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U.S. President Joe Biden delivers remarks on veterans' care at George E. Wahlen Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Salt Lake City, Utah, U.S. August 10, 2023. REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst/File PhotoWASHINGTON, Aug 11 (Reuters) - U.S. President Joe Biden is tapping C. Kirabo Jackson, a labor economist whose research advocates robust public spending on schools, to fill out his three-member Council of Economic Advisers (CEA), according to a White House official. The selection suggests public education will be a key area of focus for Biden's brain-trust ahead of a 2024 re-election bid expected to turn on the strength of the economy. Jackson's pick also comes as the Biden administration is thinking through how to boost lagging educational performance since the COVID-19 pandemic. Reporting by Trevor Hunnicutt; Editing by Heather Timmons and Andrea RicciOur Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
Persons: Joe Biden, George E, Jonathan Ernst, Kirabo Jackson, Jackson, Biden, Jackson's, Cecilia Rouse, Trevor Hunnicutt, Heather Timmons, Andrea Ricci Organizations: George, Wahlen Department of Veterans Affairs Medical, REUTERS, Economic Advisers, White, Northwestern University, Princeton University, CEA, Thomson Locations: Salt Lake City , Utah, U.S
TikTok's new Creativity Program Beta is helping some creators earn tens of thousands of dollars. However, she earned just over $5,000 in June from the creativity program. But the creativity program is taking her earnings to a new level. Today, at nearly 2 million followers, Paris' monthly earnings from the creativity program ranged from $9,000 to $13,000. The Cordles were planning on doing the same before they saw how much they could earn through TikTok's creativity program.
Persons: Kay, Tay Dudley, Fortune, Arlene Resendiz, Resendiz, I'm, it's, It's, Zachary Newman, Devin, Hunter Cordle, she's, they'd, we've Organizations: Beta, Victoria Paris, YouTube Locations: New York, Paris
Affirmative action supporters and counterprotesters shout at each other outside the U.S. Supreme Court building in Washington, D.C., June 29, 2023. Now that the Supreme Court has struck down race-conscious admissions, employers could face challenges in how they find diverse talent. A group of 13 Republican attorneys general suggested in the wake of the ruling that companies' diversity, equity and inclusion, or DEI, programs could be considered unlawful discrimination. In the wake of the ruling, many fear universities could become less reliable sources from which to recruit diverse talent. However, during the last year there has been a "step back" in terms of diversity hiring, said Reyhan Ayas, a senior economist at Revelio Labs, a workforce data and analytics firm.
Persons: Kent Nishimura, Jocelyn Samuels, Lorraine Hariton, Donald Harris, Stacy Hawkins, Kim Waller, Korn, Waller, Ahmad Thomas, Thomas, it's, We've, Alvin Tillery, Tillery, Carey Thompson, Adam Kovacevich, George Floyd, Russell, Reyhan Ayas, Northwestern's, Salesforce, Kovacevich, VI, Temple's Harris, " Harris Organizations: U.S, Supreme, Washington , D.C, Los Angeles Times, Apple, General Electric, Google, Starbucks, Harvard University, University of North, Democratic AGs, Employment, Commission, Catalyst, Temple University School of Law, University of California, University of Michigan, Urban Institute, Employers, Rutgers University . Companies, . Census, Temple University School of Law Business, Leadership Group, Corporate, Northwestern's Center, Diversity and Democracy, Gettysburg, of Progress, Economic, Revelio Labs, Silicon, Amazon, Microsoft, Civil Locations: Washington ,, University of North Carolina, U.S, Silicon Valley
For example, at the same time that white supremacist authors were writing slavery apologia for student instruction, scholars like W.E.B. Du Bois were taking note of the skills and agency of enslaved Africans for a very different purpose. Continually runaway slaves are described as speaking very good English; sometimes as speaking not only English but Dutch and French. The difference between these accounts and those of the slavery apologists, however, is that Du Bois, Woodson and their contemporaries never implied or suggested that chattel slavery was anything less than a crime. Where apologists dismissed or disparaged the efforts, radical and otherwise, to end slavery, Du Bois, Woodson and others gave them pride of place in their histories and narratives about the peculiar institution.
