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Cobb librarian discusses the lynching of Leo Frank – MDJOnline.com

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Cobb librarian discusses the lynching of Leo Frank - MDJOnline.com

Categories Leo Frank

Israels summer tourists shrug off protests in favor of holy sites and nightlife – Forward

This article is part of our morning briefing. Click here to get it delivered to your inbox each weekday.

What protests? Israels tourists are focused on holy sites and nightlife

While hundreds of thousands of Israelis have been flooding the streets of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem in protest of the governments passage of a law limiting the Supreme Courts power, summer tourists are mainly shrugging off the political strife around them.

Our Mira Fox just returned from 10 days in the holy land, where she talked to travelers about the best places to eat, the best sites to see and polyamory. Very few spoke of the protests roiling the nation.

Choosing to ignore: I think I saw something on Instagram and decided not to dive in because it was four days before my trip and I didnt want to freak myself out, said Rebecca Rhodes, a track and field coach at the University of Utah who was in Jerusalem to recruit athletes.

Tourists walk past shops in the Old City of Jerusalem. (Getty)

Not interested: Birthright pilgrims are still flooding markets, archaeological sites and bars across the country. As important as it is, its not what people came for at all, Michael Even-Esh, a tour guide, said of the protests. And truthfully except for a basic overview it interests them very little.

Geopolitical naivete: A shopkeeper in the tourist-clogged alleys of Jerusalems Old City told Mira that he gets more worried calls from friends overseas about bombings in Syria, and then has to explain that it is an entirely different country. Americans are sorry not so intelligent, he said. They never know whats going on outside.

At left, Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein. At right, the real maestro. (Getty)

Opinion | Can we please stop talking about Bradley Coopers nose? Many Jews online are upset about the prosthetic nose that Cooper wears in the just-released trailer for Netflixs Leonard Bernstein biopic a proxy for their broader feelings over a non-Jewish actor being cast to play a Jewish cultural icon. Not our Laura E. Adkins. There are very real problems facing the Jewish people, she writes.Israels democracy is on the verge of collapse. Hate speech is out of control on social media. And were talking about a nose? But Lauras deputy, Nora Berman, begs to differ. Read their conversation

Opinion | Will Donald Trump finally face his personal Yom Kippur? Elul, the Jewish month of penitence and reflection, began last night. Trumps latest indictment, enumerating 191 criminal acts of conspiracy, reads to our contributing columnist Rabbi Jay Michaelson like the confessional Al Chet prayer, including its own repetitive refrain. False claims of voter fraud. This was an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy, the indictment says. False accusations against election workers. This was an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. Cue Michaelson: Now the Book of Judgment is open, with Trumps alleged misdeeds written out in excruciating detail. Read the essay

Plus

WHAT ELSE YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

Palestinians check the damage on a house in the occupied West Bank on Thursday, following an Israeli raid. (Getty)

Israeli forces entered Jenin this morning to arrest two terror suspects, and killed a Palestinian man with a gun during the process. (Times of Israel)

Roughly 80% of new Israeli startups are choosing to incorporate in the United States, according to a new survey. Thats quadruple the 20% of new companies that did so last year. (Reuters)

A light rail through Tel Aviv has been in the works for decades. It officially opens on Friday. (Haaretz)

The leading vote-getter in Argentinas national primary elections this week, Javier Milei, could become the countrys first Jewish president. First hed have to win in October and complete a conversion hes working on. Milei, a far-right economist, was raised Catholic but studies with a rabbi regularly. (JTA)

Vandals in Berlin destroyed windows at the offices of a foundation that manages Holocaust memorial sites. This comes after a telephone booth-sized library of free Holocaust books in the city was destroyed in a fire last week. (JTA)

A new artificial intelligence app lets users instant-message with biblical figures like Job, Lot and Ruth. Some of the characters, including the prophet Isaiah and King Solomon, require a $2.99 monthly subscription. (Religion News Service)

Shiva calls Rabbi Chai Yitzchak Twerski, known as the Rachmastrivka Rebbe, died at 92 Jerry Moss, co-founder of A&M Records and member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, died at 88 Marc Becker, former chairman of the board at the Park Avenue Synagogue in New York, died at 51.

A picture of Leo Frank in the memoir of Ab Cahan, the founding editor of the Forward. (Courtesy of YIVO)

On this day in history (1915): Leo Frank, a Jewish factory superintendent, was lynched by a mob in Marietta, Georgia. Frank had been convicted for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan a conviction most historians view as wrongful in a case that launched both the birth of the Anti-Defamation League and the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan. When the Forwards PJ Grisar met Ben Platt, who played Leo Frank in the Broadway musical Parade, to read Franks letters, Platt was struck by Franks sense of hope in the face of injustice.

In honor of Robert DeNiros birthday, check out our secret Jewish history of the acclaimed actor.

Our senior political reporter, Jacob Kornbluh, talked with me and Laura yesterday about how President Biden is walking a tightrope in his approach to Israel as the presidential election ramps up. Biden hasnt taken any tactical moves to hold the Netanyahu government accountable, Jacob said. It has to do a lot with Bidens genuine love for Israel. Hes famous for saying you dont have to be a Jew to be a Zionist. Watch the episode above, or subscribe to That Jewish News Show wherever you get podcasts.

Thanks to Rebecca Salzhauer and Talya Zax for contributing to todays newsletter.

You can reach the Forwarding team at [emailprotected].

Continue reading here:

Israels summer tourists shrug off protests in favor of holy sites and nightlife - Forward

Categories Mary Phagan

Today in History – Record Herald

Today is Thursday, Aug. 17, the 229th day of 2023. There are 136 days left in the year.

