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Rothschild, Lord

Rothschild Lord (1956). Fertilization. Methuen and Co., London, U.K., and Wiley, New York, USA. [Pg.51]

Normally the role of officials was to ensure that decisions were taken by ministers in an orderly way, but inevitably officials briefs drew ministers attention to discrepancies in expert advice, and some officials, of whom Brook was one, and his successor as Cabinet Secretary, Sir Burke Trend, another, could be influential advisers on their own account. Brook had acquired considerable influence over Churchill and became accustomed to putting forward his own opinions in the briefs that he prepared for prime ministers. On the other hand he was unable to dissuade Eden from what he (Brook) considered to be the folly of the Suez operation. Trend was said by Lord Rothschild in 1970 to be one of the two men who ran the country, the other being Sir William Armstrong, the permanent secretary of the Treasury. Trend was a great believer in the Anglo-American special relationship, and this is reflected in the advice that he gave Harold Wilson, of whom he was a close confidant. ... [Pg.278]

American people through popular "violation of the law" and association with the crime syndicate controlled by the Our Crowd banks of Wall Street — the Zionist Lobby of its day (see Part III). New York s Our Crowd is an extension of the London Rothschild banking network and British Secret Intelligence into the United States. For example, Sir William Wiseman was the official head of British Secret Intelligence in the United States throughout the World War I period. He became a senior partner in the investment house of Kuhn Loeb immediately on demobilization. Wiseman was a personal protege of Canadian Round Table founder Lord Beaverbrook and one of the most prominent public figures in the Zionist movement. (1)... [Pg.45]

Britain s African mining empire future prime minister Arthur Balfour Albert Grey and Lord Rothschild. [Pg.178]

This problem of assessing risks in many walks of life is outside the scope of the present paper. The subject has recently been discussed in a remarkable lecture by Lord Rothschild ". ... [Pg.196]

Lord Rothschild (1978). Risk, The 1978 Richard Dimbleby Lecture, BBC, London. [Pg.200]


See other pages where Rothschild, Lord is mentioned: [Pg.221]    [Pg.270]    [Pg.355]    [Pg.156]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.278 ]




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