This document appears to be a page (p. 28) from a scientific or academic methodology paper found within House Oversight files (Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017036). It details a quantitative analysis of historical censorship, specifically identifying individuals suppressed by the Nazi regime using Wikipedia data and language frequency analysis. The authors discuss validating their statistical 'suppression index' by hiring an expert from Yad Vashem to manually annotate a list of names.
This document is a page containing six statistical figures (A-F) analyzing historical censorship, suppression, and fame through word frequency in literature (likely N-grams). The charts track the mentions of artists like Marc Chagall during the Nazi era, Soviet figures like Trotsky, the term 'Tiananmen', and the 'Hollywood Ten' blacklist victims. The document bears the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017006, indicating it is part of a House Oversight Committee investigation, though no direct link to Jeffrey Epstein is visible on this specific page (it is likely a scientific paper attached to correspondence).
This document is a page from a scientific paper published in 'Science' or 'Sciencexpress' on December 16, 2010, bearing the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_016999. The text discusses a statistical analysis of fame and censorship using data from Wikipedia and Google Books, analyzing the trajectories of celebrity for figures like Bill Clinton and the impact of Nazi censorship on figures like Marc Chagall. While part of a government oversight release (likely related to Epstein's connections with scientists), the content itself is purely academic.
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