Todays Highlight in History:

On Aug. 17, 1982, the first commercially produced compact discs, a recording of ABBAs The Visitors, were pressed at a Philips factory near Hanover, West Germany.

On this date:

In 1807, Robert Fultons North River Steamboat began heading up the Hudson River on its successful round trip between New York and Albany.

In 1863, federal batteries and ships began bombarding Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor during the Civil War, but the Confederates managed to hold on despite several days of pounding.

In 1915, a mob in Cobb County, Georgia, lynched Jewish businessman Leo Frank, 31, whose death sentence for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan had been commuted to life imprisonment. (Frank, whod maintained his innocence, was pardoned by the state of Georgia in 1986.)

In 1945, the George Orwell novel Animal Farm, an allegorical satire of Soviet Communism, was first published in London by Martin Secker & Warburg.

In 1978, the first successful trans-Atlantic balloon flight ended as Maxie Anderson, Ben Abruzzo and Larry Newman landed their Double Eagle II outside Paris.

In 1987, Rudolf Hess, the last member of Adolf Hitlers inner circle, died at Spandau Prison at age 93, an apparent suicide.

In 1988, Pakistani President Mohammad Zia ul-Haq and U.S. Ambassador Arnold Raphel (RAY-fehl) were killed in a mysterious plane crash.

In 1998, President Bill Clinton gave grand jury testimony via closed-circuit television from the White House concerning his relationship with Monica Lewinsky; he then delivered a TV address in which he denied previously committing perjury, admitted his relationship with Lewinsky was wrong, and criticized Kenneth Starrs investigation.

In 1999, more than 17,000 people were killed when a magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck Turkey.

In 2004, at the Athens games, Romania won its second straight Olympic gold medal in womens gymnastics; the United States took silver while Russia won the bronze.

In 2011, Vice President Joe Biden arrived in Beijing to meet with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping.

In 2020, Texas joined New York, New Jersey and California as states with at least 10,000 confirmed coronavirus deaths; about 80 percent of the Texas deaths were reported since June 1, after the state embarked on one of the fastest reopenings in the country.

Ten years ago: The attorney for a young man whod testified he was fondled by former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky said his client had reached a settlement, the first among dozens of claims made against the school amid the Sandusky child sex abuse scandal. Nick Davilla threw six touchdown passes and the Arizona Rattlers defeated the Philadelphia Soul 48-39 in the ArenaBowl. Kansas Citys Miguel Tejada was suspended 105 games by Major League Baseball for violating its Joint Drug Program, one of the longest suspensions ever handed down.

Five years ago: President Donald Trump said he had canceled plans for a Veterans Day military parade, citing what he called a ridiculously high price tag; he accused local politicians in Washington of price-gouging. Tesla CEO Elon Musk, in an interview with The New York Times, said hed been overwhelmed by job stress, an admission that pushed down the stock value of the electric car company and brought pressure on its board to take action; shares in Tesla tumbled about 9 percent.

One year ago: The head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced a shakeup of the organization, saying it failed to meet the moment of COVID-19s arrival and needed to become more nimble. A bombing at a mosque in the Afghan capital of Kabul during evening prayers killed at least 10 people, including a prominent cleric, and wounded at least 27. Two former Pennsylvania judges who orchestrated a scheme to send children to for-profit jails in exchange for kickbacks were ordered to pay more than $200 million to hundreds of people they victimized.

Todays Birthdays: Former MLB All-Star Boog Powell is 82. Actor Robert DeNiro is 80. Movie director Martha Coolidge is 77. Rock musician Gary Talley (The Box Tops) is 76. Actor-screenwriter-producer Julian Fellowes is 74. Actor Robert Joy is 72. International Tennis Hall of Famer Guillermo Vilas is 71. Rock singer Kevin Rowland (Dexys Midnight Runners) is 70. Rock musician Colin Moulding (XTC) is 68. Country singer-songwriter Kevin Welch is 68. Olympic gold medal figure skater Robin Cousins is 66. Singer Belinda Carlisle is 65. Author Jonathan Franzen is 64. Actor Sean Penn is 63. Jazz musician Everette Harp is 62. Rock musician Gilby Clarke is 61. Singer Maria McKee is 59. Rock musician Steve Gorman (The Black Crowes) is 58. Rock musician Jill Cunniff (kuh-NIHF) is 57. Actor David Conrad is 56. Singer Donnie Wahlberg is 54. College Basketball Hall of Famer and retired NBA All-Star Christian Laettner is 54. Rapper Posdnuos (PAHS-deh-noos) is 54. International Tennis Hall of Famer Jim Courier is 53. Retired MLB All-Star Jorge Posada is 52. TV personality Giuliana Rancic is 49. Actor Bryton James is 37. Actor Brady Corbet (kohr-BAY) is 35. Actor Austin Butler is 32. Actor Taissa Farmiga is 29. Olympic bronze medal figure skater Gracie Gold is 28.

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Today in History - Record Herald

Categories Mary Phagan

Today in History 8-17-23 (copy) | | duboiscountyherald.com – The Herald

Today is Thursday, Aug. 17, the 229th day of 2023. There are 136 days left in the year.

Todays Highlight in History:

On Aug. 17, 1982, the first commercially produced compact discs, a recording of ABBAs The Visitors, were pressed at a Philips factory near Hanover, West Germany.

On this date:

In 1863, federal batteries and ships began bombarding Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor during the Civil War, but the Confederates managed to hold on despite several days of pounding.

In 1915, a mob in Cobb County, Georgia, lynched Jewish businessman Leo Frank, 31, whose death sentence for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan had been commuted to life imprisonment.

In 1987, Rudolf Hess, the last member of Adolf Hitlers inner circle, died at Spandau Prison at age 93, an apparent suicide.

