This document is a page from a participant list for the World Economic Forum Annual Meeting 2011. It contains a roster of high-profile individuals arranged alphabetically by surname (from Chin to Colondam), including their job titles, organizations, and countries of origin. Notable figures on this page include former US President William J. Clinton, UK Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg, author Paulo Coelho, and various prominent CEOs and financial executives such as Steven A. Cohen and Gary D. Cohn. The document bears the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_017068.
This text critiques the reliance on "mechanical objectivity" and algorithms in legal and social domains, drawing parallels to the history of science. It warns against the dangers of proprietary "black box" algorithms in criminal justice, citing issues with trade secrets impeding fair defense and the potential for algorithmic bias to serve as a proxy for race.
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.
A page from a manuscript (likely a memoir by Alan Dershowitz) discussing the history of Jewish quotas in Ivy League admissions. It recounts the 'bagel exchange' involving Harvard Dean Chase N. Peterson and details the author's collaboration with his brother Nathan (of the American Jewish Congress) to draft an Amicus brief for the landmark *Bakke* affirmative action Supreme Court case.
This document, marked as a House Oversight record, appears to be a manuscript excerpt dated April 2, 2012. It recounts an event in 1993 where the author (a Yale Law alum living on Martha's Vineyard) invited President Bill Clinton and Hillary Clinton to Rosh Hashanah services. The document includes the text of the invitation letter and describes the service at the Whaling Church in Edgartown, noting that Clinton was the first sitting president to attend such a service.
This document appears to be a page (p. 160) from a manuscript or memoir, dated April 2, 2012, in the header. It narrates the author's time as a law clerk (likely Alan Dershowitz) for Supreme Court Justice Arthur Goldberg in the 1960s. The text details the legal research into the constitutionality of the death penalty, discussions with Justice Goldberg about the political risks of opposing it, and a specific meeting with Justice Brennan to present arguments based on the 'cruel and unusual punishment' clause and racial disparities in execution statistics. The document bears a House Oversight Bates stamp.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir draft (contextually Alan Dershowitz's) submitted to the House Oversight Committee. It recounts the author's experiences with and opposition to discriminatory practices (gender, racial, and religious segregation) at various social clubs and academic institutions, specifically detailing incidents at Harvard, in Ohio, and in Australia. It also touches on the academic culture at Harvard Law School regarding tenure and the concept of 'soundness' in legal views.
This document appears to be a page from a manuscript or memoir (possibly by Alan Dershowitz himself, given the shift to first-person perspective) discussing his early teaching career at Harvard Law School. It details his Socratic teaching philosophy, the criticism he faced from traditionalists, and the defense and praise he received from figures like Justice Arthur Goldberg and the New York Times Magazine (specifically a 1966 article). The document bears a House Oversight stamp.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir (draft dated 2012) recounting the narrator's time clerking for Judge Bazelon in the early 1960s. It details the Judge's demanding nature regarding work hours, the narrator's success on the DC bar exam, the birth of his son Jamin, and the Judge's pessimistic reaction to the Cuban Missile Crisis in October 1962. The narrator is likely Alan Dershowitz, given the biographical details (Yale Law, clerkship with Bazelon, son named Jamin).
This document appears to be page 43 of a manuscript or memoir (likely by Alan Dershowitz, given the biographical details regarding Yale, Harvard, and his son Elon) submitted to the House Oversight Committee. The text recounts the author's time at Yale Law School, including a moot court victory against a Taft family member, his role as the first Orthodox Jewish Editor-in-Chief of the Law Journal, and his graduation featuring JFK. It also details his academic development, mentorship under various professors like Joseph Goldstein, and early writings on the 5th Amendment.
This document appears to be a page from a memoir or manuscript by Alan Dershowitz, included in House Oversight Committee records (Bates stamped). It details his early experiences at Yale Law School and his struggles with job hunting in New York in the late 1950s/early 1960s, specifically focusing on antisemitism and religious discrimination at major law firms like Sullivan and Cromwell and Paul, Weiss. It concludes with an anecdote about working for Milton Handler at Kaye, Scholer.
This document is a page from a manuscript or memoir, likely by Alan Dershowitz (identified in text), produced by the House Oversight Committee. It details his personal history, including his acceptance to Yale Law School over Harvard, a humorous correspondence with the Dean of Columbia Law School, his early marriage to his wife Sue, and anecdotes about his professors at Yale, specifically Guido Calabresi. The text focuses on his Jewish heritage and family dynamics.
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