Persons: , Du Bois, Carter G, Woodson, apologia Locations: Florida
"I had no hesitation, I immediately did whatever was possible to get out," Sossinsky told Reuters in a phone interview. Fluent in three languages and still delivering classes to students in Russia via Zoom, he now expects to live out his life in exile. She fled Russia in 1923 with her mother and sisters. Alexey got his first taste of Russia in the mid-1950s, after the death of Stalin, when the family visited there on holiday. "My daughter is absolutely panicked by the thought that I will return to Russia and will be put in prison and God knows what.
Persons: Alexey Sossinsky, Vladimir Putin, Sossinsky, Putin, Ariadna Chernova, Viktor Chernov, fleetingly, Bronislav Sossinsky, Alexey, Bronislav, Stalin, Alexander Solzhenitsyn, Volodymyr Zelenskiy, Mark Trevelyan, Peter Graff Organizations: Reuters, Constituent, Bolsheviks, White Army, Moscow State University, KGB, Thomson Locations: Russia, Ukraine, France, United States, Istanbul, Russia's, New York, Moscow, Soviet Union
X: The Brand, the Generation and Elon Musk
  + stars: | 2023-07-25 | by ( Stella Bugbee | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
It’s the stuff of revolutionaries (Malcolm X) and punks (X, the band). And why did Mr. Musk choose it? In the 1990s, X reigned supreme, after Douglas Coupland’s 1991 novel “Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture” permeated the lexicon. “We were in our 20s when we were named Gen X,” Anthony Sperduti, 50, founder of the branding studio Mythology, said. “So maybe X sounds good to us, because it seeped into our brain.” At 52, Mr. Musk falls right into that demographic.
Persons: Malcolm X, Elon Musk, Musk, X, Douglas Coupland’s, ” Anthony Sperduti Organizations: Twitter
[1/3] Yuna Kato works with male students at her college club to produce a light human-powered aircraft at the school, at Tokyo University in Tokyo, Japan June 30, 2023, in this screen grab from video. Kato has made it this far, but many aspiring female engineers choose a different path due to the social stigma, creating a massive headache for Japan. That is despite Japanese girls scoring second-highest in the world in maths and third in science, according to the OECD. School officials felt women were more likely to quit working after having children and would waste their education. NO DIVERSITY, NO INNOVATIONMore schools and companies including Mitsubishi Heavy Industries (7011.T) and Toyota (7203.T) are offering scholarships to female STEM students to attract talent.
Persons: Yuna Kato, Chris Gallagher TOKYO, Kato, Li, It's, Minoru Taniura, Kyoko Ida, ichi, we've, Mariko Katsumura, Mayu Sakoda, Rocky Swift, Chang, Ran Kim, Sonali Paul Organizations: Tokyo University, REUTERS, OECD, Reuters, Kato's Tokyo Institute of Technology, Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Toyota, Mitsubishi, Panasonic, Thomson Locations: Tokyo, Japan, Mazda's
Reuters GraphicsIndia is among the world's top exporters of services, doubling its share in global services trade to over 4% from 2% in 2005, according to WTO estimates. Sunil Talati, president of government-aided Services Export Promotion Council, said total services exports could overtake goods exports in the next five years to $750 billion. A report by Knight Frank consultancy last week said demand for office space has risen sharply in smaller cities, driven by expanding operations of global accounting and multinationals, pushing up rents by up to 10%. Domestic accounting firms are also moving to smaller towns and raising wages. "With the Big Four and other global firms coming to our cities, we are going even deeper to open offices in smaller cities."
Persons: Ernst & Young, Diksha Mehta, Debasish Mishra, PwC, Padmaja Alaganandan, Narendra Modi, Sunil Talati, Swagatika Parmanik, Knight Frank, Kshitij Patel, Shah, Manoj Kumar, Kripa Jayaram, Sam Holmes Organizations: Business, Diksha, Reuters Graphics India, Deloitte, KPMG, Export Promotion Council, Reuters, PwC, IBM, Manubhai, Shah LLP, Thomson Locations: BHUBANESWAR, India, Mumbai, Delhi, Bengaluru, Jaipur, Vadodara, Kochi, Chandigarh, Patiala, Australian, Europe, New Delhi, Asia, Odisha, Bhubaneswar, Gujarat, Ahmedabad
Elon Musk launches his new company, xAI
  + stars: | 2023-07-12 | by ( Hayden Field | ) www.cnbc.com   time to read: +2 min
Elon Musk, the CEO of Tesla and SpaceX, and owner of Twitter, on Wednesday announced the debut of a new AI company, xAI, with the goal to "understand the true nature of the universe." According to the company's website, Musk and his team will share more information in a live Twitter Spaces chat on Friday. Team members behind xAI are alumni of DeepMind, OpenAI, Google Research, Microsoft Research, Twitter and Tesla, and have worked on projects including DeepMind's AlphaCode and OpenAI's GPT-3.5 and GPT-4 chatbots. Musk seems to be positioning xAI to compete with companies like OpenAI, Google and Anthropic, which are behind leading chatbots like ChatGPT, Bard and Claude. Musk reportedly incorporated xAI in Nevada in March.