In 1998, President Bill Clinton gave grand jury testimony via closed-circuit television from the White House concerning his relationship with Monica Lewinsky; he then delivered a TV address in which he denied previously committing perjury, admitted his relationship with Lewinsky was wrong, and criticized Kenneth Starrs investigation.

In 1999, more than 17,000 people were killed when a magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck Turkey.

In 2004, at the Athens games, Romania won its second straight Olympic gold medal in womens gymnastics; the United States took silver while Russia won the bronze.

In 2011, Vice President Joe Biden arrived in Beijing to meet with his Chinese counterpart, Xi Jinping.

In 2020, Texas joined New York, New Jersey and California as states with at least 10,000 confirmed coronavirus deaths; about 80% of the Texas deaths were reported since June 1, after the state embarked on one of the fastest reopenings in the country.

TEN YEARS AGO: The attorney for a young man whod testified he was fondled by former Penn State assistant football coach Jerry Sandusky said his client had reached a settlement, the first among dozens of claims made against the school amid the Sandusky child sex abuse scandal. Nick Davilla threw six touchdown passes and the Arizona Rattlers defeated the Philadelphia Soul 48-39 in the ArenaBowl. Kansas Citys Miguel Tejada was suspended 105 games by Major League Baseball for violating its Joint Drug Program, one of the longest suspensions ever handed down.

FIVE YEARS AGO: President Donald Trump said he had canceled plans for a Veterans Day military parade, citing what he called a ridiculously high price tag; he accused local politicians in Washington of price-gouging. Tesla CEO Elon Musk, in an interview with The New York Times, said hed been overwhelmed by job stress, an admission that pushed down the stock value of the electric car company and brought pressure on its board to take action; shares in Tesla tumbled about 9%.

ONE YEAR AGO: The head of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced a shakeup of the organization, saying it failed to meet the moment of COVID-19s arrival and needed to become more nimble. A bombing at a mosque in the Afghan capital of Kabul during evening prayers killed at least 10 people, including a prominent cleric, and wounded at least 27. Two former Pennsylvania judges who orchestrated a scheme to send children to for-profit jails in exchange for kickbacks were ordered to pay more than $200 million to hundreds of people they victimized.

Read the rest here:

Today in History 8-17-23 (copy) | | duboiscountyherald.com - The Herald

Categories Mary Phagan

Lookback in History | Oconomowoc News | gmtoday.com – Greater Milwaukee Today | GMToday.com

122 years ago Aug. 30, 1901

The following, clipped from the Eagle Quill, was very courteously credited to the Enterprise.

F.D. Bradley lost a horse Thursday afternoon. The animal went into the lake at the back of the bakery and getting beyond its depth, was unable to get out. Some men went to rescue the animal with a rope with a noose at the end, and throwing it about its neck, and proceeded to drag it to shore, but in doing so killed the horse by choking. As a matter of fact, the above did not appear in the Enterprise and should have been credited to the Free Press.

Get daily updates from the Oconomowoc Enterprise sent directly to your email inbox.

56 years ago

Aug. 3, 1967

Warrants for the arrest of three persons, one an adult, and the other two juveniles, may be issued this week on the charge of burning a sailboat and pier at the Joseph Weix, Sr. home at 345 N. Woodland Lane.

An intensive investigation of the incident, which happened in the early part of July, has been made by the state fire marshal and is scheduled for completion this week.

The boat belonged to Grant Krueger. It was filled with gasoline taken from the Willard Nehs residence and then set on fire at the Weix pier.

Charges will be filed in Waukesha as a state case.

90 years ago

Aug. 4, 1933

Some farmers will receive more money for their barley than others next fall simply because of harvesting and threshing methods because immature or green barley must be harvested when it is ripe because immature or green barley does not produce desirable malt. Threshing also must be done so that there are no broken, skinned grains because that injures the value for malting purposes. These are the timely suggestions made by B.D. Leith of the Agro-economy department, University of Wisconsin.

There is a very natural tendency for farmers to cut barley on the green side in order to prevent shattering said Mr. Leith. However, green or immature barley is not good malting green, so those raising barley for the market should let the fields ripen just as fully as possible without too great a loss from shattering.

72 years ago

Aug 9, 1951

Can You Label Human Beings?

A label on a can of beans is your guarantee that always you can be sure that what you buy will be the same in quality, flavor and consistency as you bought before. You can be sure that a labeled automobile will be made to the same standards and specifications as the other cars of the same make. Labels identify things and services but how can we honestly and consistently label people?

Here is a man who works in a manufacturing plant at a machine.

What label should we pin on this man? He works with his hands, so we must pin the laborer label on him. But just a minute, he has been thrifty so he owns his own home, carries life insurance and has laid claim to some shares of stocks and some bonds. His money has helped to finance, business and industry. So we must label him a Capitalist.

However, during a years time, he hires dozens of workers to do jobs for him. Every time he or any of his family pays money out-of-pocket to someone else to do a piece of work, he is an Employer so that label goes on, too.

But he would not be a worker, capitalist or an employer were he not also a Consumer.

53 years ago

Aug. 17, 1970

An attorney for Kaleidoscope apparently plans to file a federal suit against the City of Waukesha on behalf of the Milwaukee underground newspaper.

Atty. William M. Coffey of Milwaukee will be filing the suit because of attempts by the city to discourage street sales of the paper, according to Charles DeWar, 20, of 333 Arlington Ave. DeWar said he talked with Coffey over the weekend.

Coffey was not available for comment this morning on the exact type of legal action he plans to take.

A spokesman for Kaleidoscope also indicated this morning that the paper would take legal action against the city.

Its a matter of timing, said Dennis Gall, one of the editors, Were not going to take this sitting down. He did not elaborate on the type of action to be taken.

