31. The case still captures the public imagination because it shows the evil of a legal system when it is blind to innocence. 32. The criminal court is more alive in the public imagination. 33. The gruesome Ebola virus, which swept through Zaire three years ago, has captured the public imagination in books and on film. 34. The Packwood case simply has not caught the public imagination like the Anita Hill story did. 35. The stimulation of public imagination that resulted from these stories has yet to abate. 36. The Voitkas, who are awaiting trial, have captured the public imagination. 37. There were other accusations of official misconduct against the senator, including tampering with evidence, but they never caught the public imagination in quite the same way. 38. This time, though, the scandal has captured the broad public imagination as never before, and perhaps with good reason. 39. What provisions are being made for their perpetuation in the curious gallery of anti-relics by which presidential scandals and fiascoes live on in glass cases and the public imagination? 40. When Marie and Pierre Curie began to experiment with radiation, advances in physics had just begun to capture the public imagination. |