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March 14, 1986 - Image 78

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 1986-03-14

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

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78 Friday, March 14, 1986

THE DETROIT JEWISH NEWS

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4

BIRTHS

Continued from preceding page

his paternal grandfather
Mr. Nathan Potach and his mat-
ernal great-grandmother Jennie
Ginsburg.
FEB. 23 — Former Detroiter Kim
(Lichtman) Champion and Wayne
Champion of Phoeqix, Ariz., are
proud to announce the birth of
their son, Jonathan David,
brother to Adam Jacob. Elated
great-grandmother is Esther
Lober of Dallas, Tex. Thrilled
grandparents are Bonnie and
Dick Barnes of Great Falls, Mont.,
and Joyce Lichtman of Dallas.
Jonathan is named in loving
memory of his paternal great-
grandfather Mr. John Schuler.
FEB. 13 — Chuck and Jody (Or-
zuch) Marchwinski of Oak Park
announce the birth of their first
child, a son, Maximillion Charles.
The delighted grandparents are
Bernie and Loretta Orzuch of Oak
Park and Charles and Barbara
Marchwinski of Warren. The
thrilled great-grandparents. are
Ann Lobel of Southfield, Helen
Anderson of Warren and Mr. and
Mrs. Alex Marchwinski of
Florida. Maximillion Charles

ory of

(Mordechai Chaim) is named in
memory of his maternal great-
grandfather Mr. Max Lobel and
maternal great-grandmother Ida
Orzuch and in honor of his pater-
nal grandfather Mr. Charles Mar-
chwinski.
FEB. 12
Kathy and Larry
Gaynor of Farmington Hills are
delighted to announce the birth of
their son, Mark Joseph, brother to
Michael and Daniel. Mark's
grandparents area Hal and
Fayanne Gaynor and Charles and
Georgia Hutson. Mark is named
in memory of a great-great-uncle
and great-grandfather.
FEB. 6
David and Bonnie
Gross (Bonnie Finkelstein, for-
merly of Southfield) of Tarzana,
Calif., joyfully announce the birth
of their daughter, Lindsay Nicole,
sister to Darryl Justin and Allison
Michelle. Lindsay is the grand-
daughter of Annabelle Finkels-
tein, formerly of Southfield, cur-
rently of Reseda, Calif., and Sam
and Lola Gross of Los Angeles,
Calif. Lindsay Nicole also is the
granddaughter of the late Mr. Al-
bert Finkelstein.





Georgia Pardons Frank
70 Years After Lynching

Atlanta (JTA) — Leo Frank,
the Atlanta Jew lynched in 1915
after being convicted of the mur-
der of a 13-year-old girl who
worked in the factory where he
was a superintendent, received a
posthumous pardon Tuesday from
the Georgia Board of Pardons and
Paroles.
The pardon came over two years
after the board had refused such
an exoneration because, it then
said, "it is impossible to decide
conclusively the guilt or inno-
cence of Frank."
The board had re-opened the
case after the late Alonzo Mann,
then 85, came forward to say that,
as an office boy of 14 in the pencil
factory where the murder of Mary
Phagan took place, he had seen
the janitor carry her body to the
basement.
The parole boaid claimed in De-
cember 1983 that Mann's state-
ment did not provide any new evi-
dence. American Jewish organ-
izations expressed shock at the
board's decision.
The board, in granting the par-
don Tuesday, gave an account of
the entire case, concluded that
finding "conclusive evidence pro-
ving beyond any doubt that Frank
was innocent" was a standard
proof "almost impossible to
satisfy" especially for a "70-year-
old case." The board's statement
continued:
"Without attempting to address
the question of guilt or innocence
and in recognition of the state's
failure to protect the person of Leo
M. Frank and thereby preserve
his opportunity for continued
legal appeal of his conviction, and
in recognition of the state's failure
to bring his killers to justice" the
board granted Frank a pardon.
The case came before Governor
John Slaton after unsuccessful
appeals in 1913-1915. "The gov-
ernor was under enormous pres-

sure. Many wanted Frank to hang
and the emotions of some were
fired by prejudice about Frank
being Jewish and a factory
superintendent from the north,"
the board said.
Staten commuted Frank's
death sentence to life imprison-
ment on June 21,1915. "On the
night of Aug. 16, 1915, a group of
armed men took Frank by force
from the state prison at Mil-
ledgeville, transported him to
Cobb County and early the next
morning lynched him."
What the board statement did
not relate was that after the
lynching, armed mobs roamed the
streets of Atlanta, forcing Jewish
business firms to close their doors.
About 1,500 of Georgia's Jewish
population of 3,000 fled, and
others were targets of a boycott.
The reactions to the events —
the trial where mobs screamed
anti-Semitic slogans through the
windows .— and to the lynching
were' so intense that they
catalyzed the establishment of the ,1
Anti-Defamation League. The fl
events also spawned a revival of ,11
the.Ku Klux Klan.

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