The class struggle behind the story of his 1915 lynching remains tragically relevant.On 17 August 1915, Leo Frank, a Cornell-educated Jewish industrialist, was lynched in suburban Atlanta. The atrocity marked the culmination of a horrible conflict, which began in 1913 with the murder of a child worker named Mary Phagan, who worked for pennies an hour in Atlanta National Pencil Factory. Frank, the superintendent of the plant, was convicted of the crime and sentenced to death, though he always .
The class struggle behind the story of his 1915 lynching remains tragically relevant.On 17 August 1915, Leo Frank, a Cornell-educated Jewish industrialist, was lynched in suburban Atlanta. The atrocity marked the culmination of a horrible conflict, which began in 1913 with the murder of a child worker named Mary Phagan, who worked for pennies an hour in Atlanta National Pencil Factory. Frank, the superintendent of the plant, was convicted of the crime and sentenced to death, though he always .
The article is the third in response to the news about Nidal Malik Hasan,an expert opinion on Islamic culture, while rejecting the email evesdropping to be related to terrorist recruits, the author, provides certain factors in the Major Hasan's life,lead to insanity and fear symptoms rather than terrorism tip.Page 1 of 11
