T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
174.1 | | 23848::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow! | Tue Dec 13 1994 08:46 | 7 |
| > Will this move OJ off the front page?
Not likely, since this is the first I've heard of it and you say the story is
a week old. Of course, I haven't seen anything about OJ on the front page for
a while, either.
Bob
|
174.2 | | USAT05::WARRENFELTZR | | Tue Dec 13 1994 08:57 | 4 |
| Bob:
Been on National News and Washington Times front page Saturday, Sunday
and yesterday...haven't seen today's issue yet.
|
174.3 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Tue Dec 13 1994 09:44 | 3 |
| I think I heard this AM that Judge Ito sent everyone home for Christmas until
after January 4th or the like. I don't think OJ will get much front page
for a while unless some of the major players croak or something.
|
174.4 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Tue Dec 13 1994 09:53 | 10 |
| unAbomber.
UNiversities and Airlines, the kinds of organizations most of the
bomber's victims have worked for. all victims have been prominent; the
most recent was just featured in a bidness mag of some repute.
in 16 years, he's killed two and injured 23. for someone who has a
deep hatred of technology, he sure makes use of it. the most recent
bomb was roughly the size of a vhs videotape and was sufficient to
decapitate the victim and blow holes in the counter and wall.
|
174.5 | | MTVIEW::ALVIDREZ | She makes me write checks | Tue Dec 13 1994 14:14 | 8 |
|
Why did the Unabomber target this particular victim?
CBS news reported last night that the Young and Rubicand ad executive
was responsible for ad campaigns for high-tech companies. Among those
companies was Digital Equipment Corporation.
Chilling.
|
174.6 | | SMURF::BINDER | vitam gustare | Tue Dec 13 1994 14:23 | 4 |
| .5
speculation is that victim was involved in high-tech and had just been
featured in a mag, this bringing him to bomber's attention.
|
174.7 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, SDSC West, Palo Alto | Thu Dec 15 1994 16:59 | 28 |
| FBI Asks For Public's Help Via Internet
The FBI has set up an Internet site for public help in its
investigation of the UNABOM incidents.
The site, which contains information on the serial bomber and on the $1
million reward offered for his capture, is reached two ways. The first
is by connecting to an Internet server and typing:
telnet naic.nasa.gov
login: gopher
password: your e-mail address
Choose No. 9 Government Resources off the menu
Choose No. 11 FBI Gopher
The site also may be reached with a World Wide Web browser. At the
prompt, type in http://naic.nasa.gov/fbi/ to get to the address.
The FBI warned that it is a federal offense to leave false information
or otherwise engage in unlawful actions at either address.
People with information also may call the FBI's UNABOM Task Force at
1-800-701- 2662.
|
174.8 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, SDSC West, Palo Alto | Thu Dec 15 1994 17:02 | 107 |
| FBI Traces Tips On Serial Bomber / But agents are no closer to catching
mystery killer
Michael Taylor, Rob Haeseler, Chronicle Staff Writers
The FBI task force investigating the UNABOM slaying of a New Jersey
advertising executive said yesterday that it has been deluged with
telephone calls over its toll- free bomber line, receiving 3,100 tips
since Monday morning and sending agents to check personally on some
600 of them.
But so far, despite what the FBI called an extensive investigation of
all leads that have poured in, nothing has brought agents closer to
catching the bomber.
Pleading once again for public help in solving Saturday's killing of
Thomas J. Mosser, as well as 14 other incidents since 1978 attributed
to the mysterious UNABOM killer, the FBI's top agent in San Francisco,
Jim Freeman, said the case will be cracked when members of the public
notice or remember something about the few scanty clues in the case
that so far may have seemed unimportant.
``We're encouraging the public to come forward,'' Freeman said, ``and
we're utilizing publicity on a national scale, like the $1 million
reward and the toll-free number.'' That number is 1-800-701-BOMB.
Anonymity will be granted to callers.
The agents hope, for example, that someone might recognize a brief
handwriting sample the FBI believes was written by the bomber last
year and inadvertently included in a letter the bomber sent to the New
York Times.
Freeman also revealed for the first time that the name on the return
address on the package mailed December 3 from San Francisco to
Mosser's home in North Caldwell, N.J., was H. C. Wickel. The
typewritten return address was Department of Economics, San Francisco
State University.
``No H. C. Wickel is, or has been, attached to San Francisco State,
either as a professor or student,'' said Dennis Hagberg, the chief
U.S. Postal Inspection Service officer in San Francisco. Even though
the 45-agent UNABOM task force said it came up dry when it started
checking out people with the last name of Wickel, Hagberg urged the
public to ``think if that name means anything to anybody, and contact
our hotline.''
``We've talked to families named Wickel,'' Freeman said, ``but that has
been unproductive.''
In fact, the use of a realistic- looking return address is a well-
known part of the modus operandi of the UNABOM suspect, who is thought
to be a white male in his late 30s or mid-40s. Other packages or
letters he has mailed in the past had return addresses of people at
various universities.
The bomb that killed Mosser when he opened it in his kitchen was ``the
size of two videotapes stacked together,'' said Paul Snabel, chief of
the San Francisco office of the U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and
Firearms.
Snabel said task force investigators are asking people to recall
whether they had any ``houseguests who asked them to mail something,''
or if they knew people who were in the Bay Area on temporary
relocation from a job elsewhere. Snabel said the device that killed
Mosser was a pipe bomb but that investigators have yet to find the
initials ``FC,'' a clue found on pieces of other bombs the suspect has
crafted in the past.
One other clue was the phrase ``Call Nathan R Wed 7 pm,'' the writing
impression that was lifted by laboratory technicians from a letter the
bomber sent the Times in June 1993, at the same time two UNABOM bombs
injured two professors, one in Tiburon and the other in New Haven,
Conn.
Snabel said agents believe that ``it's a message, a notation he was
making to himself or a family member.''
When it comes to bombings, California is the leader, the ATF says.
Between 1989 and 1993, the bureau counted 1,599 bombings and attempted
bombings in California, representing 17 percent of all such incidents
nationwide. For the same period, Florida came in second with 822
incidents, followed by Illinois, 617; Arizona, 472; and New York, 432.
A total of 258 people died, including 70 in 1993.
Not only did California outpace all other states, but the number of
bombings in the state nearly doubled between 1989, when 203 were
recorded, and 1993, when 405 occurred.
New Jersey, where Mosser was killed, had only 191 bombing incidents
from 1989-93, accounting for a scant 2 percent of the national total.
Revenge -- said by the FBI and ATF to be the motive in the UNABOM
bombings -- accounted for 1,119 explosive incidents and 974 incendiary
ones in the five years analyzed by the ATF.
Until 1991, pipe bombs were most often used in destructive devices.
They were outnumbered by bottles the following year. In the five-year
period up to 1993, 3,081 pipe bombs were responsible for 46 deaths and
391 injuries nationwide.
According to the FBI, the UNABOM suspect has used pipe bombs in all but
one of the 15 devices attributed to him.
The ATF reported 86 mail bomb incidents from 1989-93 that killed eight
people and injured 47.
|
174.9 | Sympathize... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | | Thu Dec 15 1994 17:10 | 5 |
|
Mr. U has apparently not had an NT demo. After a few hours on our
own "U", I might click on the pipe-bomb icon myself...
bb
|
174.10 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Tue May 02 1995 10:53 | 8 |
|
WRKO was discussing the response from Bob Guccione (_Penthouse_)
to the request for publication of the unabomber's manifesto
(14.1738). Mr. Guccione thinks it might save lives. Good
idea or bad idea? Or has this already been discussed and I missed
it?
|
174.11 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | luxure et supplice | Tue May 02 1995 11:07 | 1 |
| Guccione thinks it might sell magazines.
|
174.12 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Tue May 02 1995 11:15 | 3 |
|
.11 yes well, clearly. ;>
|
174.13 | | CONSLT::MCBRIDE | Reformatted to fit your screen | Tue May 02 1995 11:39 | 4 |
| Bad idea but Bob has been known to be an opportunist. It is black
mail, they should not be published. IMO etc.
Brian
|
174.14 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | luxure et supplice | Tue May 02 1995 11:43 | 3 |
| It is indeed, blackmail, but one wonders if publishing the "manifesto"
might clue in a neighbor or acquaintance into the identity of the
unabomber, thus securing a more expeditious arrest.
|
174.15 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Trouble with a capital 'T' | Tue May 09 1995 16:12 | 4 |
|
There was something in the Worcester Telegram yesterday about the
Unabomber, but I didn't get a chance to read it.
|
174.16 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Tue May 09 1995 16:20 | 3 |
|
He or she is terrorizing Nobel prize winners.
|
174.17 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Tue May 09 1995 16:22 | 5 |
| > He or she is terrorizing Nobel prize winners.
I'll betcha old Nobel is rolling over in his grave wishing he'd selected
another line of work.
|
174.18 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Tue May 09 1995 16:24 | 9 |
|
I dunno, Jack...handing out prizes must be pretty neat.
Jim
|
174.19 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Thu May 11 1995 08:36 | 8 |
| evidently, the unabomber sent two warning letters which was identified
by the FBI as being very different from his normal method of operating.
these guys are shook-up (of course). while the FBI treated it with a
cautious reponse it seemed to me that they thought it might not be
the unabomber's work.
Chio
|
174.20 | | CALDEC::RAH | an outlaw in town | Thu May 11 1995 19:38 | 2 |
|
nobel was an explosives chemist was he not?
|
174.21 | | OOTOOL::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Thu May 11 1995 20:50 | 1 |
| Invented dynamite, I believe.
|
174.22 | | HBFDT1::SCHARNBERG | Senior Kodierwurst | Fri May 12 1995 04:55 | 10 |
| Yes, he did.
Another one of these families/companies who have their fingers
everywhere you didn't expect them.
So check your <......>
Heiko
|
174.23 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Be vewy caweful of yapping zebwas | Fri May 12 1995 10:26 | 6 |
|
re: .20
and would've been arrested today in the good ol USA for making an
"infernal" machine...
|
174.24 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Fri May 12 1995 11:09 | 7 |
| Alfred Nobel was not an "explosives chemist." He was a manufacturer,
inventor, and philanthropist. He invented dynamite as a way to make
nitroglycerine, which he did not invent, easy to handle. Pure
nitroglycerine is a soupy yellowish liquid that will explode if
subjected to a relatively mild concussive shock. Suspending nitro in
fuller's earth, which is the essence of Nobel's invention, cushions it
and prevents such explosion.
|
174.25 | | TROOA::COLLINS | My hovercraft is full of eels. | Wed Jun 28 1995 18:49 | 6 |
|
The FBI has authenticated the Unabomber's latest threat: that he will
bomb a flight out of L.A. or San Fran sometime in the next six days.
Needless to say, security has been beefed up.
|
174.26 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Wed Jun 28 1995 19:04 | 4 |
| Why do they publicize that crap? It will most likely influence some idiot
to plant a bomb in a package and try to get it onto a plane so he can
"fulfill the prophecy".
|
174.27 | | DEVLPR::DKILLORAN | M1A - The choice of champions ! | Wed Jun 28 1995 19:52 | 11 |
|
Interesting thought:
What if the bomb has already been planted?
