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Kaczynski's attorneys have good reason to be worried. This week the prosecution will begin showing the eight-woman, four-man jury what FBI agents found in April 1996 when they raided Kaczynski's Montana cabin. The list of exhibits includes the fully-armed bomb found at the shack, bomb-making parts and chemicals, carbon copies of the Unabomber's manifesto and taunting letters to his victims and the news media. There are also thousands of pages of diaries and journals that Kaczynski kept for more than two decades. Written in English, Spanish and sometimes code (which was deciphered using...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Ted Kaczynski: At His Own Request | 1/12/1998 | See Source »

...language of an observer, watching himself being watched in the role of the Soul-Searching Man. "That's part of the art of life. You bring the essence of who you are to whatever task you are performing," he told Time last week in his cabin aboard Air Force Two. Paper snowflakes dangled above his head, and a string of Christmas lights blinked on and off. "Everybody has aspects of their personality that are stronger than others. And part of becoming a well-integrated person involves the task of strengthening those aspects not necessarily emphasized in your previous growth...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: CAN AL GORE BARE HIS SOUL? | 12/15/1997 | See Source »

From their first contact with the FBI, the family warned that Kaczynski had severe mental problems. And three months after his arrest on April 3, 1996, at his mountainside cabin outside Lincoln, Mont., family attorney Anthony Bisceglie cited Kaczynski's mental illness as a reason the government should not seek the death penalty. "In his correspondence, Ted projects his own feelings of anger, depression and powerlessness onto society at large--a society of which he has never really been a member," Bisceglie wrote lead prosecutor Robert Cleary. "He blames these ill effects on a wide variety of external factors, including...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: MAN BEHIND THE MASK | 11/17/1997 | See Source »

...career and marriage were over, and his drinking and drug taking were out of control. "I remember being in a closet with someone who was shooting cocaine," he says, "and a voice said, 'Get out of there.'" He did get out of there, and spent six months in a cabin in Oregon, where he quit drinking and began to write. He moved to a tiny apartment in Greenwich Village. "My entire life," he says, "was my room and the A.A. meetings on Perry Street...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: L.A. CONFIDENTIAL | 11/17/1997 | See Source »

...orbits or so, the crew kept up this orbital hit-or-miss, searching doggedly for the sun. Finally, at well after midnight on the morning of June 26, an instrument panel flickered to life, then a cabin light. Behind the walls, a fan started to whir, and a pump started to pump. One system at a time, instrument by instrument, the battered Mir recovered. By 2 a.m., more than 14 hours after it had sustained an injury that should have claimed its life, the world's only operating space station was working again...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A BAD DAY IN SPACE | 11/3/1997 | See Source »

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