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A few saw potential downstream benefits from the influx of money and reasonably educated people, but most shared the views of their compatriots in Antelope. Reaction at the county level was mixed, but mostly negative. Soon, perhaps growing weary of life in such a small town, Rajneeshees began vying for seats on Wasco County boards and commissions. They named their new town Rajneesh and quickly converted it to their own needs and ends, to the utter disgust of the mostly retired locals. Not content with having built a thriving community on their own land, cult members gained electoral control of the nearby small (population 75) town of Antelope in Wasco County. He accumulated ninety Rolls Royces, five private jets, and a helicopter. The Rajneesh commune soon grew to several thousand souls, who enjoyed various degrees of success in their search for peace and enlightenment, in an atmosphere of easy drugs and sex. In 1981, the Rajneesh cult, founded by a displaced Indian mystic named Bhagwan Shree Rajneesh, purchased a 60,000-plus-acre ranch in north central Oregon, not far from the city of The Dalles (population 11,000). In the excerpt below we learn about one early bioterrorism attack in America. His new book, Bracing For Armageddon?: The Science and Politics of Bioterrorism in America, provides a reassuring overview of what we really need to worry about – and what we don’t. Clark is Professor and Chair Emeritus of Immunology at the University of California, Los Angeles.