Persons: Elon Musk, Musk, DeepMind's AlphaCode, OpenAI's, Bard, Claude, Dan Hendrycks, Greg Yang, Tesla Organizations: SpaceX, Twitter, Wednesday, Team, DeepMind, Google Research, Microsoft Research, Google, The Financial Times, Nvidia, Fox News Channel, Center, AI Safety, xAI, X Corp Locations: San Francisco, Nevada
Jack Ma's Alibaba and Ant Group collectively lost $850 billion in value since their peak in 2020. They came under pressure following Ma's criticism of Beijing, which spurred a regulatory crackdown. On Friday, Beijing announced a $985 million fine for Ant Group, signaling an end to the crackdown. In April, he was appointed an honorary professor at the University of Hong Kong. Alibaba shares in Hong Kong were up 3.1% at 86.90 Hong Kong dollars apiece at midday, buoyed by news of the fine.
Persons: Jack Ma's Alibaba, Jack Ma, Ma, , Ant — Organizations: Ant Group, Ant, Michelin, University of Hong, Hong Locations: Beijing, China's, Alibaba, China, Bangkok, Thai, Hong Kong, Hangzhou, University of Hong Kong, Japan, New York
Stanford students say interest in generative AI has already surpassed the crypto hype. Now, since OpenAI released ChatGPT in November, interest in AI on campus has surged, more than a dozen Stanford students and faculty told Insider. By the 2022-2023 school year, that number jumped to 140, with 14 courses that specifically touched on "generative AI." Sid SharmaSiddharth Sharma, a sophomore majoring in computer science, said those doubts haven't yet swept through campus. Bryan Chiang, a senior majoring in computer science, recently built an AI-powered monocle called RizzGPT.
Persons: Stanford, OpenAI, Rishi Bommasani, Sophie Fujiwara, Sophie Fuji, Isabelle Levent, Levent, ChatGPT, Ben Margot, Bryant Lin, Lin, Peter Norvig, , Norvig, Siddharth Sharma, Sid Sharma Siddharth Sharma, Bryan Chiang, Chiang Organizations: Morning, Stanford University, Stanford, Big Tech, Google, Yahoo, Stanford Center for Research, brunch, CS 224N, Stanford Daily, Stanford's Institute for, Twitter, Microsoft Locations: Silicon Valley,
A.I. Is Coming for Mathematics, Too
  + stars: | 2023-07-02 | by ( Siobhan Roberts | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
For more than 2,000 years, Euclid’s text was the paradigm of mathematical argumentation and reasoning. “Euclid famously starts with ‘definitions’ that are almost poetic,” Jeremy Avigad, a logician at Carnegie Mellon University, said in an email. But by the 20th century, mathematicians were no longer willing to ground mathematics in this intuitive geometric foundation. Eventually, this formalization allowed mathematics to be translated into computer code. In 2019, Christian Szegedy, a computer scientist formerly at Google and now at a start-up in the Bay Area, predicted that a computer system would match or exceed the problem-solving ability of the best human mathematicians within a decade.
Persons: Euclid, Jeremy Avigad, , Avigad, Christian Szegedy Organizations: Getty, Carnegie Mellon University, Google Locations: Los Angeles, Bay
Video Ad Feedback Are 'metaversities' the college campus of the future? 03:14 - Source: CNNCNN —When Muhsinah Morris stepped onto the central quad of the Morehouse College campus in Atlanta, Georgia, she cried. Morehouse College is the world’s first Metaversity, an interactive, virtual learning space based on real or imagined environments. Muhsinah Morris, in person, at the real Morehouse College campus in Atlanta, Georgia. Morehouse’s Metaversity campus and courses are funded by several grantors, including Meta, Qualcomm, and T-Mobile.
