This document is a partial curriculum vitae or list of professional engagements spanning from 2004 to 2007, detailing various lectures, conferences, and addresses given at universities and organizations across the US, Europe, and Mexico. It includes specific dates for events, participating organizations, and locations, highlighting a professional's involvement in psychological and legal fields.
This document is a bibliography or publication list focusing on the work of E.F. Loftus and her collaborators between 1982 and 1984. It details numerous academic articles, book chapters, and encyclopedia entries primarily concerning memory, eyewitness testimony, jury instructions, and psychological aspects of legal processes. The list provides titles, co-authors, publication venues, and page numbers for each entry.
This document is a court transcript from a legal case, filed on August 10, 2022. It captures the direct examination of a witness, Dr. Loftus, who details her educational background, including receiving a bachelor's degree from UCLA in 1966 and a Ph.D. in psychology from Stanford in 1970. Dr. Loftus also defines a curriculum vitae (CV) for the jury and confirms that hers covers her professional life since the 1960s.
This document page appears to be a transcript of an interview between an individual named Shaffer and the political scientist Francis Fukuyama. They discuss Fukuyama's work (referencing 'Origins'), the restrictive structure of modern academia regarding specialization, and the dominance of economics over other social sciences like sociology and anthropology in understanding political order. The document bears a House Oversight Committee Bates stamp.
This document is page 162 of a manuscript, bearing a House Oversight Bates stamp. The text appears to be written by Alan Dershowitz (identified by the claim of being the clerk who drafted the 'Rudolph' opinion for Justice Goldberg). It discusses the legal history of the death penalty for rape, specifically the backlash from the Georgia Supreme Court against federal intervention, scholarly criticism from Herbert Packer, and the subsequent formation of a litigation project by the ACLU and NAACP.
This document discusses the distinction between the First Amendment right to heckle a speaker versus silencing them entirely, referencing the Bruce Franklin case involving Henry Cabot Lodge at Stanford in 1971. It contrasts the ACLU's past defense of limited disruption with a later refusal by the Southern California branch to apply the same principles during a disruption of Michael Oren's speech at the University of California at Irvine.
This document appears to be page 133 of a manuscript or memoir (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the context of the Bruce Franklin case) produced to the House Oversight Committee. The text discusses First Amendment principles, specifically the 'violence veto,' and recounts the narrator's legal representation of Stanford Professor Bruce Franklin in 1970. It details Franklin's speeches inciting students to shut down the Stanford Computation Center, the subsequent police intervention, and Franklin's eventual firing by University President Lyman.
This document is a page from a memoir or narrative, likely by Ehud Barak (given the references to Stanford and the Sayeret), produced during House Oversight proceedings. It details the planning of a covert Israeli military operation to bug Syrian communications lines in the Golan Heights, discussing logistical challenges like land mines and the nervousness of command. The text mentions key figures such as Avi Telem and Meir Har-Zion and references the narrator's later time at Stanford University.
This document contains an article by Peter Beinart titled "The Palestinian Right to Dream," published in The Daily Beast on May 25, 2011. It discusses the author's meeting with Fadi Quran, a Palestinian activist and Stanford graduate, who is organizing nonviolent youth movements across the Middle East inspired by the Arab Spring to advocate for Palestinian rights.
This document is a page from a contact or attendee list (labeled HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_013487) containing biographical summaries of high-profile individuals in technology, finance, politics, and academia. Notable figures include Robert Rubin (former Treasury Secretary), General Stan McChrystal, and various tech CEOs and venture capitalists. The document outlines their current roles, former positions, and board memberships, likely prepared for a conference or networking event circa 2011-2013.
An email from Jeremy Rubin to Jeffrey E. (Epstein) dated February 1, 2017. Rubin provides updates on the political landscape regarding Bitcoin (mentioning Balaji Srinivasan and Peter Thiel), discusses his recent research presentation at Stanford regarding 'inverse-input contracts,' and describes his current trip to Japan where he is teaching a Bitcoin course to engineers.
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