DeWar and about seven other youths distributed free issues of the paper Saturday at the Five Points after a 17 year old youth was arrested Tuesday for selling Kaleidoscope without a permit. Charges against the youth were later dropped.

46 years ago

Aug. 17, 1977

Two more barns burned in Waukesha County overnight, bringing the total to seven in the past 11 days.

Six of the fires including the two Tuesday night are being investigated for arson by the Sheriffs Department.

One which occurred Aug. 9 on Busse Road in Pewaukee Town was investigated by the state fire marshal that found no evidence of arson.

The fires Tuesday were in Waukesha Town on Highway F and in Genesee Town on Highway D. The one in Waukesha Town was the third in as many nights fought by that volunteer fire department.

That latest fire destroyed a barn and required help form the Big Bend-Vernon Fire Department. No animals were lost and there was nothing really in the barn, according to Asst. Fire Chief Martin Cinkosky.

Cinkosky issued a warning to farmers: Watch out for anything unusual; write down the license plates of automobiles that seem suspicious. Local history compiled from the archives of the Oconomowoc Enterprise and Waukesha Freeman by Patrice Shanks; pshanks@conleynet.com; 262-513 2639

Also on this date:

Aug. 17, 1807 Robert Fultons North River Steamboat began heading up the Hudson River on its successful round trip between New York and Albany.

Aug. 17, 1863 Federal batteries and ships began bombarding Fort Sumter in Charleston harbor during the Civil War, but the Confederates managed to hold on despite several days of pounding.

Aug. 17, 1915 A mob in Cobb County, Georgia, lynched Jewish businessman Leo Frank, 31, whose death sentence for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan had been commuted to life imprisonment. (Frank, whod maintained his innocence, was pardoned by the state of Georgia in 1986.)

Aug. 17, 1945 The George Orwell novel Animal Farm, an allegorical satire of Soviet Communism, was first published in London by Martin Secker & Warburg.

Aug. 17, 1978 The first successful trans-Atlantic balloon flight ended as Maxie Anderson, Ben Abruzzo and Larry Newman landed their Double Eagle II outside Paris.

Aug. 17, 1982 The first commercially produced compact discs, a recording of ABBAs The Visitors, were pressed at a Philips factory near Hanover, West Germany.

Aug. 17, 1987 Rudolf Hess, the last member of Adolf Hitlers inner circle, died at Spandau Prison at age 93, an apparent suicide.

Aug. 17, 1988 Pakistani President Mohammad Zia ul-Haq and U.S. Ambassador Arnold Raphel were killed in a mysterious plane crash.

Aug. 17, 1998 President Bill Clinton gave grand jury testimony via closed-circuit television from the White House concerning his relationship with Monica Lewinsky; he then delivered a TV address in which he denied previously committing perjury, admitted his relationship with Lewinsky was wrong, and criticized Kenneth Starrs investigation.

Aug. 17, 1999 More than 17,000 people were killed when a magnitude 7.4 earthquake struck Turkey.

Aug. 17, 2004 At the Athens games, Romania won its second straight Olympic gold medal in womens gymnastics; the United States took silver while Russia won the bronze.

Continue reading here:

Lookback in History | Oconomowoc News | gmtoday.com - Greater Milwaukee Today | GMToday.com

Categories Mary Phagan

Israels summer tourists shrug off protests in favor of holy sites and nightlife – Forward

This article is part of our morning briefing. Click here to get it delivered to your inbox each weekday.

What protests? Israels tourists are focused on holy sites and nightlife

While hundreds of thousands of Israelis have been flooding the streets of Tel Aviv and Jerusalem in protest of the governments passage of a law limiting the Supreme Courts power, summer tourists are mainly shrugging off the political strife around them.

Our Mira Fox just returned from 10 days in the holy land, where she talked to travelers about the best places to eat, the best sites to see and polyamory. Very few spoke of the protests roiling the nation.

Choosing to ignore: I think I saw something on Instagram and decided not to dive in because it was four days before my trip and I didnt want to freak myself out, said Rebecca Rhodes, a track and field coach at the University of Utah who was in Jerusalem to recruit athletes.

Tourists walk past shops in the Old City of Jerusalem. (Getty)

Not interested: Birthright pilgrims are still flooding markets, archaeological sites and bars across the country. As important as it is, its not what people came for at all, Michael Even-Esh, a tour guide, said of the protests. And truthfully except for a basic overview it interests them very little.

Geopolitical naivete: A shopkeeper in the tourist-clogged alleys of Jerusalems Old City told Mira that he gets more worried calls from friends overseas about bombings in Syria, and then has to explain that it is an entirely different country. Americans are sorry not so intelligent, he said. They never know whats going on outside.

At left, Bradley Cooper as Leonard Bernstein. At right, the real maestro. (Getty)

Opinion | Can we please stop talking about Bradley Coopers nose? Many Jews online are upset about the prosthetic nose that Cooper wears in the just-released trailer for Netflixs Leonard Bernstein biopic a proxy for their broader feelings over a non-Jewish actor being cast to play a Jewish cultural icon. Not our Laura E. Adkins. There are very real problems facing the Jewish people, she writes.Israels democracy is on the verge of collapse. Hate speech is out of control on social media. And were talking about a nose? But Lauras deputy, Nora Berman, begs to differ. Read their conversation

Opinion | Will Donald Trump finally face his personal Yom Kippur? Elul, the Jewish month of penitence and reflection, began last night. Trumps latest indictment, enumerating 191 criminal acts of conspiracy, reads to our contributing columnist Rabbi Jay Michaelson like the confessional Al Chet prayer, including its own repetitive refrain. False claims of voter fraud. This was an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy, the indictment says. False accusations against election workers. This was an overt act in furtherance of the conspiracy. Cue Michaelson: Now the Book of Judgment is open, with Trumps alleged misdeeds written out in excruciating detail. Read the essay