What if he plants the bomb on a plane flying INTO Los Angles/San Fran?
Interesting question.....
Dan
|
174.29 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | He said, 'To blave...' | Wed Jun 28 1995 19:58 | 2 |
| Were I scheduled for a trip to Calif in the next week, I would
cancel it.
|
174.30 | Yikes! | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Learning to lean | Wed Jun 28 1995 23:55 | 8 |
|
My 12 year old son is scheduled for a trip to San Jose, Calif on Saturday.
Jim
|
174.31 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Mr Blister | Thu Jun 29 1995 08:12 | 2 |
| Sounds like he's having a tantrum over the fact that these amateurs in
OK are getting all the press.
|
174.32 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Thu Jun 29 1995 08:16 | 7 |
| this guy is very scary...
my wife and i were talking last night about this scum bag. imagine this
piece of wasted life holding thousands of people hostage, lat alone the
murders he's committed and the injuries.
one more example in support of capital punishment.
|
174.33 | | TROOA::COLLINS | My hovercraft is full of eels. | Thu Jun 29 1995 09:14 | 6 |
|
NOW Unabomber is saying that the whole thing was just a hoax to make
sure the public hadn't forgotten about him/them.
Security will continue to be high, however.
|
174.34 | Maybe they should find a train | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Thu Jun 29 1995 12:34 | 6 |
| Did anyone notice the news clip that showed all the mail that is
stacking up in a hangar at LAX? This wingnut is a master at letter
bombs as we all know; but aren't officials going to have to deal
with moving this mail sooner or later?
|
174.35 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Thu Jun 29 1995 21:41 | 4 |
| re: .-1
Martin - perhaps your oreos are . . .
|
174.36 | Talk Hard | SNOFS1::DAVISM | Happy Harry Hard On | Thu Jun 29 1995 23:05 | 5 |
| Ya mean they've been squished under a big pile of mail ! :*( {sniff}
Ahhhhh but I could make Oreo Ice Cream..... Now there's a thought !!!
hmmmmmm ice-cream.... {homer}
|
174.37 | | TROOA::COLLINS | My hovercraft is full of eels. | Fri Jun 30 1995 09:11 | 3 |
|
`Penthouse' says they will publish Unabomber's 35,000 word manifesto.
|
174.38 | | SMURF::BINDER | Father, Son, and Holy Spigot | Fri Jun 30 1995 10:27 | 4 |
| ...which they will doubtless put up on their Web site, thus clogging
the Internet and causing the downfall of our nation. It's all that
acceptance of gay sex, you know, I mean, really, they even print
pictures of women pretending to go at it with other women.
|
174.39 | | BOXORN::HAYS | Some things are worth dying for | Fri Jun 30 1995 10:33 | 6 |
| Unabomber threatens `Penthouse' if they publish his manifesto.
Not classy enough.
Phil
|
174.40 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Fri Jun 30 1995 10:37 | 1 |
| Are they going to do a pictorial on "Girls of the Bomb Squad?"
|
174.41 | | BOXORN::HAYS | Some things are worth dying for | Fri Jun 30 1995 10:39 | 1 |
| Or maybe on "Explosive Sex Toys?"
|
174.42 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the countdown is on | Fri Jun 30 1995 10:41 | 6 |
| >Unabomber threatens `Penthouse' if they publish his manifesto.
>Not classy enough.
Unabomber threatens retaliation if Penthouse is the only periodical to
publish his manifesto.
|
174.43 | | BOXORN::HAYS | Some things are worth dying for | Fri Jun 30 1995 11:20 | 3 |
| RE: 174.42 by WAHOO::LEVESQUE "the countdown is on"
Maybe we should see if "Slut" is interested?
|
174.44 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the countdown is on | Fri Jun 30 1995 11:21 | 1 |
| or _Barely Legal_
|
174.45 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Careful! That sponge has corners! | Thu Aug 03 1995 09:15 | 7 |
|
Excerpts from the Unabomber's manifesto were published in two major
US newspapers yesterday (NY Times & Washington Post). Clues in the
text indicate that Unabomber was a student of the history of science
in the late 1970s, probably in the Chicago area, later moving to Utah,
then northern California.
|
174.46 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the heat is on | Thu Aug 03 1995 09:35 | 1 |
| He's going to get caught soon.
|
174.47 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Prepositional Masochist | Thu Aug 03 1995 10:16 | 1 |
| They say this guy is a genius.
|
174.48 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | the heat is on | Thu Aug 03 1995 10:26 | 1 |
| They're stroking him so he'll be even more careless.
|
174.49 | | TROOA::COLLINS | Careful! That sponge has corners! | Thu Aug 03 1995 10:29 | 4 |
|
The full text of his manifesto is being circulated amongst university
professors to see if anyone recognizes his theories or style.
|
174.50 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Prepositional Masochist | Thu Aug 03 1995 10:33 | 1 |
| It's Carl Sagan.
|
174.51 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Thu Aug 03 1995 10:33 | 3 |
|
Beverly??
|
174.52 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | Prepositional Masochist | Thu Aug 03 1995 10:39 | 1 |
| His wife?
|
174.53 | Unabomber = small group, not just one guy. | VMSNET::M_MACIOLEK | Four54 Camaro/Only way to fly | Tue Aug 08 1995 13:21 | 1 |
| The professor and mary ann.....
|
174.54 | | SCAS01::GUINEO::MOORE | Outta my way. IT'S ME ! | Tue Aug 08 1995 16:06 | 1 |
| I guess they'll have to call him the "Multabomber" now.
|
174.55 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Aug 08 1995 16:08 | 1 |
| Why? Has he bombed any Multics sites?
|
174.56 | | CSC32::J_OPPELT | Wanna see my scar? | Tue Aug 08 1995 17:22 | 3 |
| I read somewhere that he is called the Unabomber because he
originally targetted universities. (Though it made me wonder
why he wasn't then called the unibomber...)
|
174.57 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Aug 08 1995 17:23 | 1 |
| UNiversities and Airlines. hth.
|
174.58 | | SMURF::WALTERS | | Tue Aug 08 1995 17:45 | 1 |
| Ah that explains it. I though he only had one testicle.
|
174.59 | | NOTIME::SACKS | Gerald Sacks ZKO2-3/N30 DTN:381-2085 | Tue Aug 08 1995 17:46 | 1 |
| No, that was Hitler.
|
174.60 | Mr. Hilter!! | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | Been complimented by a toady lately? | Tue Aug 08 1995 17:47 | 1 |
|
|
174.61 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Tue Sep 19 1995 08:53 | 10 |
| So today the Times and the Post publish the guy's garbage, and the rest
of the media, in an attempt to appear public minded, is "questioning"
the validity of their action, no doubt to throw folks off from the more
serious problem: Reno and the FBI's advisement to the papers to publish the
manifesto is an open invitation to terrorists worldwide to be heard in the
USofA, compliments of your Clinton Government.
Watch for all the Fundie Moslem and IRA wacko terrorists coming to a public
facility near you, soon!
|
174.62 | They're going to publish soapbox as a daily strip? | WELKIN::ADOERFER | Hi-yo Server, away! | Tue Sep 19 1995 12:51 | 1 |
|
|
174.63 | What's this about soapboxers stripping 8^o? | POWDML::HANGGELI | Petite Chambre des Maudites | Tue Sep 19 1995 14:15 | 1 |
|
|
174.64 | | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Tue Sep 19 1995 14:34 | 12 |
| Apparently the Unabomber hasn't heard that old cliche' "you can
lead a horse to water".......
So his manifesto gets published; big deal. Does he really expect
that all the folks who normally buy those papers, will wade thru
the entire bloody thing?
Someone asked in another note why those papers just didn't put
the manifesto out on their web sites, but I think the UnaBee
demanded that it be printed; and since he's definitely known to
carry out his threats......
|
174.65 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Holy rusted metal, Batman! | Tue Sep 19 1995 14:40 | 4 |
|
And not everyone has Web access, so the newspaper will probably
[potentially] reach more people.
|
174.66 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | sunlight held together by water | Tue Sep 19 1995 14:41 | 2 |
| besides, it would send the irony meter off the scale for his diatribe
against industrialization and technology to be placed on the WWW.
|
174.67 | Excerpts already there.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Tue Sep 19 1995 14:50 | 8 |
|
http://www.yahoo.com/Society_and_Culture/Crime/Crimes/Terrorism/Attacks/UNABOMBER/
You can count the minutes until the full "manifesto" will be on the
web.
-mr. bill
|
174.68 | | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Tue Sep 19 1995 14:56 | 3 |
| If it's there, then this is a definite "gotcha" for the web
surfers :-)
|
174.69 | The "manifesto" (aka "RO") is all out there.... | PERFOM::LICEA_KANE | when it's comin' from the left | Tue Sep 19 1995 15:16 | 5 |
| http://www.pathfinder.com/pathfinder/features/unabomber/manifesto.html
-mr. bill
|
174.70 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | Doug Olson, ISVETS Palo Alto | Tue Sep 19 1995 15:41 | 4 |
| You have to follow 8 links to get it all, actually, its serially linked
below the first section, which Mr Bill gave the pointer to.
DougO
|
174.71 | Polly wanna crack-up ! | 23989::GUINEO::MOORE | HEY! All you mimes be quiet! | Tue Sep 19 1995 16:08 | 7 |
|
Mr. Bill,
Thanks for the pointer...my bird was desperately in need of a new cage
liner.
;^)
|
174.72 | re Doctah 174.66 precisely!! :-) | DRDAN::KALIKOW | DIGITAL=DEC: ReClaim TheName&Glory! | Wed Sep 20 1995 00:44 | 9 |
| Kudos to DoctahSan for katching my point about Ye Manifesto appearing
in Newbie Electronic Web vs. on Traditional Cellulose Web. I, too, was
imagining Himself going ballistic if that's the only outlet they were
to give him... Not a pretty sight...
(I was mildly diverted last June at the Newspaper Convention to find
that there were TWO kindza web being talked aboug there -- yep, they
call those huge rollza newsprint "web.")
|
174.73 | Wonder what makes him tick, so to speak... | GAAS::BRAUCHER | Frustrated Incorporated | Wed Sep 20 1995 10:40 | 7 |
|
Actually, I might read a bit of this some time. I have a certain
morbid curiosity, and enjoy reading things I vigorously disagree
with. If I could get through Mein Kampf and Das Kapital, admittedly
at a younger age, why balk at this ?
bb
|
174.74 | | YUPPY::OHAGANB | Vatican Radio Techno | Wed Sep 20 1995 10:59 | 12 |
|
>Watch for all the Fundie Moslem and IRA wacko terrorists coming to a public
>facility near you, soon!
Too late. You've already had Gerry Adams. Oh, sorry, keep forgetting
he's Sinn Fein and they're not linked with the IRA, except when
it comes to coffin carrying time.
