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Watson Davis clipped a short article out of a newspaper on May 7, 1925.
John Scopes had been arrested for discussing evolution in a
The Science Service Executive Committee agreed to give its reporters
$1,000 to cover the trial. The committee also decided to reject neutrality,
supporting the defense on the side of evolution. Davis and Frank Thone, the
senior biology editor of Science Service’s newsletters, acted as journalists as
well as informal assistants to the defense, says historian LaFollette. They
sought out top scientists to comment on the trial and lived among the
scientists and biology teachers. Thone wrote: “All day and far into the night
the rumble of scientific discussion and laughter issues forth from the Defense
mansion, that pleasant old house … that has become the headquarters for the
defenders of science, religion, and freedom.”
Magazines and newspapers across the country ran columns published by
Science Service, now Society for Science & the Public, publisher of Science
News.
Rather than rehashing old stories from the trial, LaFollette uncovers
unprocessed records and lost photographs from Science Service records stored in
the Smithsonian’s archives. She examines the role of the press in shaping the
trial. She also reveals how different Davis and Thone were from others who
sensationalized the trial or simply kept their distance.
Univ. Press of

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