Plus

WHAT ELSE YOU NEED TO KNOW TODAY

Palestinians check the damage on a house in the occupied West Bank on Thursday, following an Israeli raid. (Getty)

Israeli forces entered Jenin this morning to arrest two terror suspects, and killed a Palestinian man with a gun during the process. (Times of Israel)

Roughly 80% of new Israeli startups are choosing to incorporate in the United States, according to a new survey. Thats quadruple the 20% of new companies that did so last year. (Reuters)

A light rail through Tel Aviv has been in the works for decades. It officially opens on Friday. (Haaretz)

The leading vote-getter in Argentinas national primary elections this week, Javier Milei, could become the countrys first Jewish president. First hed have to win in October and complete a conversion hes working on. Milei, a far-right economist, was raised Catholic but studies with a rabbi regularly. (JTA)

Vandals in Berlin destroyed windows at the offices of a foundation that manages Holocaust memorial sites. This comes after a telephone booth-sized library of free Holocaust books in the city was destroyed in a fire last week. (JTA)

A new artificial intelligence app lets users instant-message with biblical figures like Job, Lot and Ruth. Some of the characters, including the prophet Isaiah and King Solomon, require a $2.99 monthly subscription. (Religion News Service)

Shiva calls Rabbi Chai Yitzchak Twerski, known as the Rachmastrivka Rebbe, died at 92 Jerry Moss, co-founder of A&M Records and member of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, died at 88 Marc Becker, former chairman of the board at the Park Avenue Synagogue in New York, died at 51.

A picture of Leo Frank in the memoir of Ab Cahan, the founding editor of the Forward. (Courtesy of YIVO)

On this day in history (1915): Leo Frank, a Jewish factory superintendent, was lynched by a mob in Marietta, Georgia. Frank had been convicted for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan a conviction most historians view as wrongful in a case that launched both the birth of the Anti-Defamation League and the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan. When the Forwards PJ Grisar met Ben Platt, who played Leo Frank in the Broadway musical Parade, to read Franks letters, Platt was struck by Franks sense of hope in the face of injustice.

In honor of Robert DeNiros birthday, check out our secret Jewish history of the acclaimed actor.

Our senior political reporter, Jacob Kornbluh, talked with me and Laura yesterday about how President Biden is walking a tightrope in his approach to Israel as the presidential election ramps up. Biden hasnt taken any tactical moves to hold the Netanyahu government accountable, Jacob said. It has to do a lot with Bidens genuine love for Israel. Hes famous for saying you dont have to be a Jew to be a Zionist. Watch the episode above, or subscribe to That Jewish News Show wherever you get podcasts.

Thanks to Rebecca Salzhauer and Talya Zax for contributing to todays newsletter.

You can reach the Forwarding team at [emailprotected].

Read more from the original source:

Israels summer tourists shrug off protests in favor of holy sites and nightlife - Forward

Categories Mary Phagan

In the news on this date: Aug. 17 | News, Sports, Jobs – Altoona Mirror

Local history

50 years ago

Aug. 17, 1973

The Blair County Law Enforcement Association met at the Family Host Cafeteria to discuss crime by motorcycle gangs or clubs, with Altoona Police Chief Jack Kuhn as chief speaker. The association comprised police from the state, Altoona, Logan Township, Williamsburg, Roaring Spring, Martinsburg, parole and probation officers and prison wardens.

25 years ago

Aug. 17, 1998

Altoona Mayor Tom Martin named former Altoona Mayor Daniel Milliron to head a committee to study crime problems in the city. Other members of the committee had not yet been named.

10 years ago

Aug. 17, 2013

Members of the local Laurel Divers Club, which had about 80 members, including Ashley Sorge and Tom Manion, recovered several 6-inch teeth from the extinct Megalodon Shark off the coast of North Carolina. The Megalodon was estimated to be 50 feet long and weigh 70 tons.

Compiled by Tim Doyle

World history

Today is the 229th day of 2023. There are 136 days left in the year.

Todays highlight in history:

In 1982, the first commercially produced compact discs, a recording of ABBAs The Visitors, were pressed at a Philips factory near Hanover, West Germany.

On this date:

In 1807, Robert Fultons North River Steamboat began heading up the Hudson River on its successful round trip between New York and Albany.

In 1915, a mob in Cobb County, Georgia, lynched Jewish businessman Leo Frank, 31, whose death sentence for the murder of 13-year-old Mary Phagan had been commuted to life imprisonment. (Frank, who had maintained his innocence, was pardoned by the state of Georgia in 1986.)

In 1978, the first successful trans-Atlantic balloon flight ended as Maxie Anderson, Ben Abruzzo and Larry Newman landed their Double Eagle II outside Paris.

In 1987, Rudolf Hess, the last member of Adolf Hitlers inner circle, died at Spandau Prison at age 93, an apparent suicide.

The Associated Press

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In the news on this date: Aug. 17 | News, Sports, Jobs - Altoona Mirror

Categories Leo Frank

Broadways Parade and the Tragedy of Leo Frank – Jewish Link of New Jersey

Platt and Diamond as Leo and Lucille.

On Sunday, August 6, the Broadway revival of the musical Parade ended its limited run at the Bernard B. Jacobs Theatre. The show details the true story of Leo Frank, a Jewish man who is believed to be wrongly convicted and murdered for the rape and killing of a 13-year-old girl. The production stars Jewish actors Ben Platt and Micaela Diamond as husband and wife Leo and Lucille Frank.