Barry.
|
174.75 | | DEVLPR::DKILLORAN | Danimal | Wed Sep 20 1995 14:06 | 7 |
|
> -< Wonder what makes him tick, so to speak... >-
BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHAHAHAHAH ! ! ! !
:-))))
|
174.76 | Possible, but is it probable? | DECLNE::REESE | ToreDown,I'mAlmostLevelW/theGround | Wed Sep 20 1995 17:30 | 10 |
| In a CNN report last night, it was stated that the newspapers
agreed to go ahead and print the manifesto because:
a) they wanted to prevent additional people from becoming
victims and,
b) they were hoping someone might recognize the dude's
writing style (apparently they are convinced that he
probably has advanced college degrees.
|
174.77 | Iwant to read it. | POLAR::WILSONC | A dog is a womans best man | Sat Sep 23 1995 05:52 | 3 |
| can someone scan his manifesto into the box?
|
174.78 | Is this somehow not enough? | ALPHAZ::HARNEY | John A Harney | Sat Sep 23 1995 09:15 | 19 |
| re: .77
> -< Iwant to read it. >-
>
> can someone scan his manifesto into the box?
<<< BACK40::BACK40$DKA500:[NOTES$LIBRARY]SOAPBOX.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Soapbox. Just Soapbox. >-
================================================================================
Note 174.69 Unabomber Strikes Again 69 of 77
PERFOM::LICEA_KANE "when it's comin' from the left" 5 lines 19-SEP-1995 14:16
-< The "manifesto" (aka "RO") is all out there.... >-
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
http://www.pathfinder.com/pathfinder/features/unabomber/manifesto.html
-mr. bill
==============================================================================
|
174.79 | | USAT05::SANDERR | | Sat Nov 25 1995 08:47 | 3 |
| He's still there!
Not Roger
|
174.80 | Unabomber caught! | ALFSS2::WILBUR_D | | Wed Apr 03 1996 17:02 | 6 |
|
He probably won't strike again.
The news reported that he was just arrested.
|
174.81 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | april is the coolest month | Wed Apr 03 1996 17:05 | 1 |
| get outta here! really?
|
174.82 | Its a blast blast blast | ALFSS2::WILBUR_D | | Wed Apr 03 1996 17:07 | 6 |
|
A relative turned him in, and they have been watching
him apparently for months.
|
174.83 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | april is the coolest month | Wed Apr 03 1996 17:08 | 1 |
| well it's about time!
|
174.84 | | SMURF::MSCANLON | a ferret on the barco-lounger | Wed Apr 03 1996 17:12 | 3 |
| Well, I guess all his relatives will have their
property confiscated now.....
|
174.85 | | BSS::SMITH_S | lycanthrope | Wed Apr 03 1996 18:29 | 3 |
| No, I heard they raided the place he was living in Montana but he
wasn't there.
-ss
|
174.86 | | DECLNE::REESE | My REALITY check bounced | Wed Apr 03 1996 19:46 | 4 |
| Latest buzz on TV is that they are investigating someone; he's
a his residence, but still hasn't been arrested.....yet.
|
174.87 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | put the opening in back | Thu Apr 04 1996 08:41 | 3 |
| He's in custody. I think everybody's going to become experts in
spelling (polish? chechen?) surnames. The guy's last name is full of Ks
Cs, Zs and Ys.
|
174.88 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Baroque: when you're out of Monet | Thu Apr 04 1996 10:37 | 3 |
|
Kaczynski.
|
174.89 | | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | put the opening in back | Thu Apr 04 1996 10:41 | 1 |
| gesundheit
|
174.90 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Madison...5'2'' 95 lbs. | Thu Apr 04 1996 11:02 | 3 |
| Interesting how this guy is a Harvard grad and taught at UCal Berkeley.
But hey, I don't know what I'm talking about anyway..that's what
everybody says.
|
174.91 | RE: .89 | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Baroque: when you're out of Monet | Thu Apr 04 1996 11:02 | 5 |
|
Ummm, no, that doesn't look quite right.
Not enough k's.
|
174.92 | | PENUTS::DDESMAISONS | person B | Thu Apr 04 1996 11:08 | 4 |
|
.90 my brother's a Harvard grad, but he has never taught at UCal
Berkeley, so prolly the chances are good he won't end up becoming
a radical nutcase, sending bombs through the mail. phew.
|
174.93 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Madison...5'2'' 95 lbs. | Thu Apr 04 1996 11:33 | 1 |
| But he might if he teaches at Brown!
|
174.94 | the fool on the hill | CSSREG::BROWN | Common Sense Isn't | Thu Apr 04 1996 13:33 | 5 |
| For such a nutcase enviro-wacko, unabom sure liked to pick off them
helpless cute li'l furry critters to feed his festering gut...
must be environuts are allowed to hunt and eat meat only if they are
crazed mad bombers.
|
174.95 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Thu Apr 04 1996 15:16 | 7 |
| re .94,
don't you realize hunters are the original environmentalists? Without
appropriate habitat, none of us will have anything to plug, except each
other.
meg
|
174.96 | what did he use, salt licks and land mines? | CSSREG::BROWN | Common Sense Isn't | Thu Apr 04 1996 15:51 | 6 |
| no, I'm not antihunting, just being my usual cynical self.
I dunno if mr unabom was a greenpeacer or not, just judging from his
rants against technology and industry, figured he was another deranged
treehugger who really went bad.
must be all that poached red meat gave him dain bramage ;-)
|
174.97 | | SMURF::BINDER | Uva uvam vivendo variat | Thu Apr 04 1996 15:58 | 1 |
| I think Mr. Unabom was more of a Luddite than a tree-hugger.
|
174.98 | | SUBPAC::SADIN | Freedom isn't free. | Sun Apr 07 1996 19:55 | 83 |
|
FBI focus turns to travels of Unabomber suspect
Copyright © 1996 Nando.net
Copyright © 1996 Reuter Information Service
HELENA, Montana (Apr 7, 1996 6:24 p.m. EDT) - FBI agents piecing
together evidence left by Unabomber suspect Theodore Kaczynski are
focusing on periodic bus trips made from his recluse's shack in the
mountains of Montana, law enforcement sources said on Sunday.
Authorities say they are confident the Harvard-educated former
mathematics professor, who is being held in the county jail in Helena, is
behind a string of 16 mail bombings that killed three people and wounded
23 others beginning in 1978.
Justice Department officials are expected to meet on Monday with
federal prosecutors from across the country to determine how to proceed
in the case.
A federal grand jury in Great Falls, Montana, will begin hearing
evidence against Kaczynski on April 17, but there is pressure to move the
case to northern California, where two of the Unabomber's victims were
killed.
Following Saturday's discovery of a live bomb under the bed, agents
were searching the cabin where Kaczynski lived without electricity or
running water and the surrounding woods.
They used X-ray machines and other equipment to inspect dozens of
boxes that already have yielded chemicals, electrical devices, handwritten
manuals and partially completed bombs.
In order to keep Kaczynski in jail, he was charged with possessing
bomb-making components.
No evidence has been disclosed of how he might have travelled from his
remote cabin near the town of Lincoln, Montana, to Sacramento,
California, Salt Lake City, Utah, and other sites where bombs were
mailed or delivered.
Before his arrest on Wednesday, investigators said they were compiling a
record of his travels and taking registration records from cheap hotels in
Helena and northern California, according to managers of the hotels.
They also have been contacting bus drivers and ticketing agents for
information about a man who lived virtually outside society and left little
of a paper trail.
Stacie Fredrickson, a ticketing agent for Greyhound bus lines in Butte,
Montana, said on Sunday she had been contacted by federal authorities
about a week ago and shown a picture of Kaczynski.
"They just asked if I recognised this guy and I said I did," she said.
Fredrickson said she remembered Kaczynski from a bus trip sometime in
the past five years "because he looked like a geek."
Kaczynski reportedly also was known to bus drivers on the Rimrock
Trailways line, which operates out of Helena, 60 miles (100 km) from
Kaczynski's cabin near the Continental Divide.
It was at the Kaczynski family home in Lombard, Illinois, where the
suspect's brother, David, found writings resembling those of the
Unabomber, providing the FBI its breakthrough tip in the case.
David Kaczynski, who lives in Schenectady, New York, has made no
public comment on the case, although CNN reported that his lawyer
plans a news conference on Monday.
David Kaczynski is listed as a co-owner of the 1.4 acre (.46 hectare)
property where his brother lived, and the family provided financial
contributions to support the reclusive former professor, according to a
source quoted by U.S. News and World Report.
One lingering question left unanswered even by the Unabomber's
published 35,000-word manifesto against technology's effect on society,
published by the New York Times and Washington Post, was how he
chose his targets, who included university professors, an airline
executive, an advertising executive and a lobbyist.
|
174.99 | | ALFSS2::WILBUR_D | | Mon Apr 08 1996 15:40 | 20 |
|
.95
> don't you realize hunters are the original environmentalists? Without
> appropriate habitat, none of us will have anything to plug, except
Seems funny that the environment has more friends than enemies
and it's still losing. (Pity the more because what a force they
make together, hunters and environmentalists, those few times
that they do work together. I blame both sides equally for not
making it happen more.)
Back to the thread...
The Unabomber fight seems to be more against science than
pro-nature. Less of what he loves and more of what he hates.
|
174.100 | | SMURF::BINDER | Uva uvam vivendo variat | Mon Apr 08 1996 15:42 | 2 |
| AOL's top story of the hour around noontime said that Kaczynski is
known to have been in San Francisco when the bombing happened there.
|
174.101 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Go Go Gophers watch them go go go! | Mon Apr 08 1996 15:47 | 3 |
|
Geez, you're saying San Francisco and I'm thinking Oklahoma.
|
174.102 | Unabomber haiku | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | FUBAR | Thu Apr 11 1996 19:09 | 996 |
| [Image]
Welcome to the Haiku Extravaganza
Today's subject is the Unabomber. Please, all posts here should
adhere to the demands of the haiku format: that's five syllables,
followed by seven syllables, followed by five syllables. Okay?
Here are a few examples to inspire you:
Recluse Luddite freak Smells in the evening
Killing people because they Are of C-4 and pine trees
Simply like machines Behold one man's strength
------------------------- -------------------------
Those damned dials and knobs The world was all mine
Have measured our lives to death For seventeen years, that is
Horrible science I hate my brother
------------------------- -------------------------
Talk at a party: I hate my brother
"Let's do the 'Unabomber'" Oh, how I hate my brother
Now he is bitter I hate my brother
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[Image]Bernard S. at Friday, Apr. 5, 1996, 6:58pm ET
Okay, here's one:
The rabbits taunt me
like fed'ral jack-booted thugs.
Kill the rabbits. Kill.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ginny from starwave.com at Friday, Apr. 5, 1996, 7:16pm ET
Eviscerate deer
Can it be man or cougar?
Let's never take baths
---------------------------------------------------------------------
beat nick from starwave.com at Friday, Apr. 5, 1996, 7:19pm ET
I love the outside
why do the rabbits hate me?
next time it's their turn
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ferret from starwave.com at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 12:15pm ET
Do you like my beard?
