senator Gravel read the Pentagon Papers aloud at a hearing at a time when newspapers were barred from publishing them.
In 1962 a group of SF veterans—knowing the Viet Nam war was looming—marched unofficially under the banner of “Veterans For Peace.”
This article originally appeared at http://danielborgstrom.blogspot.com/ By Daniel Borgstrom. Back in 1972, near the...
This article originally appeared at DemocracyNow.org. Thousands gathered Saturday to celebrate the life of...
This post originally appeared at the newyorktimes.com. By Sam Roberts. Douglas Dowd, a radical economics professor and...
This article appeared at Portside.org. Photo credit: Frederick M. Brown/Getty Images Dick Gregory used his humor to...
Richard Dudman, left, with Elizabeth Pond and Michael Morrow after they were freed from Vietcong captivity in Cambodia...
By VFP member, John Ketwig. Three Stars “Look up in the sky, up towards the north There are three new stars brightly...
This article originally appeared at TheNewYorkTimes.com. By Sam Roberts. Photo: Robin Holland. Marilyn B. Young, a...
This article originally appeared at jacobinmag.com. Militarism runs deep in the United States, but historian Marilyn...
This post originally appeared at remebr.com/forever.young Marilyn Young April 21, 1937 - February 19, 2017 Passed away...
This article originally appeared at TheNewYorkTimes.com. By William Grimes. Bernard S. Redmont, a longtime foreign...
This article originally appeared at the NewYorkTimes.com By Sam Roberts. Charlie Liteky, a former Army chaplain who...
Born on February 14, 1931, in Washington, D.C., Liteky joined the Army from Fort Hamilton, New York. He served in...