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・ Frank Wörndl
・ Frank X Walker
・ Frank X. Altimari
・ Frank X. Gaspar
・ Frank X. Graves, Jr.
・ Frank X. McDermott
・ Frank X. Schwab
・ Frank X. Tolbert
・ Frank Xavier Leyendecker
・ Frank Wild
・ Frank Wild Holdsworth
・ Frank Wildhorn
・ Frank Wiley Wilson
・ Frank Wilkes
・ Frank Wilkeson
Frank Wilkinson
・ Frank Wilkinson (cricketer)
・ Frank Willan
・ Frank Willan (rower)
・ Frank Willard
・ Frank Willenborg
・ Frank Willey Clancy
・ Frank William Baxter
・ Frank William Bullock Jr.
・ Frank William Crilley
・ Frank William Erickson
・ Frank William Foster
・ Frank William Gay
・ Frank William Gilligan
・ Frank William Green


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Frank Wilkinson : ウィキペディア英語版
Frank Wilkinson

Frank Wilkinson (August 16, 1914 – January 2, 2006) was an American civil liberties activist who served as Executive Director of the National Committee Against Repressive Legislation and the First Amendment Foundation (both predecessors to the Defending Dissent Foundation).
== Biography ==
Born in Charlevoix, Michigan, Frank was one of four children. In 1917, Frank's father, Dr. Alan Wilkinson, enlisted in the Army Medical Corps and was stationed in Arizona. Dr. Wilkinson was a devout Methodist, so much so that Wilkinson recalled, "every morning of my life we had Bible reading and prayers at the breakfast table. It wasn't just saying grace. We got down on our knees and put our heads on the chairs."
In 1925 the family moved to Hollywood, California and on to Beverly Hills two years later. Although they weren't rich, the family was comfortable and Frank told his biographer "I was not touched by the Depression." 〔First Amendment Felon, pg 29〕 Wilkinson attended Beverly Hills High School.
Frank graduated from University of California, Los Angeles in 1936,〔Lyman, Rick. ("Frank Wilkinson, Defiant Figure of Red Scare, Dies at 91" ), ''The New York Times'', January 4, 2006. Accessed January 19, 2008. "He attended Beverly Hills High School and then the University of California, Los Angeles, graduating in 1936."〕
After graduation, Frank traveled in the U.S., North Africa and the Middle East. His desire to see Hull House, a settlement house founded by Jane Addams, the pacifist anarchist head who won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1931, took him to Chicago. While there, he visited Maxwell Street which he says was "one of the real turning points of my life because I had never seen poverty before."〔First Amendment Felon, pg. 44〕 He got another glimpse of poverty when he visited the Bowery in New York City and stayed at a flop house.
He encountered more poverty and degradation in his travels through North Africa and the Middle East. His experiences there caused him to re-evaluate his faith. He wrote to his friend, U.C. Berkeley President Robert Gordon Sproul: "Dear Bob, There is no God..."〔First Amendment Felon, pg 54〕 But his commitment to humanity and to building a better world was still there, he just had a new perspective on it.

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