Please tell me you like my beard
Or I'll blow you up
---------------------------------------------------------------------
spazzo from starwave.com at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 12:48pm ET
Just me and my shack
And three very strong padlocks
I hate my brother
---------------------------------------------------------------------
cg from [149.82.30.156] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 2:44pm ET
The postman cometh
"Oh, boy! A package for me!"
A twisted hermit strikes
---------------------------------------------------------------------
cg from [149.82.30.156] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 2:54pm ET
Montana: big sky
No speed limit on highway
Lousy bicycle
---------------------------------------------------------------------
daved from starwave.com at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 3:19pm ET
Agents in the house.
X-ray boxes as sweat beads.
Don't touch that dial.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Scott Lewis from [199.77.161.24] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 4:15pm ET
I like my brother
I like my brother's hat
Who is my brother?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[Image]Bernard S. at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 4:25pm ET
cg, remember: 5 syllables
The postman cometh
"Oh, boy! A package for me!"
Twisted hermit strikes
And Mr. Lewis, just what the hell are you talking about? Your own
brother? Please, let's stick to topic.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
cg from [149.82.30.156] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 4:53pm ET
so what, I can't count
Unabomber taught me math
one-two-three-four-boom
---------------------------------------------------------------------
rb from uconn.edu at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 5:27pm ET
Package in the mail:
Computers in the office --
People parts in street!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Mikey Shoeshines from harvard.edu at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 5:30pm ET
There is no bathroom
In the cabin. Beware! Bombs are
Strewn about. Tip-toe.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 5:50pm ET
Technology bites
Been reading too much Pynchon
Package for you, dear
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[Image]Bernard S. at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 6:15pm ET
cg, touch�
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Madballimal from [152.163.193.81] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 6:23pm ET
fun, easy going
single, white Unabomber
seeks same for love, laughs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[Image]Bernard S. at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 6:25pm ET
Stop the madness, you
People who make us consume--
Hey, I'm no loner!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
cg from [149.82.30.156] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 6:37pm ET
Sorry, last one:
Eight hours, making booms
in 10x12 four-bit room.
By no means, a King...
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V2 from [199.183.109.249] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 7:26pm ET
Machines done ruined
Western Civilization
Think I'll mail some bombs
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ME from [204.213.67.126] at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 7:36pm ET
In the mail I think
My messengers shall please go
To bring death to you
---------------------------------------------------------------------
al from starwave.com at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 7:50pm ET
Buckets of feces
Make for delicious veggies
I don't like jail food
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[Image]Bernard S. at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 8:00pm ET
"Unabom" reminds
me of "Uncola." It's cool
and refreshing. Ah!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[Image]Bernard S. at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 8:02pm ET
A Special Achievement award for . . .
Madballimal
who wrote
fun, easy going
single, white Unabomber
seeks same for love, laughs.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Kermit from binghamton.edu at Monday, Apr. 8, 1996, 9:02pm ET
I am primitive
I am the unabomber
one, two, thREE! FOUR! BOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOMMMMMMMMM!!!!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
JennyP from halcyon.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 4:30am ET
Unabomber, why?
"Forget all we know. Happy
peasants. Blood and soil."
---------------------------------------------------------------------
cypher from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 4:52am ET
i have a vision
but i am misunderstood
do you like my beard?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
leee from eushc.org at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 11:25am ET
unabomber creed:
evil technology is
soap and water use
---------------------------------------------------------------------
kurq from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 11:25am ET
he he he he make
it go boom beavis, grow up
and try some decaf
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Darcy from warwick.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 11:36am ET
I used to teach math
Then I blew things up for spite
Now I eat jail food
---------------------------------------------------------------------
kurq from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 11:37am ET
trees cannot bleed red
nature boy wants you to die
in pine forever
---------------------------------------------------------------------
lees from [131.229.26.22] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 12:01pm ET
hood and glasses man
media comic stardom
evil but oh so juicy
---------------------------------------------------------------------
John from [205.168.71.31] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 12:34pm ET
Luddite brings me Joy
Movin from Montana Soon
Prison in the Spring
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hermetic from nc.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 1:21pm ET
Deep Montana woods
Quiet Neighbors don't complain
This is no Love Shack
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hermetic from nc.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 1:23pm ET
Nitro or C-4?
Many choices must be made
When you build a bomb
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Nick Palmer from harvard.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:09pm ET
Words, thirty-five thou'
Now that should be clue enough
The game grew boring
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Unabomber from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:21pm ET
Option: Suicide
Perhaps I'll send a letter
To myself in jail
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Unabomber from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:23pm ET
Do the Unabom
A Go-Go, pretty baby,
Oh, do it, yeah, yeah.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Unabomber from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:24pm ET
Harvard boy--upset.
Didn't get the attention
Of upper class chicks
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Teddy K. from [149.82.30.156] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:42pm ET
Ed McMahon of Death
you may already be a
winner! open me!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:52pm ET
Academia
I spit my last breath at thee
Montana postage
---------------------------------------------------------------------
notme from utexas.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:52pm ET
Bad Unabomber!
Blowing people all to hell.
Do you take requests?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jfors from utexas.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:56pm ET
Farewell to tenure
Sniping from the tower clock
already been done
---------------------------------------------------------------------
unabomber from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 2:57pm ET
I see all of you
using that technology
Guess who's next in line?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Gamecock from [129.252.237.190] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 3:08pm ET
Five, four, three, two, one....
Enjoy your last precious breath.
Now your is done.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Commodore from vanderbilt.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 3:19pm ET
Bane of the North woods
hates the Harvard of the South.
Ha! Shrewd prof dodged death.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Temp28 from hp.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 3:20pm ET
That crazy jackass!
Hey! What's up with Montana?
And Idaho, too!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
j from utexas.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 3:37pm ET
Sad. Doesn't he see?
He too could waste the whole day
On bad poetry
---------------------------------------------------------------------
daved from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 3:42pm ET
New fashion for Fall
A Unabomber Jacket
The sleeves tie together
---------------------------------------------------------------------
John from [205.168.71.31] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 3:55pm ET
techno whiz kid scum
I am the merry mailman
now my job is done
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 4:04pm ET
Twigs and explosives
It's good to have a hobby
My brother needs one
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Teddy K. from [149.82.30.156] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 4:17pm ET
Lick. STAMP. Lick. STAMP. Lick.
STAMP. Mail...tick tick tick tick tick....
Feds got the wrong man.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 5:04pm ET
Mansonesque hairdo
Seventeen-year old T-shirt
The grunge look is out
---------------------------------------------------------------------
The Modem Wizard from dal.ca at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 5:10pm ET
Crash bang bombs go boom
Country man mails cards of doom
Quite the Hallmark mood.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[email protected] from nytimes.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 5:19pm
ET
Thirty-two cents, hey
Does anybody know if
Bombs go parcel post?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ME from gte.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 5:32pm ET
Try to make your point
Try to mail a love note now
Try to get a life
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Derek Zumsteg from washington.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 6:13pm
ET
Whine of a true nut:
Publish me in 'Penthouse', please
I pity the fool
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jack Boot from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 6:27pm ET
Hey Unabomber
You don't look happy to me
What's that nasty smell?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jack Boot from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 6:28pm ET
Smells in the evening
Are of C-4 and pine trees--
And body odor.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jack Boot from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 6:31pm ET
Twilight, and the crop
Is ready for the harvest
I stretch out my scythe.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Teddy K. from [149.82.30.156] at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 7:02pm ET
Why can't I get this
stupid computer to print?
Time to buy some stamps.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
louise from utah.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 7:56pm ET
Seventeen years of
Isolation seemed long, not
Like sixty to life.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
address unknown from starwave.com at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 8:44pm
ET
No, not my brother
Purely just coincidence
Reward is how much?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard Speck from sdsu.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:29pm ET
Oh, how I envy
Him, who had the grace and mind
To fight for nature
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Richard Ramirez from sdsu.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:30pm ET
Psycho Killer, je
Ques que c'est, fa fa fa fa
fa fa fa fa fa
---------------------------------------------------------------------
J Hofmann from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:34pm ET
reading all those books
elements of refusal
playing with wires
---------------------------------------------------------------------
J Hofmann from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:36pm ET
what if he had nukes?
anti-technological
bye bye bye bill gates
---------------------------------------------------------------------
kurq from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:37pm ET
hate technology
love typewriters feds trace it
next time laserjet
---------------------------------------------------------------------
J Hofmann from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:37pm ET
on a wood platform
sleeping in a wood cabin
lumberjacks nearby
---------------------------------------------------------------------
J Hofmann from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:39pm ET
dan rather was mad
needed to break a big one
what's the frequency?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
J Hofmann from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:40pm ET
unabomber types
on the internet today
laughing at his mark
---------------------------------------------------------------------
J Hofmann from mn.us at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 11:21pm ET
he's travelled far, huh?
ever been to L.A., Ted??
quick, go call OJ
---------------------------------------------------------------------
J Koenig from tenet.edu at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 1:49am ET
He had too much time
Not enough of a real life
Like everyone here
---------------------------------------------------------------------
bJd from aa.net at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 2:58am ET
Technology? no
Family - the enemy
Now more time to waste...
---------------------------------------------------------------------
bJd from aa.net at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 3:14am ET
It's hard to get chicks
wearing same clothes as last week
and eau de pipebomb
---------------------------------------------------------------------
bmj from utexas.edu at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 11:06am ET
Manifesto. Oops.
What a giveaway. Next time-
no windy essays.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[Image]Bernard S. at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 1:26pm ET
Kill the wabbits, kill
the wabbits, kill the wabbits--
Think I'm Elmer Fudd?!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
[Image]Bernard S. at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 1:29pm ET
More special commendations!
notme from utexas.edu
Bad Unabomber!
Blowing people all to hell.
Do you take requests?
Temp28 from hp.com
That crazy jackass!
Hey! What's up with Montana?
And Idaho, too!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
mpa from utah.edu at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 1:31pm ET
Anxious students wait
Linear programming quiz?
Saved by the bomb squad!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 1:55pm ET
A recognition
Of fundamental truths that
Scare us all silly
---------------------------------------------------------------------
notme from utexas.edu at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 2:04pm ET
Family lawyer.
Like family shark in pool.
My brother - coward.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 2:22pm ET
A recognition
Of fundamental truths that
Scare us all silly
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Shrapnel Boy from mn.us at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 2:35pm ET
Society Freak
Theodore J. Kaczynski
Personal revenge.
Freedom for nature
mental gratification
fire cleanses the world.
Biblical times read
to save the environment
I make you all dead.
Killer of Bunnies
Perpetrators of nature
I avenge my "Bugs."
Teacher of logic
professor of a theory
punisher of all.
"Mad Genius" Time says
"Odyssey of a Mad Man"
all right when world done.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 2:54pm ET
TV movie soon
Portrayed by Schwarzenegger?
Money to be made
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 3:44pm ET
TV movie soon
Portrayed by Schwarzenegger?
Money to be made
---------------------------------------------------------------------
The Walrus from mn.us at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 3:47pm ET
Brown paper and twine,
A big wad of "boom" within,
Down with computers.