Persons: Muhsinah Morris, , Morehouse, lockdowns, Morris wasn’t, Morris, Morehouse’s, , , Juan Johnson, Morris isn’t, Danny P, Goel, Rose Luckin, it’s Organizations: CNN CNN, Morehouse College, , CNN, VR, Orthopedic, VictoryXR, University College London Knowledge Lab, Institute, Ethical AI, Morehouse, Meta, Qualcomm Locations: Atlanta , Georgia, Morehouse’s, Vancouver, Canada,
A Boy’s Life on the Front Lines
  + stars: | 2023-06-26 | by ( Lynsey Addario | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +6 min
A Boy’s Life on theFront Lines In a Ukrainian town, an 11-year-old navigates a childhood transformed by war. He lived with his mother, Lena, and his 23-year-old half sister, Angelina, in a borrowed one-story home about four miles from Russian positions to the east. “I remember how I used to have fun here with my friends,” Yegor said. Now only his father, Sasha, remained there, trapped behind Russian lines caring for the home and animals on the road out of Mariupol. But the war had forced Yegor into a sedentary life, almost always behind closed doors.
Persons: Lena, Angelina, Lena didn’t, Yegor, ” Yegor, , , , , ‘ Sonny, Sasha, squander, they’ll Organizations: Yegor Locations: Ukrainian, Donbas, Ukraine, stretchers, Kramatorsk, Chernivtsi
He was, he said in a memoir, “Witness to Grace” (2008), the unwanted child of an agnostic Yale University professor of religion and a mother with whom he never bonded. The two sides, called electrodes, hold charges — a negative one called an anode, and a positive one called a cathode. When a battery releases energy, positively charged ions shuttle from the anode to the cathode, creating a current. A rechargeable battery is plugged into a socket to draw electricity, forcing the ions to shuttle back to the anode, where they are stored until needed again. Materials used for the anode, cathode and electrolyte determine the quantity and speed of the ions, and thus the battery’s power.
Persons: Grace ”, Clarence Zener, Edward Teller, Enrico Fermi Organizations: Yale University, Yale, Army Air Forces, University of Chicago, Lincoln Laboratory Locations: Groton, M.I.T, Oxford
[1/2] John B. Goodenough, 2019 Nobel Prize in Chemistry winner, speaks during a news conference at the Royal Society in London, Britain October 9, 2019. REUTERS/Peter Nicholls/File PhotoJune 26 (Reuters) - Nobel laureate John Goodenough, a pioneer in the development of lithium-ion batteries that today power millions of electric vehicles around the globe, died on Sunday just a month short of his 101st birthday. In recent years, Goodenough and his university team had also been exploring new directions for energy storage, including a “glass” battery with solid-state electrolyte and lithium or sodium metal electrodes. Goodenough also was an early developer of lithium iron phosphate (LFP) cathodes as an alternative to nickel- and cobalt-based cathodes. After completing a bachelors in mathematics at Yale University, Goodenough received an masters and a PhD in physics from the University of Chicago.
Persons: John B, Goodenough, Peter Nicholls, John Goodenough, , Jay Hartzell, Britain's Stanley Whittingham, Japan's Akira Yoshino, Paul Lienert Organizations: Royal Society, REUTERS, University of Texas, Chemistry, Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences, Yale University, University of Chicago, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, University of Oxford, Thomson Locations: London, Britain, Austin, Jena, Germany, Detroit
Archaeologists have discovered the remains of an ancient Mayan city in Mexico. The lead researcher said that it must have been an important site between 250 AD and 1000 AD. The previously unknown village was discovered in the Yucatán Peninsula by a team from the Archeology Council of the National Institute of Anthropology and History. The site sprawls has several pyramid-like structures measuring around 50 feet in height, Mexico's National Institute of Anthropology and History said. Sprajc said that the site most likely underwent changes between 800 and 1000 AD and then experienced the collapse of the Lowland Maya civilization in the 10th century.
