Ashland marked on 'Hate Map' | Mail Tribune
There was an incident where a Native American woman was punched in the face by a bar patron whom she alleges hit her because she identifies as Native. The alleged perpetrator was not found but the police confirm mailtribune.com/news/happening…
the woman was hit.
Herb Rothschild of Talent, former executive director of Peace House in Ashland, is also aware of the anti-Semitic nature of recent conversations being generated in the Ashland area, primarily by Rense.
“Apparently, until recently Rense focused on conspiracy theories about aliens, contrails and especially the FDA's determination to keep life-saving drugs and devices out of our hands (much of his income is selling — or allowing others to sell via his site — such stuff),"
Rothschild wrote in an email to the Tidings. "But in the last couple of years he's promoted anti-Semitic propaganda, even celebrating Hitler's birthday.”
Arthur F. Rense (1917 — 1990) was a sports journalist for the Los Angeles Daily News[1] and the director of public relations for Howard R. Hughes' Summa Corporation.
Arthur Frederick Rense was born 20 May 1917 in Cleveland, Ohio, to Austrian-Italian immigrant parents, Joseph
Rensi and his wife, the former Rosalia Luther.[3][4] He had six siblings, including five brothers: Louis, Rudolph, Andrew, Frank, William; and a sister, Rose.[5] After graduating from Ohio State University with a degree in English, Rense served in the United States Coast Guard
during World War II. Between 1959 and 1974 Rense handled public relations for the Douglas Aircraft Company, Missiles and Space division (pre-McDonnell-Douglas).[5][6] In the mid-1970s Rense became public relations specialist for Harvey Mudd College,[5] and later collaborated with
football player Tom Harmon on Tom Harmon's Football Today in Las Vegas.[1] After that, Rense worked on public relations for hotels in Las Vegas owned by the Summa Corporation, mainly the Desert Inn.[1] He was a lifelong poet by avocation.
The name "Summa", Latin for "highest", was allegedly chosen by several of Hughes' employees without consulting him first. Hughes was allegedly dissatisfied, and preferred the name "HRH Properties" - with the initials standing for both "Howard Robard Hughes" and "
Hughes Resort Hotels". His suggestions were never implemented, and the company remained Summa for 18 years following Hughes' death.
Howard Hughes died in 1976 at the age of 70, without a valid will.[1] Administrators were appointed, led by his cousin William Lummis. Most of
Summa's operations were gradually liquidated. Summa's Nevada money-losing mining interests were sold by the end of 1976, while KLAS-TV and Hughes Sports Network were both sold in 1978. Hughes Airwest was sold to Republic Airlines for $38.5 million in October 1980,[2] and
Hughes Helicopters was sold to McDonnell Douglas for $470 million in January 1984.
Whyte Enterprises Inc., from the 1971 James Bond film Diamonds Are Forever is a direct expy (in other words a fictional counterpart) of the Summa Corporation, much as Willard Whyte was an expy
of Howard Hughes.
The company was founded in 1888 by British businessman Cecil Rhodes, who was financed by the South African diamond magnate Alfred Beit and the London-based N M Rothschild & Sons bank.[6][7] In 1926, Ernest Oppenheimer, a German immigrant to Britain and later South Africa who
had earlier founded mining company Anglo American with American financier J.P. Morgan,[8] was elected to the board of De Beers.[9] He built and consolidated the company's global monopoly over the diamond industry until his death in 1957. During this time, he was involved in a
number of controversies, including price fixing and trust behaviour, and was accused of not releasing industrial diamonds for the U.S. war effort during World War II.
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There are currently two available residential listings at the building. Unit 6/7A is listed for a whopping $44 million. Jackie O’s childhood home, it is a 14-room, four-bedroom duplex. On the market for $29.5 million, apartment 23D is a 16-room, five bedroom duplex that was
recently renovated by acclaimed architect Alan Wanzenberg.
Dalio is pictured with Jeff Taylor, a senior executive at Bridgewater Associates who founded the job site Monster.
Jeff Taylor contracted Christopher Caldwell of Net Daemons Associates to develop a facility in an NDA lab on a Sun Microsystems SPARCstation 5 where job seekers could search a job database with a web browser. The machine was moved to sit under a router in a phone closet in
The first manual, "KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation", dated July 1963, is the source of much of the material in the second manual. KUBARK was a U.S. Central Intelligence Agency cryptonym for the CIA itself.
The cryptonym KUBARK appears in the title of a 1963 CIA document KUBARK Counterintelligence Interrogation which describes interrogation techniques, including, among other things, "coercive counterintelligence interrogation of resistant sources". This is the oldest manual, and
In 1918 Britain sent in money and some troops to support the anti-Bolshevik "White" counter-revolutionaries. This policy was spearheaded by Minister of War Winston Churchill.[9] France, Japan and the United States en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origins_o…
also sent forces to help decide the Russian Civil War in the Whites’ favor. Lenin made peace overtures to Wilson, and the American leader responded by sending diplomat William Bullitt to Moscow.
Bullitt was born to a prominent Philadelphia family, the son of Louisa Gross (Horwitz) [5] and William Christian Bullitt Sr. His grandfather was John Christian Bullitt, founder of the law firm today known as Drinker Biddle & Reath.[6] He graduated from Yale University in 1912,
In 1941, after it had become clear that the United States would soon enter World War II, Alsop and Kintner suspended their column and volunteered for the armed forces. Alsop entered the US Navy and used his political connections en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Al…
to be assigned as Staff Historian to Claire Lee Chennault's American Volunteer Group, later famous as the Flying Tigers,[5] while the group was training at Toungoo, Burma. While on a supply mission for Chennault late in the fall of 1941,
he found himself in Hong Kong on December 7. Unable to secure passage out of the city, Alsop was eventually taken into custody as an enemy alien and interned at Hong Kong by the Japanese. After six months he was repatriated through a prisoner exchange as a journalist, but he
In 1854, he founded the law firm of Scudder & Carter, which is now known as Carter Ledyard & Milburn. He was commissioned captain in the Thirty-seventh Regiment of the New York National Guard in 1862 and served throughout en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Joe…
the Civil War. