Conflicting forces: * Urban vs. Rural (Farms clashing with modern city life) * Science vs. Religion (Evolution conspiracy; Scopes "Monkey" Trial)
It was a conflict between the teachings of theology and science. To some people in the early 1900s, the theory of evolution suggested that men were descended from apes (which is erroneous). The term "monkey trial" was applied to the Scopes trial because a teacher was charged with teaching Darwinian evolution in violation of a state law against it. The underlying issue was whether or not a state statute was constitutional or unconstitutional because it made it a criminal offense to teach the theory of evolution, as opposed to the Bible's teaching of the Creation. Scopes was found guilty as charged, but cleared on a technicality. The 1925 law, called the Butler Act, was upheld by the Tennessee Supreme Court but was eventually repealed by the Tennessee legislature in 1967.
The Rosenberg trial and the Alger Hiss trial
Peter Cooper
Ethel and Julius Rosenberg
Secretary of State William Jennings Bryan was prosecuting attorney, Clarence Darrow was the defense attorney.
The Scopes Monkey Trial garnered widespread attention because it was the first major legal case concerning the teaching of evolution in public schools. The trial pitted the theory of evolution against creationism, two highly debated topics at the time. This clash of ideas resulted in a high level of public interest and media coverage.
Conflicting forces: * Urban vs. Rural (Farms clashing with modern city life) * Science vs. Religion (Evolution conspiracy; Scopes "Monkey" Trial)
The three major social conflicts in the 1920s were the Scopes Trial, which centered around the teaching of evolution in schools; Prohibition, which banned the sale and consumption of alcohol; and the Red Scare, which was a fear of communist infiltration and led to the Palmer Raids.
the scopes trial
In the 1920s, a major conflict emerged between science and religion in the United States over the teaching of evolution in schools. This debate culminated in the famous Scopes Monkey Trial in 1925, where a high school teacher was tried for illegally teaching evolution in Tennessee. The trial highlighted the tensions between religious beliefs and scientific theories on the origins of life.
It was a conflict between the teachings of theology and science. To some people in the early 1900s, the theory of evolution suggested that men were descended from apes (which is erroneous). The term "monkey trial" was applied to the Scopes trial because a teacher was charged with teaching Darwinian evolution in violation of a state law against it. The underlying issue was whether or not a state statute was constitutional or unconstitutional because it made it a criminal offense to teach the theory of evolution, as opposed to the Bible's teaching of the Creation. Scopes was found guilty as charged, but cleared on a technicality. The 1925 law, called the Butler Act, was upheld by the Tennessee Supreme Court but was eventually repealed by the Tennessee legislature in 1967.
the prosecution was invalid because the law was essentially designed to benefit a particular religious group, which would be unconstitutional
The first trial was the 'Trial of the Major War Criminals' .
The Rhine River was Germany last major line of defense in the West.
In the book "Inherit the Wind," Harry Y. Eastrbook is a character who is based on the real-life prosecutor and politician William Jennings Bryan. Eastrbook, like Bryan, represents the prosecution in the fictionalized account of the Scopes Monkey Trial, a landmark court case in 1925 that centered on the teaching of evolution in schools.
Major General Abibilla Kudayberdiev is the Minister of Defense for Kyrgyzstan.