Persons: sprawls, , Ivan Sprajc, Ṡprajc, Sprajc Organizations: Service, Archeology, National Institute of Anthropology, Mexico's National Institute for Anthropology, University of Houston Locations: Mexico, Central, Campeche, Lowland, Guatemala, Belize
Buffett would likely be worth an unmatched $250 billion if he hadn't donated any shares. Tally up the shares he's given away over the past 17 years, and they would be worth an astounding $132 billion today. He gave about 10.5 million of those shares to the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, just over 1 million shares to the Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, and about 732,000 shares to each of the Sherwood Foundation, Howard G. Buffett Foundation, and Novo Foundation. The Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation is named after Buffett's late wife, while Buffett's three children each run one of the other three foundations. Buffett has given away 54% of his Berkshire shares so far, and has pledged that over 99% of his personal wealth will go toward good causes.
Persons: Warren Buffett, Buffett, hadn't, , Tally, Melinda Gates, Susan Thompson Buffett, Howard G, Bill Gates, Buffett's, He's, hasn't, Elon Musk, he's Organizations: Berkshire Hathaway, Service, Berkshire, Melinda Gates Foundation, Susan Thompson Buffett Foundation, Sherwood Foundation, Buffett Foundation, Novo Foundation, Microsoft, SpaceX, Bloomberg Locations: Berkshire
Credit-card crackdown will net limited rewards
  + stars: | 2023-06-22 | by ( John Foley | ) www.reuters.com   time to read: +8 min
NEW YORK, June 22 (Reuters Breakingviews) - With more than two open accounts for every American, credit cards are practically part of the family. The point of credit cards is to make spending easier, yet in practice their complexity rivals the edgiest financial derivatives. At Capital One, late fees account for a little less than $2 billion of revenue, or roughly 5%, a year. If late fees have raised hackles among U.S. lenders, they’re only a taste of what could lie in store. Currently, issuers can charge $30 for a first late payment and $41 for late payments thereafter if they happen within the following six billing cycles.
Persons: Joe Biden’s, Biden, Banks, don’t, Goldman Sachs, Rohit Chopra, Michael Barr, that’s, There’s, Chase, they’re, , Joe Biden, Jeffrey Goldfarb, Oliver Taslic Organizations: YORK, Reuters, JPMorgan, Consumer Financial, Bureau, American Bankers Association, Citigroup, Federal Reserve, Securities and Exchange Commission, Discover Financial Services, Bank of America, One, Fed, Biden, University of Michigan, Apple, Chase Sapphire, American Express, Capital, U.S, Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, New York Fed, Thomson Locations: U.S, United Kingdom
Alibaba cofounder Jack Ma held a small group meeting with top company execs in May, per LatePost. Alibaba cofounder Jack Ma retired from the company in 2019, but he was back advising the company in late May, per LatePost, a Chinese media outlet. Ma held a small group meeting with executives from the company's e-commerce platforms Taobao and Tmall, LatePost reported on Monday, citing unnamed Alibaba employees. Ma suggested the two Alibaba e-commerce platforms cut out management layers, per the LatePost report. And on Saturday, Ma attended the finals of the Alibaba Global Mathematics Competition in Hangzhou, where Alibaba is based.
Persons: Jack Ma, Ma, LatePost, Alibaba, Mark Zuckerberg's, Michael Evans, Jack Organizations: execs, Meta, Michelin, University of Hong, CNBC Locations: Silicon Valley, China, Hong Kong, Singapore, Douyin, Bangkok, Thai, Hangzhou, University of Hong Kong, Japan, Tokyo
Hong Kong CNN —Alibaba founder Jack Ma gave a lecture as a visiting professor to the University of Tokyo, as the high-profile Chinese entrepreneur retreats further from his business empire following Beijing’s regulatory crackdown. His return was a symbolic move and probably a “planned media event” by Beijing intended to appease private sector fears, according to analysts. In April, the University of Hong Kong announced that Ma would join its business school for the next three years. Ma became a professor at the University of Tokyo on May 1, and his period of stay is until October 31, a profile page of Ma shows. Beijing needs the private sector more than ever to shore up growth and create jobs.
Persons: Hong Kong CNN —, Jack Ma, Ma, , Masa Son, Ma chatted, Xi Jinping, Li Qiang Organizations: Hong Kong CNN, University of Tokyo, Alibaba Group, University of Hong Kong, Damo Academy Locations: Hong Kong, Japan, China, India, Malaysia, Shanghai, Beijing, Spain, Hangzhou
Ma taught his first class at the University of Tokyo last week, per the South China Morning Post. Jack Ma has popped up at an Alibaba event, just a few days after its president described him as "alive" and "happy." Hong Kong's South China Morning Post reported he took his first class on June 12 at the institution. He's well, he's happy. He's teaching at a university in Tokyo, spending more time in China," he said, per CNBC.
