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Seven of the eight defendants in January 1972: Wenderoth, McLaughlin, Glick, McAlister, Ahmad, and the Scoblicks. The Harrisburg Seven were a group of religious anti-war activists, led by Philip Berrigan, charged in 1971 in a failed conspiracy case in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, located in Harrisburg.
Area codes 717 and 223 are telephone area codes in the North American Numbering Plan (NANP) for South Central Pennsylvania and the Susquehanna Valley. The numbering plan area (NPA) includes the Harrisburg , Lancaster , and York metropolitan areas and a considerable portion of Pennsylvania Dutch Country , an area with nearly two million people.
This is a list of telephone area codes of Pennsylvania. In 1947, the American Telephone and Telegraph Company divided Pennsylvania into four numbering plan areas (NPAs) and assigned distinct area codes for each. Since 1995, several relief actions in form of area code splits and overlays have expanded the list of area
FIPS codes are five-digit numbers; for Pennsylvania the codes start with 42 and are completed with the three-digit county code. ... Harrisburg: 1785: Parts of ...
Harrisburg: ZIP codes: 17104 and 17106. Area code(s) 717 and 223: South Harrisburg (or South Side) is an area of, and neighborhood within, the city of Harrisburg ...
The United States Commonwealth of Pennsylvania currently has 48 statistical areas that have been delineated by the Office of Management and Budget (OMB). On July 21, 2023, the OMB delineated 12 combined statistical areas, 16 metropolitan statistical areas, and 20 micropolitan statistical areas in Pennsylvania. [1]
The "Nine" inspired many other anti-draft and anti-military actions in the 1960s and 1970s, including the Milwaukee 14, D.C. 9, Silver Spring 3, Chicago 8, Harrisburg 7, Camden 28. Participants sometimes remained at the scene to be arrested, sometimes they departed in order to avoid arrest.
Zoia Markovna Horn (née Polisar; March 14, 1918 – July 12, 2014) [1] was an American librarian who in 1972 became the first United States librarian to be jailed for refusing to share information as a matter of conscience. [2]