16 research outputs found
Book Review
Reviewing Henry B. Rothblatt, Successful Techniques in the Trial of Criminal Cases, Prentice-Hall, Inc., 196
Newspapers and the Courts
A problem of legal ethics that has been hovering over American courts, lawyers and newspapermen for more than half a century has finally landed in open debate in recent months. It is a problem that thus far has done little more than rouse recriminations and countercharges between two forced each of which, surprisingly enough, claims it avidly seeks what is in essence the same goal - justice. The problem is that of newspaper handling of court trials and their pre-trial developments
Newspaper Libel
Cases to be cited below in this article will show that libel\u27s line of danger in many instances is vague even to legal experts with specialized training and ample time for research and meditation. For journalists in their ceaseless race against time, and harried by competition, perforce relying on many sources for valuable information, the phantom of libel can be most troublesome
Newspaper Libel
Cases to be cited below in this article will show that libel\u27s line of danger in many instances is vague even to legal experts with specialized training and ample time for research and meditation. For journalists in their ceaseless race against time, and harried by competition, perforce relying on many sources for valuable information, the phantom of libel can be most troublesome
Newspapers and the Courts
A problem of legal ethics that has been hovering over American courts, lawyers and newspapermen for more than half a century has finally landed in open debate in recent months. It is a problem that thus far has done little more than rouse recriminations and countercharges between two forced each of which, surprisingly enough, claims it avidly seeks what is in essence the same goal - justice. The problem is that of newspaper handling of court trials and their pre-trial developments
Book Review
Reviewing Henry B. Rothblatt, Successful Techniques in the Trial of Criminal Cases, Prentice-Hall, Inc., 196
Hương Ngô: To Name It is to See It
This publication accompanies the exhibition Hương Ngô: To Name It is to See It, on view April 27- August 6, 2017 at DePaul Art Museum. In a new body of work that includes photographs, textiles, prints, neon, video, sound, and objects, Hương Ngô engages with the French government’s surveillance archives of Vietnamese anticolonial organizer Nguyễn Thị Minh Khai (1910-1941). The role of performance in the construction of identity is at the forefront of Ngô’s investigation of this historical figure. Minh Khai’s constant crossing of borders – those of nation-states, ethnicities, languages, genders, and classes – via her numerous pseudonyms and disguises, was key to her invisibility to authorities yet renders her difficult to classify even today.https://via.library.depaul.edu/museum-publications/1016/thumbnail.jp