This document is a list of academic and professional engagements, likely by a single individual, spanning from 1989 to 1993. It details various conferences, lectures, seminars, and organizational affiliations across numerous universities, legal associations, and psychological societies in the United States, Canada, Australia, and Europe. The entries include the year, event name, and associated institutions or locations.
This document is a list of academic institutions, legal associations, and other organizations, along with events, grouped by year from 1974 to 1980. It appears to be a chronological record of affiliations, seminars, and conferences, potentially related to a professional's career or an institution's activities. The document also includes page numbering and a document identifier 'DOJ-OGR-00015246'.
This document is page 160 of a larger collection (labeled HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016963), containing an essay titled 'Algorists Dream of Objectivity' by Peter Galison. The text discusses the history of algorithms and compares subjective 'clinical' prediction methods against objective 'algorithmic' methods in psychology, citing a 1996 study by Grove and Meehl. While included in Epstein-related discovery files, the document itself is an academic text likely from a compilation book (possibly an Edge.org publication) and contains no flight logs or financial data.
This document is page 155 of a larger file (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_024588) detailing the 'Real Estate Management Team' for Greenstreet Real Estate Partners. It lists Steven Green (CEO) and Jeffrey Safchik (CFO), referring the reader to the 'KUE Advisory Board section' for their bios. The page primarily features a detailed professional biography for Steven Cox, Executive VP of Real Estate, highlighting his past roles at Tishman Heskin Partners and the Heskin Group, and his management of billion-dollar real estate assets.
This document is a page from an essay titled 'Algorists Dream of Objectivity' by Harvard science historian Peter Galison. The text discusses the history of algorithms and contrasts 'clinical' (subjective) judgment with 'algorithmic' (objective) prediction, citing a study by psychologists Grove and Meehl that argues algorithmic prediction is generally superior. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' Bates stamp, suggesting it was part of a document production for a congressional investigation, likely related to the Edge Foundation or scientific networks associated with Jeffrey Epstein.
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