X-Nico

unusual facts about John Harris


Jacqueline Laing

She argues that the new eugenics adopted by John Harris, Julian Savulescu and others, collapses into the old variety because of its fixation on producing “the better” or even more implausibly, “the best”.


Music journalism

In this article John Harris writes about music journalism with reference to the well-known journalists Nick Kent and Lester Bangs.

New wave of new wave

The movement was short lived and several of the bands involved were later linked with the more commercially successful Britpop, which it immediately preceded, and the NWONW was described by John Harris of The Guardian as "Britpop without the good bits".

Popscene

In the documentary The Britpop Story hosted by John Harris, this song along with Suede's "The Drowners" was championed as being the first ever Britpop song, and a starting point for the movement.


see also

Animals, Men and Morals

John Harris writes about killing for food, Maureen Duffy about hunting, Brigid Brophy about the need for animal rights, Roslind and Stanley Godlovitch about the ethics, and Leonard Nelson (the German philosopher who died in 1927) about duties to animals.

Blackburn Cathedral

The organ was opened on 28 February 1828 with a concert which included works by Handel - extracts from his Messiah and Israel in Egypt and his Occasional Overture played by the new orgnaist Joseph John Harris.

Brigid Brophy

Animals, Men and Morals, edited by Stanley and Roslind Godlovitch and John Harris (1971)

Dennis Holt

During the weekly gatherings of the workshop, Holt became friends with a number of the poets who were to be active in the Los Angeles poetry-scene throughout the following 40 years, including some of the poets whose works were collected in the workshop-based anthology Venice Thirteen (1972): Joseph Hansen and John Harris (the two directors of the workshop), Luis Campos, Harry Northup, and Barry Simons.

Harrisville, Queensland

The town is believed to be named after John Harris (1819-1895) and George Harris (1831-1891) who had a store and cotton ginnery in the area.

Michael Harris

Pasty Harris (Michael John Harris, born 1944), English cricketer

Paxtang, Pennsylvania

People who molded the early religious and political character of America are buried here, including John Harris II, the first United States Senator from Pennsylvania, William Maclay, as well as four of the six commissioners who planned the town of Harrisburg with him in 1785.

Ronald Dalzell, 12th Earl of Carnwath

Sarah was the eldest daughter of Capt. John Harris, R.N., of Eldon House London, Ontario, and his wife, Amelia, daughter of Colonel Samuel Ryerse.

Stanley Garrick

Nigeria Direct, Garrick Family, Palace of Benin, National Archives of Nigeria, Garrick Memorial School, Vanguard Newspaper Archives, Nigerian Bar Association, John Harris Library of the University of Benin

TheaterWeek

John Harris edited the magazine during its heyday, and such columnists as Peter Filichia, Alexis Greene, Ken Mandelbaum, Charles Marowitz, Davi Napoleon and Michael Riedel were featured.