Reese ehrlich biography
- Reese Erlich (July 5, 1947 – April 6, 2021) was an.
- Reese Erlich was an American author and freelance journalist who wrote for CBS Radio, Australian Broadcasting Corp., and National Public Radio.
- Longtime antiwar activist Reese Erlich passed away on April 6 after a long battle with cancer.
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REBUILDING SOUTH AFRICA
Program 9908
February 23, 1999
Guests
Various South African Laborers
Michiel Bester, Senior Economist, Econometrics
Peter Danjtie, Deputy General Secretary, Metal Trades Union
Jennie Cargill, Owner, Business Map
Anzil Adams, Coordinator, New Beginnings Co-op
Peter Jacobs, Leader, New Beginnings Co-op
Vusi Nhalpu, President, National Hospital Workers Union
Cynnthia Alvillar, Spokesperson, Labor Ministry, South Africa
Esther Hlongwane, Communication Officer, Chris Hani Baragwanav Hospital
Dr. Karen Silwa, Heart Specialist, Chris Hani Baragwanav Hospital
Popo Maja, Spokesperson, Provincial Ministry of Health, South Africa
This text has been professionally transcribed. However, for timely distribution, it has not been edited or proofread against the tape.
JOSEPH PEPU: And I think the government have to look at the policies. Unemployment is the key in this country, and it needs to be addressed with immediate effect. A government who cannot be able to support its own nation, it is not a government at all.
JEFF MARTIN: South Africa holds
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Reese Erlich
1947–2021
Antiwar Activist Reese Erlich Dead at 73
by Eric Garris
Longtime antiwar activist Reese Erlich passed away on April 6 after a long battle with cancer. He was 73.
Reese was most recently a bi-weekly columnist at a number of publications, including Antiwar.com. He wrote his last column two weeks ago saying goodbye to his friends and readers.
I met Reese in 1980 when we worked together in the Bay Area Mobilization Against Militarism and the Draft.
Reese was arrested in 1969 as part of the “Oakland Seven,” for organizing anti-draft demonstrations. His arrest and trial (resulting in his acquittal) are the subject of a documentary, Movement on Trial: The Oakland Seven.
Reese worked as a staff writer and research editor for Ramparts, a national investigative reporting magazine published in San Francisco. His magazine articles appeared in Vanity Fair online, San Francisco Magazine, California Monthly, Mother Jones, The Progressive, The Nation, and AARP’s Segunda Juventud.
Erlich’s book Target Iraq: What the News Medi American journalist (1947–2021) Reese Erlich Reese Erlich (July 5, 1947[1] – April 6, 2021) was an American author and freelance journalist who wrote for CBS Radio, Australian Broadcasting Corp., and National Public Radio. He also contributed to Foreign Policy and VICE News. He wrote the nationally distributed Foreign Correspondent column. Erlich won numerous journalism awards including a Peabody.[2] Erlich was born and raised in Los Angeles. In 1965 he enrolled at the University of California, Berkeley, and later became active in the Anti-Vietnam War movement. In October 1967 Erlich and others organized Stop the Draft Week. They were arrested and became known as the "Oakland Seven". In their trial they were acquitted of all charges, being successfully represented by Charles Garry. In 1968 he visited Cuba for the first time, which led to a continuing interest in that country that
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Reese Erlich
Born July 5, 1947 Died April 6, 2021(2021-04-06) (aged 73) Nationality American Occupation(s) author, journalist Biography
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