The Leo Frank Case

Leo Max Frank, a Jewish American, was raised in Brooklyn. An anxious intellectual, Frank was a quiet man, and he mostly kept to himself and his books. He attended Pratt Institute and Cornell University before moving to Atlanta, Georgia, in 1908. There, he married Lucille Selig in 1910 and began a happy marriage. She hailed from a prominent Jewish family; her grandparents had founded the first synagogue in Atlanta. Two years after Franks wedding, he was elected president of the Bnai Brith Atlanta chapter.

Frank took on a job at the National Pencil Factory in 1908 and devoted his entire life to his work. Being a college-educated Jew from New York, Frank felt a deep sense of estrangement from the people and culture of the southern United States even in his own assimilated Jewish neighborhood. On April 26, 1913, the day of the Atlanta Confederate Day Parade, a 13-year-old White girl named Mary Phagan, who worked under Frank, went to the National Pencil Factory alone to collect her pay. The next day, her dead body was found in the basement of the factory by the African-American night watchman, Newt Lee.

Frank, Lee and Jim Conley, the African-American factory janitor, were all suspects in the murder. However, Frank was the only man who had to stand trial, in Leo M. Frank v State of Georgia.

Despite ample evidence that Frank was innocent, many factory girls were forced to testify against Frank by Franks prosecutor, Hugh Dorsey. These girls were told to accuse Frank of being a pedophile. Dorsey also persuaded the Franks African-American maid, Minola McKnight, to testify against him. Conley told the prosecution several different versions of the events of April 26, changing the story each time he was questioned.

The court also used Franks nervous demeanor and anxious fidgets as evidence of his guilt, when in reality, he was just a perpetually shy man. In addition, at the time, the state of Georgia didnt allow the defendant in a murder trial to testify on his own behalf, so Frank was only permitted to give a short speech declaring his innocence.

The trial was riddled with antisemitism, and the Atlanta press exploded, claiming that Frank was a blood-thirsty pedophile. The articles published about Frank employed countless antisemitic tropes that served to further pit the Atlanta public against Frank. Outside the courthouse, angry antisemitic crowds gathered and rioted, advocating for the death of a Jew. At the end of the trial, Frank was sentenced to death by hanging, and the city lit up at the prospect of what they saw as justice being served.

Frank spent his time in jail writing a paper that would prove his innocence and disprove every single piece of evidence used against him. Governor Slaton finally agreed to reopen Franks case after speaking with Lucille Frank and reading the over 100,000 letters requesting that he do so. After examining 10,000 pages of documents and all of the evidence against Frank, Governor Slaton deemed Leo Frank completely innocent. Governor Slaton reduced Franks death sentence to a sentence of life, and Leo and Lucille were hopeful they could eventually see him free.

After this announcement, riots broke out across Atlanta. Many wielded signs with messages such as Hang the Jew.

This new verdict was so unpopular that Slaton lost the next gubernatorial race and was succeeded by Franks prosecuting attorney, Hugh Dorsey. Dorseys entire career was built upon the Frank trial, on the back of the condemnation of an innocent man. On the night of August 16, 1915, a group of terrorists known as The Knights of Mary Phagan abducted Frank from his jail cell and drove him to Marietta, Georgia, Phagans hometown. There, 31-year-old Leo Frank was hanged at 7 a.m. the following day, facing Phagans childhood home. After his death, the lynching site drew a large crowd, with many tearing off the fabric of Franks shirt. Franks lynching is the only known case in U.S. history where a Jewish man was hanged by a mob.

Franks trial and death led to the rise of two contrasting organizations: Bnai Brith founded the Anti-Defamation League (ADL), aimed at fighting antisemitism. The Knights of Mary Phagan gave rise to the resurgence of the Ku Klux Klan (KKK), aimed at promoting white supremacy.

Today, most historians agree that not only was Leo Frank innocent, but Jim Conley was likely the true perpetrator of the crime.

In 1986, the state of Georgia officially pardoned Leo Frank. In 2019, the Fulton County task force declared that they would reexamine the entire case, an assignment that is ongoing.

Ben Platt

This productions star, Ben Platt, is the first Jewish actor to play the role professionally. However, Platt is no theater novice; this is the 29-year-olds third Broadway show. But Platt has never before played a Jewish character on the Broadway stage. His family is deeply immersed in the Jewish world. His mother, Julie, was a board chair of Camp Ramah and is also the current chair of the board of trustees of the Jewish Federations of North America. Platt attended Camp Ramah in California as a child. He cites winning his camps color war in Maccabiah (he was on Team Adom) as one of his proudest achievements. Platt said that it is due to Camp Ramahs influence that he feels very close to his Jewish identity today. In fact, Theater Camp, the 2023 movie that Ben co-wrote and co-starred in, was partially based on his real-life camp experiences. The film was even shot at the URJ Kutz Camp.

Both on and off screen, Platt continues to advocate for the Jewish community. In addition, Platt and fellow Jewish actor Zoey Deutsch took to social media to sing a light-hearted Yom Kippur theme song before the holiday. Platt also wore a Star of David necklace as part of his outfit for the Met Gala.

He said he feels honored to portray Leo Frank in this revival. Platt and his co-star, Diamond, showed off their Jewish pride by performing a song from Parade this May at the White House for Jewish American Heritage Month. Also, before almost every performance, Platt, Diamond and the rest of the cast say the mourners kaddish for Frank. After Parades 100th performance, Platt said, As a Jew and lifelong musical theater devotee, the experience of Leo has already been, as we say, dayenu.

Before the show premiered on Broadway, Platt had already stated that it is a timely piece given the uptick in antisemitic attacks. However, during the first preview of the show this February, neo-Nazi protesters gathered outside the Jacobs Theatre, handing out antisemitic flyers and wielding signs warning theatergoers that they are about to go see a show that worships a pedophile, serving as a juxtaposition to the antisemitic parades that protested Frank in the play itself.

