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ERSON
ag 301 East 66th Street. He
to join him? He did.”
ups and downs. At one point,
y the Epstein brothers. There,
bout a little-known side of Jef-
o lived in South America, des-
splant. Epstein paid for the
:g says. “That's who he always
's another old classmate, James
was nothing special about it.”
stal worker. He lives in South
tein, he’d grown up in Sea Gate.
at Lafayette,” Rosen recalls. “It
at one time, 90 percent Italian.
vs moved in, and there was
rt want the Jews to be there.”
in, too, he remembers, and His-
the animosity was aimed at Jews.
schools. They thought we were
sade friends easily. Even then, his
ypy—could see he was special.
ich, Epstein played the piano. Did
‘ed stamp collection.
CHAPTER 21
Jeffrey Epstein: 1969-1976
t’s the height of the Vietnam War. Students collide with col-
lege administrators. Hippies collide with hard hats. Kids with
long hair collide with their parents. Jeffrey Epstein does not
go in for any of that. At the age of sixteen, he’s taking advanced
math classes at Cooper Union, an august institution in the East
Village where Abraham Lincoln once spoke.
Thanks to a generous endowment, the school is tuition-free
though the application process is famously rigorous. )
Epstein sails through it.
At Harvard or Yale, his accent would give him away. Epstein
tawks like the Brooklyn boy he is. But Cooper Union is more open
than any Ivy League school. It’s full of boys from Brooklyn, and
asi . . . :
a from his prodigious intellect, Epstein doesn’t stand out. He
_ Starts to make money by tutoring his fellow students. And in 1971
he
_ he leaves Cooper Union for the greener pastures of New York
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