Try and ignore that last remark, It's my right, as an
American, to be a hypocrite.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Paul from starwave.com at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 5:29pm ET
Rose and Valerie
Screaming from the gallery
Say, "He must go free."
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Paul from starwave.com at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 5:33pm ET
Ted was quizzical
Studied 'bout the physical
science in the home
---------------------------------------------------------------------
cliff clavin from starwave.com at Wednesday, Apr. 10, 1996, 5:46pm
ET
Technology's bad?
Worse for society is
More stressed out mailmen
---------------------------------------------------------------------
suebee from mn.us at 6:29pm ET
Ted's story is penned
Critics review no surprise
"This one's a real bomb"
---------------------------------------------------------------------
logo from starwave.com at 7:20pm ET
my rodomontade
a postmodern catafalque
petardly fantod
---------------------------------------------------------------------
plain jane from starwave.com at 7:44pm ET
Unabom suspect
Theodore J. Kaczynski
Goes on trial next month
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Madballimal from aol.com at 9:53pm ET
Cabin fever boy
Masturbation's lost it's thrill
MacGyver's NOT REAL!
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Chimpie from mn.us at 12:10am ET
towers of concrete
i want to tear your head off
tasty salty brain
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Chimpie from mn.us at 12:12am ET
i'll continue to
write more of these goofy poems
like a real hole
---------------------------------------------------------------------
JENRA from [204.94.45.200] at 12:14am ET
Haiku, my haiku
What would I do without you?
Probably sleep more.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Stacey Wicksall from northnet.org at 12:35am ET
People blown to bits
Lone bomber, Oklahoma-
Revolution's here...
Stick your head in sand
Go about your life at ease-
Violence won't harm you...
Teacher help me please
Education is the key-
Freedom is my plea...
So the story goes
Round and round the globe today-
What's freedom anyway?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
andy hall from nevada.edu at 12:56am ET
montana like the moon
lunacy scrapes our eyes decapitating heads
fury fed for warmth
I bleed onto the wires
my children will kill yours one day
for I stick pins in them and make them do
bad things...I am...electronic voodoo
Squeeze the juice out of this creature
Make him howl in confusion
This is us, gasping
fish out of water
silly games we play... like
war
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jeff from [204.94.235.230] at 1:12am ET
We're on our way
to zero degrees K.
Yippee-yi-yo-ki-yay.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Dan from [204.140.216.107] at 1:37am ET
waiting long, oh slow FBI,
for my fame overdue,
fulfilled at last, happy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Brad from alaska.edu at 1:51am ET
The world falls so short
of actualization
kill techno-facade
You all live a lie
lap-tops and v.c.r.s bar
growth by easing pain
I shall start the fight
deliver ye salvation
and force bitter pills
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Unabomber from [157.160.80.203] at 1:55am ET
I want to purchase
the bike Ted rode around town
when it is auctioned
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Sorry from [157.160.80.203] at 2:01am ET
That previous poem
was not from "Unabomber"
my mistake - sorry
---------------------------------------------------------------------
bJd from aa.net at 2:34am ET
Once scared for my mail
now safe until I receive
a package from jail
---------------------------------------------------------------------
idego2 from mn.us at 4:27am ET
Infinite numbers
jumbling up my brain, must stop
the running rabbits
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Martha from iohk.com at 6:38am ET
Hey Unabomber -
Technology will find you:
The electric chair.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Karl from [146.115.240.60] at 7:17am ET
The man has a point
Technology can hurt us
Back to web browsing
Mighty is the man
who values his ideals more
than innocent lives.
Thirty-five thousand
words in that manifesto
fell asleep reading
Off to other things
Manifesto in shredder
Rot in jail dirtbag
---------------------------------------------------------------------
John from [193.130.251.48] at 8:26am ET
I'm very tired
I'm going to bed now
To go to dream land
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Gpx from [160.217.96.10] at 8:29am ET
Take me up and high
who don't wanna try to fly
be my friend too, guy.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Cris E from westpub.com at 9:07am ET
Kind of ironic:
hates technology lots but
has two typewriters
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Brian S. from autometric.com at 9:42am ET
Bang, Boom, I wake up
Happy Santa Claus with bombs
Ho, ho, ho, ho, ho
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Dave Romm from umn.edu at 9:55am ET
my freeman neighbors
(those illegal immigrants)
appreciate me
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jeff from mn.us at 10:50am ET
he tells us to share
oh, please, simplify your lives!
true identity
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jeff from mn.us at 10:54am ET
consumerist thoughts
poison man's identity
smooth wooden box
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jeff from mn.us at 10:58am ET
Theo wrote Sanchez
"My friend, to come visit you,
means no food this year."
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Legs from [205.213.168.233] at 12:03pm ET
Deodorant is
Evil for Unabomber
He doesn't get chicks
---------------------------------------------------------------------
turtel from [199.218.238.141] at 12:33pm ET
yo ho a blow a man down.if he gets up I blow him down
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jer from mn.us at 12:46pm ET
Should I comb my hair
Or should I wear it matted
The judge likes it combed
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jer from mn.us at 12:49pm ET
Theodore, what's up?
Why did you wait so long to
Kill those other guys?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Jer from mn.us at 12:54pm ET
Turned down for clerk job
Dirty, unkempt and smelly
I make bombs at home
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Odosbucket from uncc.edu at 12:56pm ET
hey Unabomber
you should have bombed Microsoft
while you had the chance
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Edward VanHalen from compuserve.com at 1:15pm ET
Big cheese in my head
Why are all the bad people
Sodomizing me.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Randy Walters from [156.24.1.1] at 1:28pm ET
My hand's creation
imposes upon your life
Instant entropy
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Crane from mn.us at 1:35pm ET
I like dem rabbits
so I'm gonna blow you up -
stop messing with me
Boy, do I smell bad
but then you should smell bad, too
and that makes me mad
---------------------------------------------------------------------
preppy heaven from [204.187.105.43] at 1:43pm ET
Your beard sucks big time
My brother is a big snitch
Now I'll do hard time
---------------------------------------------------------------------
spam from calpoly.edu at 1:44pm ET
bring my typewriter
must write my manifesto
if you don't i'll kill
---------------------------------------------------------------------
acme from [205.134.228.73] at 1:51pm ET
bombs,so sick,so fun
excitement in your letters
more techno victims
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 1:59pm ET
technology bad
bombs make people go boom
berkeley boy is mad
---------------------------------------------------------------------
gafferguy from [157.22.248.142] at 2:09pm ET
turn the TV off
whistle quietly in shame
is it me you blame?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
WeirdGuy from nstn.ca at 2:17pm ET
Bombs are little toys
That make a BOOM BOOM BOOM sound
Won't you join along?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 2:21pm ET
unabomber in jail now
busted by feds for blowing up folks
deserves C-4 enema
It misreported the info on where my last haiku came from...
My address is [email protected], no flames, please.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
pat from [170.142.16.4] at 2:23pm ET
negative spiral
of serious sole searching
far too little fun
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Mayo from uchicago.edu at 2:43pm ET
Unabombers all around
with a uzi shoot him down
who will clean this up?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Karen Yeo from [164.114.102.40] at 3:06pm ET
Another case of
Mad Cow Disease struck in the
Montana forest
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Karen Yeo from [164.114.102.40] at 3:09pm ET
Another case of
Mad Cow Disease struck in the
Montana forest
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Karen Yeo from [164.114.102.40] at 3:10pm ET
Another case of
Mad Cow Disease struck in the
Montana forest
---------------------------------------------------------------------
plough from iup.edu at 3:10pm ET
micky mouse is cool
tripping consendentally
and the river flows
---------------------------------------------------------------------
plough from iup.edu at 3:12pm ET
micky mouse is cool
tripping consendentally
and the river flows
---------------------------------------------------------------------
WeirdGuy from nstn.ca at 3:26pm ET
Bombs are little toys
That make a BOOM BOOM BOOM sound
Won't you join along?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at 3:37pm ET
Whitman. Kaczynski.
Academic guns and bombs
Let's play Nintendo
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hookah from [204.139.11.180] at 3:47pm ET
enjoying jail-time
sodomy is so low-tech
don't need bombs in here
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hookah from [204.139.11.180] at 3:49pm ET
enjoying jail-time
sodomy is so low-tech
don't need bombs in here
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hookah from [204.139.11.180] at 3:51pm ET
enjoying jail-time
sodomy is so low-tech
don't need bombs in here
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Hookah from [204.139.11.180] at 3:52pm ET
user interface
lame, reposts my messages
no new bomber posts
---------------------------------------------------------------------
I love Molly S from pipeline.com at 3:52pm ET
I Love Molly
I Love Molly
---------------------------------------------------------------------
lisa from wesleyan.edu at 3:53pm ET
Unabomber says
Technology is the worst
we don't care at all
It is ironic
as we play with our machines
the Unabomber
---------------------------------------------------------------------
I love Molly S from pipeline.com at 3:53pm ET
I love Molly Sunderland, I want to her
I want to suck her
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Gaan from compuserve.com at 3:53pm ET
Poor Unabomber
comfort comes only
with used Vaseline
---------------------------------------------------------------------
I love Molly S from pipeline.com at 3:54pm ET
I love Molly
I want to her
I want to suck her
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Megan from [204.253.92.103] at 3:54pm ET
My name is Kuczynski too, but me and him aren't related. Just wanted
to let you know.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
I love Molly S from pipeline.com at 3:55pm ET
I want to
Molly Sunderland
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Megan from [204.253.92.103] at 3:55pm ET
My name is Kuczynski too, but me and him aren't related. Just wanted
to let you know.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
I love Molly S from pipeline.com at 3:56pm ET
I want to
Molly Sunderland
---------------------------------------------------------------------
I love Molly S from pipeline.com at 3:57pm ET
I want to
screw
Molly Sunderland
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Baldrick from [205.240.233.100] at 4:02pm ET
That picture they show
of the Unabomber guy
sure looks like Weird Al
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Mark Koi from navy.mil at 4:05pm ET
Working, working, working. Thats all I seem to do.
Jerking, jerking, jerking. Is all I wanna do.
Working, working, working. That's what I'm doing now.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
HURT from [194.2.23.25] at 4:28pm ET
Feds in my cabin
all come searching for my bombs
I need a lawer
---------------------------------------------------------------------
V from [205.241.44.101] at 4:32pm ET
Theo had learned the
art of how not to be seen
Damn greedy brother
---------------------------------------------------------------------
ActionVerb from mn.us at 4:47pm ET
Matches? Nails? Wood?