That night, Platt took to Instagram to address the situation. In a video, he said, It was definitely very ugly and scary but a wonderful reminder of why were telling this particular story and how special and powerful art and, particularly, theater can be. Now is really the moment for this particular piece.

The Show

The show is a revival of the 1998 musical written by Alfred Uhry (book) and Jason Robert Brown (music and lyrics). In 2022, the musical began a week-long run Off-Broadway at New York City Center in November starring Platt and Diamond. It transferred to Broadway with a strictly limited run set to end on August 6, with previews starting on February 21. The demand for tickets was so high that the Telecharge ticketing site crashed.

The show got rave reviews, with The New York Times calling the production a timely and gorgeously sung Broadway revival. Variety wrote, This theatrically thrilling revival of Parade teaches lessons that still need to be learned from a wicked past that haunts us still. The show was nominated for six Tony Awards, winning two for Best Direction of a Musical and Best Revival of a Musical this June.

Major Highlights

Ardens directing makes the show even more moving. His choice to have Platt remain on stage during the entire 15-minute intermission effectively makes the anxiety that Frank felt after being convicted palpable. As each character was introduced in the show, photos of the real-life people that these actors were depicting flashed on a screen, serving as a reminder to audience members that this tragic tale is true.

The shows beautiful score is peak Brown, complete with catchy tunes, upbeat numbers and heartbreaking ballads. Alex Joseph Grayson, who plays Jim Conley, sings the show-stopping song, Thats What He Said, which left this audience member in awe. The presence of Platt and Diamonds onstage chemistry is powerfully demonstrated when they sing the hopeful This Is Not Over Yet. Platts rendition of Come Up to My Office is a disturbingly poignant portrayal of how strongly the Atlanta public felt that Frank was a vile human being.

The show also focuses a lot of its energy on the love story between Leo and Lucille. Leo died when Lucille was only 27. After his death, Lucilles doctor, Dr. James Kauffman, said that Leo might have been killed, but she served a life sentence. This sense of a romantic, inseparable bond is evident in the show via Lucilles insistence on helping her husband be freed. In one of the shows final scenes, where the Franks believe they have a chance at proving Leos innocence, they have a picnic in Leos jail cell, an act that Leo had previously been too busy with work to engage in. As they talk, the cell walls around them fade away and an open field replaces them, effectively emphasizing how the Franks kept each others spirits alive. After Leos lynching, Lucille never remarried and died in 1957 at age 69.

Throughout the show, Lucille implores Leo to assimilate his Jewish identity to fit the time and place in which they live as she herself puts her Southern identity before her Jewish one. However, this show serves as a reminder that assimilation does not stop hate. In reference to Lucille Franks assimilation, Diamond said, Antisemites have never cared what kind of Jew you are, whether you attend synagogue or throw around Yiddish words.

The most heartwrenching scene comes right before Frank is lynched. He was pulled out of his jail cell so fast that he was not even honored with the dignity of putting on his pants. Thus, before he is killed, he does four things. First, he asks for a sack to be tied around his waist. Next, he requests his wedding ring be given to his wife. Then, he once again states that he is innocent, despite the prospect of being freed if he admits to the deed. Lastly, he defiantly says the Shema before being hanged from an oak tree.

On the day of Parades final performance, Platt said, Leo and Lucille Frank, you will not be forgotten. In an age when prejudice, misinformation and bias run rampant, Parade is a story that needs to be told. The show is a painful demonstration of the importance of critical thinking and not following the crowd on the road to ignorance. Parade serves as a reminder of all of the tangible consequences of unbridled hate.

Dina Shlufman of Tenafly is a Jewish Link summer intern and is a rising freshman at Cornell University.

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Broadways Parade and the Tragedy of Leo Frank - Jewish Link of New Jersey

Categories Leo Frank

Leo Brandt, 94 – Daily Inter Lake

Our loving father, husband, grandpa, and uncle, Leo Frank Brandt, 94, passed away suddenly and peacefully at home on July 25, 1923.

He was born in Jefferson City, Missouri, on March 26, 1929, to Frank and Emma Brandt.

His career included master plumbing, logging and for the last 20 years, the main man at Spencer and Company.

He loved going to the woods with family and friends to cut wood for heating their homes for the winter. He enjoyed the camping trips (Tally Lake) with Dad being the head barbecuer.

He was an endless helper to his family and friends. He was honored as Volunteer of the Year at the Salvation Army in 1989.

He is survived by his wife Margaret, marriage of 74 years, along with his children; Donna Spencer, Ronnie Brandt (Kathy), Debbie Kraus (Ron), Theresa Eickert (Boot), Carla Brandt, Randy Brandt (Thelma), Barbara Lipp (Jerry) and Patsy Stinger (Kevin); his sister, Emily Combs; 17 grandchildren; 24 great-grandchildren; many great-great-grandchildren; and his faithful puppy, Jack.

He was preceded in death by his son, Samuel Leo Brandt Sr.

Services will be held at 1 p.m. Monday, July 31, at Buffalo Hill Funeral Home, with final resting place at Glacier Memorial Garden.

The family wishes to extend our utmost appreciation to chaplain Michelle of Braveheart Ministry, along with the first responders who helped us at a very difficult time. If you wish to give a donation in Leos honor to Braveheart Ministry, it would be most deserving so they can continue to help others.

Dad, we love you and our lives will be forever touched by the memories of you. Your helping hand that always helped us will no longer be reaching out, but we will hold you and those memories close to our hearts forever and ever.

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Leo Brandt, 94 - Daily Inter Lake

Categories Leo Frank

Keep it real at these Broadway shows based on true stories | Official … – New York Theatre Guide

Historical events and notable figures of entertainment, politics, and more are the basis of Broadway's biggest shows that you can both enjoy and learn from.

