Encyclopedia > Floyd Abrams and the McCarthy documentary case
Helen Whitney was a prize-winning American Broadcasting Corporation producer and writer who in 1982 devoted half of a one-hour program (American Inquisition) to the impact McCarthyism had on Fairmont, a small West Virginia town. She focused on Luella Mundel, who chaired the art department at Fairmont State College. The narrator said in 1951 Mundel "was not a political activist, but had tastes, convictions about art, about religion, unfamiliar to these streets. And at a local American Legion seminar about subversives, she angrily stood to challenge what was being preached there. Her contract was dropped by the college. A state education official accused her of being a poor security risk. She then sued for slander, but in the trial that followed in Fairmont's courtooom, it was Luella Mundel and her right to speak freely, to be different, that wound up being tried."[1] Floyd Abrams is a famous First Amendment lawyer. ...
Helen Whitney was an award-winning producer for the American Broadcasting Corporation. ...
2002 identity of the ABC Circle logo, designed by Paul Rand in 1962. ...
Senator Joseph McCarthy McCarthyism is the term describing a period of intense anti-Communist suspicion in the United States that lasted roughly from the late 1940s to the late 1950s. ...
Official language(s) English Capital Charleston Largest city Charleston Area Ranked 41st - Total 24,244 sq mi (62,809 km²) - Width 130 miles (210 km) - Length 240 miles (385 km) - % water 0. ...
Fairmont State University is a public university located in Fairmont, West Virginia. ...
1951 (MCMLI) was a common year starting on Monday; see its calendar. ...
[edit] Conservative view
"In presenting the case of Luella Mundel, an art teacher at Fairmont College in Fairmont, West Virginia. ABC gave the impression that Victor Lasky had been one of the accusers who had caused her to lose her job. Laskv [sic] was lured into giving ABC News an interview on the pretext that it wanted to talk to him about fighting communism in the 1950s and about the Americanism lectures that he gave for the American Legion. It also wanted to talk about the little people who were caught up in the controversy, such as Luella Mundel, who had been the subject of an article published in Harper's magazine." Accuracy in the Media, June 1983.[2] According to Accuracy in the Media, Lasky only had a "brief encounter" when he was one of several speakers at the seminar. Mundel criticized the speakers, of which Lasky was one. Lasky said he recalled when meeting Helen Whitney that she was "an hysterical woman." He said, "I had to...try to calm her down." [3] Helen Whitney was an award-winning producer for the American Broadcasting Corporation. ...
[edit] References - ^ Speaking Freely, Page 154
- ^ Accuracy in the Media, ABC News Run Amok, July 8, 1983.
- ^ Accuracy in the Media, ABC News Run Amok, July 8, 1983.
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