1972
There were two trials 1) October 24, 1770-October 30, 1770 2) November 27, 1770-December 14, 1770
Whole bunch of people and Villingers. the afflicted and the acused were the main people.
The Nuremburg trials were trials meant to find men guilty or innocent of War Crimes. The people involved were the Nazi war criminals and Allied judges.
cities involved in the Salem witch trials were Salem, denver, washinton d.c., and p-town!! EDIT: Three of those didn't exist yet. Cities and Towns involved were Salem Town, Salem Village, Andover, Topsfield, Beverly, Marblehead and Boston.
Massachusetts had alotta history during the revolutionary days and even before that. The first battles of the war and other events such as the boston massacre and the Boston tea party occured. The infamous Salem which trials happened in the 1600s
The only comparison is that people were killed. The Salem trials were legal trials caused by a religious panic and was contained to a single county. Only twenty people died and those deaths were technically legalized. Jonestown was sheer massacre because of cultish mentality.
People wore headphones during the Nuremberg trials to listen to simultaneous translations of the proceedings in multiple languages. This allowed participants and observers to understand the proceedings regardless of their native language.
There were witch trials in Boston, but the most famous was in Salem.
It wasn't covered up, there were courts, trials, and convictions.
The clergy of Essex County and Boston put all their support behind the trials and sometimes were the only force that kept the trials going.
No and yes. The Crucible is work of fiction centering around the Salem witch trials, so its characters are real people involved in the trials. However, not all the real people are there and the stories and bios of those who are were mangled while he wrote the book.
There are several clinical trials around treatments for liver cancer that are currently recruiting for participants in the Boston area. You can find a listing of these trials as well as current ones that are ongoing at http://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/results?term=boston+AND+liver+cancer.