Could he possibly not heard
of technology?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 4:51pm ET
psycho in woods
no hockey mask or chainsaw
uses bombs instead
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 4:53pm ET
what motivation
prompts killing the innocent?
voices in his head
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 4:54pm ET
terror has a beard
kills computer scientists
freud says it's envy
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 4:55pm ET
beavis and butt-head
think unabomber is cool
others are sickened
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Oh just me from [192.42.101.202] at 4:56pm ET
His madness revealed
His true genius concealed
His verdict repealed
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 4:57pm ET
victims die in vain
anti-tech weirdo in jail
no more bombs for now
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 4:58pm ET
psycho in woods
no hockey mask or chainsaw
uses bombs instead
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Rich from mn.us at 4:58pm ET
Empty wooden shack
A hardwood timepiece ticks, tocks,
"Mail's late again, dear"
---------------------------------------------------------------------
SIS from mn.us at 4:59pm ET
My sister is weird,
So very very crazy,
Her name is Rachel
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 4:59pm ET
psycho in woods
no hockey mask or chainsaw
uses bombs instead
---------------------------------------------------------------------
jcunning from mn.us at 5:00pm ET
psycho in woods
no hockey mask or chainsaw
uses bombs instead
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Rich from mn.us at 5:05pm ET
Remember when you
Laughed at his fake fur parka?
He remembers, too.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Bo from [204.107.119.73] at 5:05pm ET
Hey, mister, nice hood,
But lose the damn blueblockers.
Dress for your success.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
sammy baby from [144.26.14.206] at 5:30pm ET
If I had a bomb,
I am sure that I would not
put it in the mail.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
sammy baby from [144.26.14.206] at 5:35pm ET
If technology
is so bad, why did you use
a typewriter, hmm?
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Raging Slab from dec.com at 6:01pm ET
Theodore is a
looney living in the sticks
who deserves prison.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Raging Slab from dec.com at 6:02pm ET
Blowing people up
doesn't sound like fun at all
unless you're insane.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
Raging Slab from dec.com at 6:03pm ET
Blowing people up
doesn't sound like fun at all
unless you're insane.
---------------------------------------------------------------------
|
174.103 | | TROOA::BUTKOVICH | I am NOT a wind stealer! | Thu Apr 11 1996 19:46 | 3 |
| <--- those were quite funny
Thank you Shawn for posting them
Kaczynski is nuts!
|
174.104 | | EDITEX::MOORE | GetOuttaMyChair | Fri Apr 12 1996 02:24 | 4 |
|
Labounty rattles.
Oh joy, a haiku comes.
I striketh him in the head with a pool cue.
|
174.105 | | LANDO::OLIVER_B | april is the coolest month | Fri Apr 12 1996 09:10 | 1 |
| incorrect haiku parameters.
|
174.106 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Madison...5'2'' 95 lbs. | Fri Apr 12 1996 10:54 | 10 |
| Z Richard Ramirez from sdsu.edu at Tuesday, Apr. 9, 1996, 10:30pm ET
Z Psycho Killer, je
Z Ques que c'est, fa fa fa fa
Z fa fa fa fa fa
Well, at least he likes Talking Heads.
This was one of the songs that inspired Hinckley to shoot Reagan. He
went to a concert in Dallas the week before and this song was sung by
the Kamakazi Clones.
|
174.107 | | SMURF::BINDER | Uva uvam vivendo variat | Fri Apr 12 1996 11:59 | 3 |
| Unabomber sings
A lonely song of hatred
For worldly machines.
|
174.108 | | ALFSS2::WILBUR_D | | Mon Apr 15 1996 14:56 | 6 |
|
Educated Math
A skill for chemical bath
The world felt his wrath.
|
174.109 | | COOKIE::MUNNS | dave | Mon Apr 15 1996 15:50 | 3 |
| Unabomber stinks
Bombs, bike, typewriter his toys
Low tech boy pays price
|
174.110 | Slept with one under his bed....confident geek!!!! | DECLNE::REESE | My REALITY check bounced | Mon Apr 15 1996 16:11 | 2 |
| Wonder if his family turned him in for the reward? ;-}
|
174.111 | | SX4GTO::OLSON | DBTC Palo Alto | Mon Apr 15 1996 16:37 | 6 |
| >Wonder if his family turned him in for the reward?
His family has stated that they'll turn the $1M over to the
families of Unabomber victims.
DougO
|
174.112 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | tumble to remove burrs | Mon Apr 15 1996 16:38 | 11 |
|
<-------
Integrity, compassion and honesty...
What's this world coming to?????????????????
|
174.113 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Mon Apr 15 1996 16:40 | 4 |
|
thud.
|
174.114 | Fahrenheit on its way | NQOS01::16.68.48.117::S_Coghill | Luke 14:28 | Tue Apr 16 1996 14:20 | 11 |
| The radio news report last night said that some of the things found in his cabin
included:
o guns (including a homemade one)
o bomb materials
o gun powder
o AND! 232 books
Coupling the last item with Janet's performance since '93, I better start looking over my
shoulder. With over 1000 books in my house (no counting what's on CD-ROM) my piddling 2
guns probably won't even count as a drop in the bucket when Janet breaks down my door.
|
174.115 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Cracker | Tue Apr 16 1996 14:41 | 3 |
|
For his sake, I hope none of those books are on the "banned list".
|
174.116 | | EDITEX::MOORE | GetOuttaMyChair | Fri Apr 19 1996 02:25 | 5 |
|
Another leftist wacko.
Sierra club wannabe.
Blame upon militia.
|
174.117 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Always a Best Man, never a groom | Fri Apr 19 1996 11:15 | 3 |
|
Ummm, that appears to stray from the accepted 5-7-5 format.
|
174.118 | rev 02B | CSSREG::BROWN | Common Sense Isn't | Fri Apr 19 1996 11:41 | 7 |
| in that case,
A leftist wacko
Sierra club wannabe
Blame talk radio
5-7-5
|
174.119 | kookbooks | CSSREG::BROWN | Common Sense Isn't | Fri Apr 19 1996 11:43 | 2 |
| I wonder if one of his books was AlGore's "Earth in the Balance".
a truly inspiring work. NOT!
|
174.120 | | SUBPAC::SADIN | Freedom isn't free. | Sun Apr 21 1996 12:09 | 495 |
|
Kaczynski's spiral -- boy genius to '60s wallflower
to embittered hermit
Copyright © 1996 Nando.net
Copyright © 1996 The Associated Press
(Apr 20, 1996 11:41 a.m. EDT) - Theodore Kaczynski carefully twisted
the small piece of paper in the middle and cupped the two ends. In one,
he placed a few drops of ammonia. In the other, iodine. He closed the two
ends, gave it to a high school classmate and told her to untwist the
middle.
The chemicals ran together. The little device exploded in her hands with
a harmless pop. Ted laughed. So did the surprised girl.
"You're going to get suspended," Jo Ann De Young recalled telling him.
"No, I'm not," Ted replied. "I'm too smart."
Too smart to get caught. Too smart for high school. Too smart to take
advice from his professors at the University of Michigan. Too smart to
get wrapped up in the turbulence of Berkeley in the late '60s. Too smart
to fall for the myths of an industrial society.
Too smart for his own good, he would eventually acknowledge.
Three decades later, living alone in a Montana cabin with two tiny
windows, Kaczynski would write a plaintive letter lamenting his
childhood as "a genius in a kid's body."
By then, he had turned into a kid in a genius' body. A warped, bitter,
malevolent kid, say federal investigators who are convinced he is the
Unabomber.
And one who had lost his last spark of humanity along the way, said a
woman who tried to reach out to him only months before he abandoned
his efforts to build a life at the University of California-Berkeley.
Graduate student Harriet Hungate took Kaczynski's topology class. He
impressed her.
"He was this young guy, tall and good looking, and had all the outward
manifestations of someone who would be very sociable," she said.
Hungate needed someone to talk to. She was in crisis, thinking of
dropping out, "hanging in there by the skin of my teeth."
She went to Kaczynski's office for a conference. She asked questions
about the course, but then her emotions took over. She spilled out her
fears and doubts, looking to her professor for warmth and reassurance.
His response chilled her. Kaczynski didn't acknowledge she had spoken.
"There was no reaction at all," Hungate said. "Usually there's a person
in there who responds to what is said, but I looked in his eyes, and I saw
no person there."
------
Contrary to some accounts, there were no clear signs of his eventual fate
in Ted's early life.
Yes, he was hospitalized with a drug reaction at 6 months old, and came
home listless. Yes, he was smarter than his peers, and didn't mix with
everyone.
But in his early days in the Chicago suburbs, he was no embittered loner.
His father, Theodore R. Kaczynski, was a gregarious, happy man who
loved the outdoors, camping and canoeing, and taught his sons to do the
same. Friends said the sausage factory owner was also an atheist who
liked to consider the big questions of life.
Ted's mother, Wanda Kaczynski, was no overbearing tyrant driving her
son beyond his capacity. Counselors and teachers -- not his parents --
suggested Ted skip his junior year in high school, according to his
chemistry, math and physics instructor, Robert Rippey.
The parents "just wanted him to have a good time, to do the things that
interested him and not be bored," Rippey said.
Years later, from Montana, Kaczynski would write raging letters
blaming his mother for his social incompetence, calling her a "dog."
That's not the way neighbors in Evergreen Park remember it.
"They were a happy family, a productive family, civic-minded, extremely
intellectual," said Dorothy O'Connell, who lived beside them from 1952
to 1958.
"Wanda was very interested in reading to the children. She read
Scientific American every month to Teddy. She was a born teacher. She
was able to translate those difficult subject matters into understandable
language for her son," Mrs. O'Connell said.
Given Ted's choice of reading matter, it does not appear his mother was
forcing Scientific American on him.
Once, as the Kaczynskis packed for a vacation in Wisconsin, Ted ran to
Mrs. O'Connell's house, asking that she care for his pet bird.
She noticed a book under his arm.
"I said, 'What are you doing with a book when you're going on
vacation?' I thought it would be a storybook."
It wasn't. Ted was carrying "Romping Through Mathematics, From
Addition to Calculus."
"He said, 'I have to learn this.' He was happy."
Ted reveled in his intelligence.
He sometimes joined the neighborhood women playing Scrabble.
"Within minutes, he had all of us beaten," Mrs. O'Connell said. "We
were not dumb. Teddy was brighter. At 12, he had a better vocabulary
than we did."
The Kaczynskis were terrific neighbors, bringing groceries when the
O'Connell home was quarantined after her daughter contracted polio.
Dorothy O'Connell remembered Ted and David buying Good Humor ice
cream bars -- then sharing them with the younger neighborhood
children.
Although he learned hunting skills from his father, Ted was no casual
killer. Once, his brother David found a lame rabbit. Together, the father
and two sons built a cage, nursed it back to health and let it go.
While some neighbors remember Ted walking home alone from school
day after day, others remember a different boy.
Wayne Tripton lived across the street -- and in another world. While
Ted's pocket protector and briefcase proclaimed his nerdiness, Tripton's
engineer boots, jeans and leather labeled him a greaser.
"Ted and I were friendly enough to say hello despite the fact that we
were different," Tripton said. "It was like he and I both knew he wasn't
supposed to socialize with my kind and I knew very well I wasn't
supposed to socialize with a bookworm."
Ted was proud of his intellect and studies at a time when such kids were
picked on, teased, and occasionally beaten up just for fun, Tripton said.
"Quite frankly, I had an overwhelming admiration for Ted."
But as Ted's peers grew older, he somehow didn't. A gap began to grow.
