Pulitzer Prize-winning author and law professor Edward J. Larson takes a look at the effects media exposure had on the Scopes trial in an article for the National Post, calling the trial a 1920s version of the O.J. Simpson and Michael Jackson trials of today. The article title is The O.J. trial of its time, and it was published on 10/26/05
The early 1920s found social patterns in chaos. Traditionalists, the older Victorians, worried that ...
This thesis will explore the media\u27s increasing impact on the criminal court system, specifically...
Thursday, September 7, 2000 CONTACT: Ed Larson, (706) 542-2660 WRITER: Kathy R. Pharr, (706) 542-517...
Pulitzer Prize-winning author and law professor Edward J. Larson takes a look at the effects media e...
The infamous Scopes trial has again been brought into the limelight as it celebrates its 80th annive...
Tali Yahalom, College \u2709, History Roman Holidays: The Role of Publicity in Criminal Trials The m...
The 1990s produced a number of sensational criminal and civil trials. The media and public avidly fo...
The national press descended on Dayton, Tennessee in the summer of 1925 to watch the prosecution of ...
friends hatched a plan that would put their tiny town of Dayton, Tennessee, on the map. While sippin...
October 3, 1995 marked the end of the O.J. Simpson double murder trial, which lasted 474 days and wa...
The notion that pretrial media coverage impacts the judicial process of highly publicized trials is ...
The trial of John Scopes is an important landmark in legal history. What happened in Dayton, Tennes...
October 3, 1995 marked the end of the O.J. Simpson double murder trial, which lasted 474 days and wa...
Thursday, March 12, 1998 WRITER: Kathy R. Pharr, 542-5172 CONTACT: Jill C. Birch, 542-5190 SCOPES MO...
This article reports that the murder trials of Sam Sheppard brought about changes in the press cover...
The early 1920s found social patterns in chaos. Traditionalists, the older Victorians, worried that ...
This thesis will explore the media\u27s increasing impact on the criminal court system, specifically...
Thursday, September 7, 2000 CONTACT: Ed Larson, (706) 542-2660 WRITER: Kathy R. Pharr, (706) 542-517...
Pulitzer Prize-winning author and law professor Edward J. Larson takes a look at the effects media e...
The infamous Scopes trial has again been brought into the limelight as it celebrates its 80th annive...
Tali Yahalom, College \u2709, History Roman Holidays: The Role of Publicity in Criminal Trials The m...
The 1990s produced a number of sensational criminal and civil trials. The media and public avidly fo...
The national press descended on Dayton, Tennessee in the summer of 1925 to watch the prosecution of ...
friends hatched a plan that would put their tiny town of Dayton, Tennessee, on the map. While sippin...
October 3, 1995 marked the end of the O.J. Simpson double murder trial, which lasted 474 days and wa...
The notion that pretrial media coverage impacts the judicial process of highly publicized trials is ...
The trial of John Scopes is an important landmark in legal history. What happened in Dayton, Tennes...
October 3, 1995 marked the end of the O.J. Simpson double murder trial, which lasted 474 days and wa...
Thursday, March 12, 1998 WRITER: Kathy R. Pharr, 542-5172 CONTACT: Jill C. Birch, 542-5190 SCOPES MO...
This article reports that the murder trials of Sam Sheppard brought about changes in the press cover...
The early 1920s found social patterns in chaos. Traditionalists, the older Victorians, worried that ...
This thesis will explore the media\u27s increasing impact on the criminal court system, specifically...
Thursday, September 7, 2000 CONTACT: Ed Larson, (706) 542-2660 WRITER: Kathy R. Pharr, (706) 542-517...