Author(s): Michael Burgan
Format: Hardback
No. of Pages: 64
Publisher: COMPASS POINT BOOKS
Language: English
Date Published: 2016-08-01
Dimensions: 239 x 267 x 10mm
Publication City/Country:
Edition:
Illustrations: Illustrations, unspecified
It didn't seem possible. Four college students shot dead May 4, 1970, by Ohio National Guardsmen during a protest against the Vietnam War. The shootings at Kent State University would shock the nation and spark a mass student strike across the country, the only one in U.S. history. A photojournalism student's photograph of a teen girl crying in anguish over a victim's dead body would win the Pulitzer Prize and become a symbol of the antiwar movement.
Format: Hardback
No. of Pages: 64
Publisher: COMPASS POINT BOOKS
Language: English
Date Published: 2016-08-01
Dimensions: 239 x 267 x 10mm
Publication City/Country:
Edition:
Illustrations: Illustrations, unspecified
It didn't seem possible. Four college students shot dead May 4, 1970, by Ohio National Guardsmen during a protest against the Vietnam War. The shootings at Kent State University would shock the nation and spark a mass student strike across the country, the only one in U.S. history. A photojournalism student's photograph of a teen girl crying in anguish over a victim's dead body would win the Pulitzer Prize and become a symbol of the antiwar movement.
Book Info | |
Author | Michael Burgan |
Date Published | 2016-08-01 |
Dimensions | 239 x 267 x 10mm |
First Author | Michael Burgan |
Format | Hardback |
Illustrations | Illustrations, unspecified |
ISBN | 9780756554248 |
Language | English |
No. of Pages | 64 |
Publisher | COMPASS POINT BOOKS |
Death at Kent State: How a Photograph Brought the Vietnam War Home to America
- Michael Burgan
- Hardback
- Publisher: COMPASS POINT BOOKS
- ISBN: 9780756554248
- Availability:In Stock
-
$1,092