No one ever saw him with a girlfriend or on a date.
Patrick Morris was president of the Math Club at Evergreen Park, in the
band with Ted and took classes with him. He remembers a spindly,
skinny kid who seemed vulnerable, certainly not dangerous.
"The thing that runs through my mind is how young he was, how
juvenile he was in the best sense and worst sense of the word," Morris
said. "At a social level, he was not traveling at the same rate as the rest
of us."
Classmate James Baker, who later joined the Marines, put it simply.
"He was a boy among men," Baker said.
Ted's humor, especially, seemed childish and insecure. If someone spilled
something at the lunch table, everybody would tease the spiller, then
drop it. Not Ted.
"Ted wouldn't let it go," Morris recalled. "He would zero in."
Pranks were common at Evergreen High. Kids carried firecrackers and
threw them in the street. Frogs were stuck in desks.
Ted's were more complicated. He pulled the ammonia-iodine trick
several times. He, Morris and other chemistry students manufactured a
chemical that exploded when thrown on the ground, flashing and leaving
a smoke trail.
"We did trade around bomb recipes," Morris said. "We put together some
stuff and set it off. Gunpowder is easy to make. There are some easy
recipes you can make out of stuff from your medicine cabinet."
Once, Morris said, it went too far.
A fellow student asked Ted's advice on making a better bomb. Ted
obliged.
"The dumb kid went ahead and he did it. Hit it up with a hammer. It
blew out two windows in the chem lab" and damaged a girl's hearing.
Morris is convinced Ted was unfairly punished for that incident.
"It never entered Ted's mind that this was a dangerous thing," Morris
said.
As high school ended, Ted's future seemed assured. Harvard accepted the
math whiz, and off he went to Cambridge, Mass., in the fall of 1958.
That may have been a terrible mistake for the immature Ted, said
Evergreen Park classmate Russell Mosny, one of his best friends.
"Here's this kid, probably an emotional age of 12, 13 at best. He went on
to a preppy, patrician, jock residential hall, I can't think of anything more
contrary," Mosny said. "He had absolutely nothing in common with
these people."
The biggest blow at Harvard, says Richmond Campbell, who arrived at
the same residence as Kaczynski in his freshman year, was the shock of
learning you are no longer a shining star.
Ted was only 16 -- but there were 10 other 16-year-olds admitted by
Harvard the same year.
The group at 8 Prescott St. where he lived was especially impressive: The
son of Welsh poet Dylan Thomas. A student published in the Journal of
Symbolic Logic while in high school. A freshman taking advanced
exchange courses at the nearby Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
"It was quite overwhelming coming from high school and thinking you
were quite bright, and being just a nobody there," Campbell said.
At Harvard, the prankish behavior -- and much of Kaczynski's
personality -- seemed to disappear. Those who remember him didn't call
him Ted -- it was Theodore.
He became the wraith described by those who knew him in later years,
gliding through his classes and residences like a shadow.
Holed away in Room 2, a single on the first floor, Kaczynski befriended
no one, said his freshman proctor Francis Murphy.
"He was a lonely boy," thin, quiet and with poor personal hygiene and a
dirty room, Murphy said. "But he was very proud to have come to
Harvard. He was always very busy and his energies were devoted to his
work."
In his sophomore year, Kaczynski moved to Eliot House, one of several
upper-class residences that serve as combination dormitory, dining hall
and social club. He took the smallest, cheapest room in the building.
"It was purgatory," said Irvin Bieser Jr., who lived on the same floor as
Kaczynski for one year.
His door was always shut, and even some who shared the suite can
barely recall Kaczynski. He emerged only to eat, always alone. He was
among only six of the 139 house residents from his class who left no
record of involvement in extracurricular activities.
Richard Adams, who attended Harvard on a Navy scholarship and lived
in Eliot, said Kaczynski didn't fit in with the wealthy, well-tailored "den
of preppies."
"I would certainly think if I were to try to analyze his character and
where he went off the track, that would have to be an area that would
deserve a lot of consideration," Adams said.
Some former Eliot House residents remember Kaczynski in his junior
year at a table with a suite-mate Michael Rohr, described by one as the
"high priest" of a group that pondered environmental issues long before
the subject became fashionable.
"It is not too much to say they were absolutely rabid on the subject," said
a classmate, Frederick Boersma. "That was their creed, protecting the
environment."
But typically, Rohr, now a philosophy professor at Rutgers, said neither
he nor his friends remember Kaczynski being there.
Increasingly isolated, Kaczynski took to bringing sandwiches from the
dining room upstairs to his room, which soon began to smell of spoiled
milk, rotting food and foot powder. Bieser said he caught a glimpse of the
room once when the floor was two-feet-deep in trash.
When he left Harvard, Kaczynski's reputation for brilliance had suffered.
He didn't graduate with honors. Math faculty members don't remember
him.
For graduate school, Kaczynski chose another location known for its
progressive politics and political fervor -- the University of Michigan at
Ann Arbor. But once again, he seemed to ignore the call that so many of
his academic contemporaries heard. As students were shifting to jeans
and T-shirts, Kaczynski stuck with a white shirt and tie.
Math faculty classmate Alan Heezen said there were picnics and parties
but Kaczynski didn't attend.
"Other people had a life. This guy apparently didn't," he said. "At
Michigan, it was accepted to be pathologically involved in mathematics.
... It's not extraordinary that I didn't know him. But I've talked to five
other people. Nobody knew him. Now that is extraordinary."
While Kaczynski may have been a mystery to his classmates, he was
certainly impressing his teachers.
"He was one of my best students, one of only four students who got A's
in the class I taught," said Peter Duren, who sat on the committee that
judged Kaczynski's doctoral thesis.
Kaczynski also took one other class that seemed a foretaste of his
changing values -- Human Evolution. He earned Professor Frank
Livingstone's first A-plus in five years.
But he stuck with math as his focus, earning a cash award from the
department for his thesis, an extremely technical document titled
"Boundary Functions." Duren was concerned that Kaczynski had chosen
to work in a mathematics backwater.
When Kaczynski got a job at the University of California-Berkeley, a
temple for mathematicians, Duren hoped that his star student would tap
into his colleagues and work on more exciting math principles. He didn't.
If Cambridge and Ann Arbor were in social and political ferment,
Berkeley was close to revolution when Kaczynski arrived in the fall of
1967 to take a position in the math department.
At Sather Gate, the entrance to the Berkeley campus, Black Panthers
sold Chairman Mao's little red book for a dollar a copy. Anti-Vietnam
War protesters gathered frequently at Sproul Hall to hear David Harris
and Joan Baez urge resistance to the military-industrial complex. Wes
"Scoop" Nisker signed off his underground radio newscasts with his
trademark, "If you don't like the news, go out and make some of your
own."
All the ingredients for the Unabomber's philosophy were there, said
Nisker, who still does radio commentary in San Francisco.
"A lot of what the spirit of the '60s rebellion was about was challenging
the myth of progress -- challenging the machine," Nisker said. "Part of
the anti-war movement was an anti-technology movement, and you can
still see that today with environmentalists."
But if the '60s was a giant party, Kaczynski was a wallflower.
On the surface, at least, he seemed oblivious to it all. Other math
professors took votes among their students on canceling classes for
anti-war teach-ins or Third World strikes. Kaczynski held every lecture.
He seemed equally oblivious to his students and fellow faculty members.
Lecture hall questions were left unanswered. Invitations for beer and
pizza after math seminars were spurned.
Instead, he walked home to his small apartment, where he apparently
worked on some of the six mathematics papers he published. All dealt
with boundary functions, the same closed-end, arcane backwater of
mathematics he had explored at Michigan.
"I've been struck by the narrowness of the field," said Thomas Addison,
math department chairman at the time. "If he was coming up for tenure,
they would probably have been concerned. This was not the hottest
thing."
If, between math books, Kaczynski read the prototypical underground
newspaper, the Berkeley Barb, he would have read the column of "Dr.
Hip," who dispensed candid advice on sex and drugs at a time the topics
were taboo.
"Dr. Hip" was Dr. Eugene Schoenfeld, now a psychiatrist who also
works as a forensics consultant for San Francisco and Alameda counties,
and has followed the Kaczynski case.
Kaczynski shows all the signs of someone who had bottled up his fear
and anger since childhood, perhaps because of trauma or depression,
Schoenfeld said.
Schoenfeld believes that Kaczynski chose Berkeley to liberate himself --
but instead withdrew totally when his unrealistic expectations failed.
Addison described Kaczynski as "almost pathologically shy." Schoenfeld
agreed.
"He can't experience strong feelings," the psychiatrist said. "He fears he
will be overcome by the vehemence of his feelings if he confronts
someone, or gets involved in a cause. He would be a puddle."
Schoenfeld sees a strong echo of that pathology in the Unabomber's
manifesto, where the author writes that "oversocialization can lead to
low self-esteem, powerlessness, defeatism, guilt ..."
Those are the writings of a man who is describing himself, justifying his
internal pain and the wall he has erected around him, Schoenfeld said.
As Kaczynski's academic life imploded, Berkeley's worst crisis climaxed
a block from his apartment. In February 1969, demonstrations began as
students tried to preserve a plot of university land they called People's
Park. In May, authorities moved in amid clouds of tear gas, and shot a
student to death. Then-Gov. Ronald Reagan vowed that if students
wanted a bloodbath, he'd give them one.
A month later, Kaczynski packed his bags and left Berkeley. Addison
heard a rumor he wanted to pursue social work. Oddly, the same rumor
had circulated at the University of Michigan when he left there.
But the last time anyone from Berkeley saw him, Kaczynski was hiking
in Yosemite National Park. Alone.
The family has said Kaczynski spent the next year or two in Utah, but if
so, he used an alias or didn't leave a trace. His name shows up nowhere.
No one remembers him. Two people who thought they may have seen
him now acknowledge their perceptions of those brief encounters are
clouded by drugs and the passage of time.
In 1971, the Kaczynski brothers bought the now-famous 1.4-acre plot of
land outside Lincoln, Mont. Kaczynski built his cabin and seemed to
retreat further inside himself. Human contact virtually ended.
As children in Evergreen Park, he and his brother had once saved a
rabbit's life. Now Kaczynski found himself hunting and killing rabbits to
survive.
The emotions that built inside him came out in letters and acts directed
against people at safe distances -- just as the Unabomber would soon
attack and kill at safe distances.
One letter called a service station owner who Kaczynski felt had cheated
him a "fat con-man." His mother was a "dog" in another letter. A
neighbor's unoccupied cabin was trashed after Kaczynski complained
their snowmobiles disturbed him.
He complained in person only to the phone company. He couldn't
successfully operate their pay phones even though the instructions were
written on the front.
But poverty, and perhaps loneliness, eventually drove Kaczynski out of
his Montana cabin in 1978 and back to his family in Chicago.
He had failed in his attempt to go back to the land, to live in harmony
with nature.
The Unabomber's first crude device exploded in Chicago shortly
afterward. In May 1978, a small bomb made from match heads slightly
injured a Northwestern University police officer.