Persons: Jack Ma, Ma, Michael Evans, Jack Organizations: Alibaba, Bloomberg, University of Tokyo, China Morning, Damo Academy, China Morning Post, CNBC Locations: Hangzhou, Thailand, Bangkok, Beijing, China, Tokyo
CNN —Two American tourists who police say were attacked – one fatally – while hiking in Germany were identified as recent graduates of the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign, according to the school. A friend who was with her, Kelsey Chang, 22, attempted to rescue Liu but was pushed down a steep slope. After fleeing the scene, he is now in police custody on suspicion of murder, attempted murder and attempted sexual offense, according to authorities. View from the Marienbruecke bridge into the Pollat gorge, near the Neuschwanstein castle, in Schwangau, Germany, on Friday. Karl-Josef Hildenbrand/AP“Our University of Illinois family is mourning the senseless death of Ms. Liu and the attack on Ms. Chang,” said Robin Kaler, associate chancellor at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign.
Persons: , Eva Liu, Neuschwanstein, Kelsey Chang, Liu, Chang, Karl, Josef Hildenbrand, Ms, , Robin Kaler, ” Liu, “ Eva, Tami J, Armstrong, , ” Armstrong, Kelsey Organizations: CNN, University of Illinois, “ Our University of Illinois, , Illinois, Science Academy, US Embassy Locations: Germany, University of Illinois Urbana, Champaign, Bavarian, American, Schwangau, Aurora
The Unabomber died by suicide, AP reports
  + stars: | 2023-06-11 | by ( Associated Press | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +5 min
Ted Kaczynski carried out a 17-year bombing campaign that killed three people and injured 23 others. Kaczynski was suffering from late-stage cancer and was found unresponsive in his cell on Saturday. He died by suicide, four people familiar with the matter told The Associated Press. They were not authorized to discuss Kaczynski's death publicly and spoke to the AP on condition of anonymity. Bernie Madoff, the infamous mastermind of the largest-ever Ponzi scheme, died at the facility of natural causes the same year.
Persons: Ted Kaczynski, Kaczynski, , Jeffrey Epstein, Bernie Madoff, David, Linda Patrik, He's, Daryl Johnson Organizations: Associated Press, Service, Federal Medical Center, AP, Prisons, Harvard, Yale University, The New York Times, Washington Post, FBI, American Airlines, New Lines Institute Locations: Butner , North Carolina, Florence , Colorado, North Carolina, Montana, California, Lincoln , Montana, Chicago
The infamous Unabomber Ted Kaczynski has died at age 81. "I'm confident that I'm sane," Kaczynski told Time magazine in 1999. David Kaczynski wanted his role kept confidential, but his identity quickly leaked out and Ted Kaczynski vowed never to forgive his younger sibling. Ted Kaczynski was born May 22, 1942, in Chicago, the son of second-generation Polish Catholics — a sausage-maker and a homemaker. His brother fired him and Ted Kaczynski soon returned to the wilderness to continue plotting his vengeful killing spree.
Persons: Ted Kaczynski, David, , — Theodore, Ted, Kaczynski, Kristie, David's, Linda Patrik, Daniel Boone, Edward Abbey, Henry David Thoreau, Sally Johnson, Hugh Scrutton, Thomas Mosser, Gilbert Murray, Charles Epstein, David Gelernter, Mosser, Susan, Timothy McVeigh, Patrik, Ted Kaczynski's, Susan Swanson, Chicago . Swanson, Clint Van Zandt, David Kaczynski, Swanson, Anthony Bisceglie, Ann Arbor, ___ Balsamo, Derek Rose Organizations: FBI, Service, WASHINGTON, Harvard, of Prisons, Associated Press, Washington Post, New York Times, Industrial Society, Its, American Airlines, Yale University, Oklahoma City, Bennington College, University of Michigan, University of California Locations: Montana, Butner , North Carolina, Florence , Colorado, West Coast, nation's, Lincoln , Montana, California, North Caldwell , New Jersey, Los Angeles, Chicago, America, Ann, Berkeley, Lincoln, Miami
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