Theyre the real deal. Some of the characters in current and upcoming Broadway plays and musicals are so complex, quirky, and colorful they seem larger than life. But they're not, really theyre actually drawn from life.

Shows based on fact and actual figures offer intriguing slices of history for audiences and distinct challenges for actors bringing these people back to life. Like, say, capturing a pop music superstars signature growl or the various idiosyncrasies of a troubled world-class wit.

Whether its on a movie set in the 1970s, in a courtroom in 1913 Georgia, or in colonial times where history and a nation is made, Broadway shows bring us up close and personal with fascinating characters whod be hard for writers to just dream up. The stories of real people in theatre are just as extraordinary as any fiction.

Get tickets to Broadway shows on New York Theatre Guide.

If you think Steven Spielbergs 1975 man-eating shark movie, Jaws, is scary, then get a load of what the films actors Richard Dreyfuss, Roy Scheider, and Robert Shaw endured while making it. Between a prop predator constantly not working, shooting delays, and actors egos, there was blood in the water between scenes. So it goes in this play starring Alex Brightman as Dreyfuss, Colin Donnell as Scheider, and Ian Shaw, who wrote it with Joseph Nixon, as his father.

Get The Shark Is Broken tickets now.

Neil Diamond, a shy Brooklyn kid-turned-adored Jewish Elvis, has 39 albums and more than enough hit singles Sweet Caroline, Song America, and Shiloh among them to fill this musical. Will Swenson and Mark Jacoby play Diamond at different ages as the story traces his career and personal highs and lows, which he explores therapy sessions that hush the not-so-beautiful clamor in his head.

Get A Beautiful Noise tickets now.

Comedian Fanny Brices rollercoaster life took her from modest Lower East Side roots to 1920s superstar status in the Ziegfeld Follies to an ill-fated marriage to gambler Nick Arnstein. The duality gangbusters career, rocky romance tugs at the heart of this classic musical stacked with hits like People and Dont Rain on My Parade. Lea Michele stars in the role made famous by Barbra Streisand.

Learn more about the real Brice and the showbiz history that inspired Funny Girl.

Get Funny Girl tickets now.

A musician, author, and actor whod say anything, Oscar Levant was a man who wasnt shy about discussing his struggles with mental health. On live TV, no less. Doug Wrights tightly focused play covers Levants sensation-stirring appearance on Tonight Starring Jack Paar in 1958. Sean Hayes won a Tony for his portrait of Levant.

Learn more about Levant and the history that inspired Good Night, Oscar.

Get Good Night, Oscar tickets now.

Former Philippine First Lady Imelda Marcoss love for disco sparked this immersive bio-musical by David Byrne and Fatboy Slim set in a dance club. Amid the infectious, giddy beats, an unsettling story emerges about the notorious Marcos dictatorship. Arielle Jacobs and Jose Llana are Imelda and Ferdinand Marcos, and Conrad Ricamora is their outspoken and doomed political rival.

Get Here Lies Love tickets now.

This stand-up show isn't just based on a true story it is entirely a true story. Alex Edelman, a comedian and writer whose Orthodox Jewish upbringing informs all his work, recalls the time he infiltrated a new-Nazi meeting. Yes, that happened. Yes, Edelmans solo recollection is shockingly funny. New York Theatre Guide's five-star review reads, "Its that rare theatrical production that doesnt just live up to the hype it exceeds it."

Get Alex Edelman: Just For Us tickets now.

In Marietta, Georgia in 1913, Leo Frank was wrongfully tried, convicted, and sentenced to death for the murder of a girl who worked in the factory he supervised. Jason Robert Brown and Alfred Uhry dont shy from the darkness in this Tony Award-winning 1998 musical, now starring Ben Platt as Leo and Micaela Diamond as his wife, Lucille, for the first Broadway revival.

Learn more about the real history behind Parade.

Get Parade tickets now.

Pop star Michael Jackson prepares for his Dangerous World Tour in 1992 while an MTV crew shoots footage for a documentary in this jukebox bio-musical. Audiences get a look into his early family life and his creative process and watch transformative performances from the lead actor practically resurrecting Jackson on stage. The Tony-winning show is fueled by Jacksons greatest hits, high-octane dance, and a book by two-time Pulitzer Prize-winner Lynn Nottage.

Get MJ The Musical tickets now.

They were The Real Housewives of Henry VIII Catherine of Aragon, Anne Boleyn, Jane Seymour, Anna of Cleves, Katherine Howard, and Catherine Parr. In this glitzy, compact musical, whoever makes a case for suffering the most while wed to Henry rules. The women engage in a six-way vocal throwdown with Tony-winning, pop-tastic songs by Toby Marlow and Lucy Moss.

Learn more about the real Tudor-era English history that inspired Six.

Get Six tickets now.

Founding Father Alexander Hamilton comes to life in Lin-Manuel Mirandas hit musical filled with rap, hip-hop, and pop that puts a diverse spin on an essential chapter of American history. The story charts Hamilton from his poor childhood in the Caribbean to power player in George Washingtons cabinet to errant husband to the losing end of a duel with his bitter rival.

Get Hamilton tickets now.

By the early 1930s, the six-man German musical group the Comedian Harmonists had risen to prominence thanks to the beautiful music they made when their voices blended. As this musical by Barry Manilow and Bruce Sussman recounts, the group clashed with the Third Reich because it included Jewish members. It's a harrowing story, but also a heartfelt one of brotherhood, buoyed by plenty of musical comedy and original songs.

Check back for information on Harmony tickets on New York Theatre Guide.

Top image credit: MJ The Musical. (Photo courtesy of production)

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Keep it real at these Broadway shows based on true stories | Official ... - New York Theatre Guide