Authorities at the time dismissed it as a student prank -- hardly more
serious than the little devices Kaczynski and his chemistry class friends
once built.
But if Kaczynski's attempt to live off the land was a failure, his return to
civilization turned into an unmitigated disaster.
He took a job at the foam rubber plant where his brother worked, and
dated a woman supervisor. She ended the casual relationship after two
dates because they had nothing in common, but Kaczynski wouldn't let
go.
Typically, his revenge for being spurned came not in a direct
confrontation, but in nasty limericks posted on machines. His brother
David fired him because of the harassment.
After his firing, Kaczynski returned to Montana. His appearance
deteriorated, his clothes and beard turning ragged and unkempt. He
apparently never bathed.
And inside his dimly lit shack, he turned into a modern-day Madame
Defarge, the peasant in "A Tale of Two Cities" who secretly recorded the
crimes of the French aristocrats in her knitting to send them to the
guillotine after the revolution.
The aristocrats Kaczynski targeted in his writings were the techno-elite
destroying what radical environmentalists called "Wild Nature," both
inside and outside the human heart.
The Unabomber, meanwhile, had begun his bloody work. Before he was
finished, three would die. Twenty-three people were injured.
Like Kaczynski, the killer enjoyed writing disparaging letters.
He called the FBI "a joke." Victim David Gelernter, a Yale computer
scientist badly injured by a bomb, was later taunted for his supposed
stupidity in opening the package.
The words "smart," "dumb" and "brains" all appear in the first
paragraph of the Gelernter letter -- the sign of an author obsessed with
his own brain, Schoenfeld said.
But in May 1994, just months before the Unabomber's last orgy of
bombings and threats disrupted air travel and led to the publication of his
manifesto, Kaczynski couldn't help wondering what might have been.
He wrote Juan Sanchez Arreola, a friend of his brother's he knew only
through letters, to commiserate over a pension dispute.
And to look for a little commiseration himself, perhaps.
"Consider that your fortune is not all bad, because you have a wife and
three children and all are healthy ... " Kaczynski's letter said. "Your
children will thrive, and some day they will have children of their own. I
wish I had a wife and children!"
But when agents searched Kaczynski's cabin, his only offspring was a
dangerous, carefully wrapped package, complete with everything but the
addressee.
The package, like the little boy who was just too smart, was a bomb
waiting to go off.
|
174.121 | | SUBPAC::SADIN | Freedom isn't free. | Sun Apr 21 1996 12:10 | 96 |
| Unabomber reign of terror spanned 17 years
(c) Copyright 1996 Nando.net
Reuters
SAN FRANCISCO - Following is a chronology of the Unabomber's
deadly 18-year bombing spree:
+ May 26, 1978 - Northwestern University in Evanston, Illinois: a bomb
detonated when a university police officer opened a package handed over
by a professor whose name was written on the package. The officer
suffered minor injuries.
+ May 9, 1979 - Northwestern University: an explosive device left on the
university's student commons exploded, slightly injuring a graduate
student who opened it.
+ Nov. 15, 1979 - Chicago: a bomb wrapped in a parcel mailed from
Chicago exploded in an airplane's cargo department. Twelve people
suffered from smoke inhalation.
+ June 10, 1980 - A Chicago suburb: a bomb inside a package mailed to
an airline executive's home exploded as he opened it, injuring him.
+ Oct. 8, 1981 - University of Utah, Salt Lake City: An explosive device
was found in a classroom building hallway. Bomb squad personnel
disengaged the bomb, rendering it safe.
+ May 5, 1982 - Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee: A pipe
bomb inside a wooden box detonated when the box was opened by a
secretary in the computer science department, injuring the secretary.
+ July 2, 1982 - University of California at Berkeley: A small pipe bomb
found in a coffee room by a professor of electrical engineering and
computer science exploded, injuring the professor.
+ May 15, 1985 - University of California at Berkeley: A bomb exploded
in a computer room, impairing the vision and tearing off fingers of the
graduate student who opened it. The bomb was believed to have been
placed there days earlier.
+ June 13, 1985 - Auburn, Washington: A parcel bomb received in the
mail at Boeing Co. exploded when employees discovered it and opened it.
No one was injured.
+ Nov. 15, 1985 - Ann Arbor, Michigan: A parcel bomb mailed from
Salt Lake City to the home of a University of Michigan professor injured
a research assistant who opened it.
+ Dec. 11, 1985 - Sacramento, California: The owner of a computer
store was killed when he picked up a bomb disguised as a road hazard
marker. Shrapnel tore into his heart.
+ Feb. 20, 1987 - Salt Lake City: Another bomb disguised as a road
hazard marker was left near a computer store. It exploded and injured
the store owner.
+ June 22, 1993 - Tiburon, California: A renowned geneticist received a
package in the mail holding a bomb. It exploded when he opened it,
seriously injuring him.
+ June 24, 1993 - Yale University, New Haven, Connecticut: A package
received by a computer science professor exploded when he attempted to
open it, severely injuring him.
+ Dec. 10, 1994 - North Caldwell, New Jersey: A New York City
advertising executive was killed in his home when he opened a package
addressed to him.
+ April 24, 1995 - Sacramento, California: The president of the
California Forestry Association was killed when he opened a package
addressed to someone who once worked in his office.
+ June 28, 1995 - San Francisco: The San Francisco Chronicle
newspaper received a letter threatening to bomb a flight out of Los
Angeles International Airport.
+ June 1995 - The Unabomber contacted the New York Times and The
Washington Post saying that if they would print his manifesto of ideas
within three months he would stop killing.
+ Sept. 19, 1995 - Washington, D.C.: The Washington Post and New
York Times publish the 35,000-word manifesto.
+ April 3, 1996 - Theodore Kaczynski, former university math professor
identified by law-enforcement officials as the prime suspect in the
bombings, is taken into custody for questioning as FBI agents search his
Montana home.
+ April 4 - Kaczynksi makes his first court appearance and is formally
charged with illegal possession of bomb-making components. He does
not enter a plea and a federal judge orders him held in U.S. custody
pending further proceedings.
|
174.122 | Learn someting new about explosives every day... | ALFSS2::WILBUR_D | | Mon Apr 29 1996 15:13 | 11 |
|
.120 Iodine and Ammonia explode?
Did anyone know this before this article.
Just curious if this was some common lore that I missed
growing up.
|
174.123 | | SMURF::BINDER | Uva uvam vivendo variat | Mon Apr 29 1996 15:55 | 9 |
| .122
The product is called ammonium tri-iodide. It is famous in most
college chem labs, along with its close cousin nitrogen tri-iodide, for
its extreme instability. One common trick, which I was never party to
when I lived in a boarding high school, is to mix it up in a suitable
amount of pure alcohol (which keeps it from exploding) and paint the
solution on the floor. After it dries, the pressure of a person's shoe
when walking is sufficient to cause a series of POPs.
|
174.124 | | SOLVIT::KRAWIECKI | tumble to remove jerks | Mon Apr 29 1996 16:15 | 10 |
|
>.123
>One common trick, which I was never party to when I lived in a
>boarding high school,
You're probably lying...
|
174.125 | | NQOS01::s_coghill.dyo.dec.com::S_Coghill | Luke 14:28 | Mon Apr 29 1996 16:32 | 2 |
| Also, if the person walking on was barefooted, then he/she/it was likely to get
some 1st and 2nd degree burns from it.
|
174.126 | | EVMS::MORONEY | your innocence is no defense | Mon Apr 29 1996 16:43 | 6 |
| re .123:
Actually the product is nitrogen tri-iodide (NI3) "stabilized" by ammonia.
It is ridiculously sensitive, esp. dry.
Ammonium triiodide (NH4I3) is another chemical and is non-explosive.
|
174.127 | | SMURF::BINDER | Uva uvam vivendo variat | Mon Apr 29 1996 16:48 | 4 |
| .126
Well, there I go again... Once again proven imperfect. I think I'll
go out and eat worms.
|
174.128 | | BUSY::SLABOUNTY | Form feed = <ctrl>v <ctrl>l | Mon Apr 29 1996 16:58 | 6 |
|
RE: once again proven imperfect
I'd think that if you were proven imperfect once it would have
sufficed, Binder.
|
174.129 | | EVMS::MORONEY | your innocence is no defense | Mon Apr 29 1996 17:00 | 3 |
| re .127:
Can I watch?
|
174.130 | | CNTROL::JENNISON | Crown Him with many crowns | Mon Apr 29 1996 17:16 | 7 |
|
If you find more than you can eat, would you mind bringing
some over to my house and letting them loose on the lawn ?
Thanks in advance,
Karen
|
174.131 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Fri May 03 1996 17:32 | 5 |
| robert Hienlien had quite a bit of information on iodine and ammonia
derived explosives in "Farmer's Freehold." I first read about it in
1973. Isn't that the stuff in "sidewalk Poppers?"
meg
|
174.132 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri May 03 1996 17:34 | 3 |
| Heinlein.
nnttm.
|
174.133 | | EVMS::MORONEY | your innocence is no defense | Fri May 03 1996 17:40 | 6 |
| > Isn't that the stuff in "sidewalk Poppers?"
No. The ammonia/iodine stuff is much too unpredictable and sensitive for them.
It may go off if you look at it crosseyed. Or it may not.
Snappers contain silver fulminate, I believe.
|
174.134 | Mr. Anal Retentive wants YOU, yes YOU to know: | BSS::PROCTOR_R | Fozil's 3; Chooch makes 4! | Fri May 03 1996 18:10 | 10 |
| > robert Hienlien
Robert Heinlein
> "Farmer's Freehold."
Farnham's Freehold.
Illiterates.... sheesh.....
|
174.135 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | It's the foodchain, stupid | Fri May 03 1996 20:23 | 1 |
| So I can't spell and my memory isn't what it was.
|
174.136 | | MOLAR::DELBALSO | I (spade) my (dogface) | Fri May 03 1996 20:39 | 6 |
| Nitrogen Tri-Iodide. HS chem teacher showed us how to make it in '63. He
even used to sell us the Iodine crystals and concentrated Ammonium Hydroxide
to make it.
Until some idiot painted it on someone else's locker door.
|
174.137 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Sun May 05 1996 21:59 | 3 |
| Math stuff:
http://www.rpi.edu/~bulloj/tjk/tjk.html
|
174.138 | | EVMS::MORONEY | vi vi vi - Editor of the Beast | Thu May 15 1997 15:52 | 1 |
| Janet Reno to seek the death penalty for Kaczynksi.
|
174.139 | gotta know where to look | WAHOO::LEVESQUE | Spott Itj | Thu May 15 1997 15:52 | 1 |
| think she'll find it?
|
174.140 | | POLAR::RICHARDSON | got any spare change? | Thu May 15 1997 15:53 | 4 |
| she's a niiiice lady.
YUUUUUUUUEEEEEUUUUUUUUGH!
|
174.141 | | WMOIS::GIROUARD_C | | Fri May 16 1997 08:13 | 2 |
| regardless of how niiiice she is or isn't, i would expect no less
and support it.
|