| Connected Entity | Relationship Type |
Strength
(mentions)
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Documents | Actions |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
person
JANE
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Student teacher |
5
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1 |
This document is a page from the court transcript of the redirect examination of a witness named 'Jane' in the Ghislaine Maxwell trial (Case 1:20-cr-00330-PAE). Jane testifies about her application to Interlochen, confirming that while she was having severe difficulties at home, her recommendation letters from teachers did not reflect this because she was 'very good at hiding' the abuse. The attorney directs Jane to look at Defendant's Exhibit J-3.
The narrator reflects on their academic success at Brooklyn College despite earlier discouragement, and their transition from a strictly observant Orthodox Jew to a secular lifestyle in their twenties. The text discusses the personal and professional implications of this choice, including the decision to raise their children free from imposed religious rules, despite the potential career advantages of remaining within the Orthodox community.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or manuscript draft (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the biographical details regarding Yeshiva, Brooklyn College, and Yale Law School). It details the author's academic and personal transformation during the summer of 1955 while working at Camp Maple Lake. The text contrasts his poor performance and lack of respect at his Yeshiva high school with his subsequent success at Brooklyn College and Yale Law School.
This document is a single page (page 131) from a book or essay titled 'Knowledge,' bearing a House Oversight Committee Bates stamp. The text discusses mathematical probability, scientific notation, and the 'infinite monkey theorem' concept, illustrating the immense time required to randomly generate the book 'War and Peace' using the entire universe's atoms and the Planck interval.
Recommendation letters for Jane's application.
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