1. All the publicity is making it hard to find an unbiased jury. 2. Such premature publicity could make her positively obstructive instead of merely difficult. 3. And the publicity made Caterpillar a national symbol of the striker replacement issue. 4. At one point a passenger got on a phone in the plane and called the Associated Press, apparently on the erroneous assumption that publicity would make things right. 5. Brill said intense publicity makes televised coverage more imperative. 6. Certainly great publicity may make the process more onerous. 7. He said publicity might make him look like a Nazi sympathizer. 8. Negative publicity makes a fair trial in Grundy impossible, he writes. 9. She was concerned that publicity would make her unemployable. 10. The Appellate Division of state Supreme Court ruled that pretrial publicity would make it difficult to conduct a fair trial in the Bronx. |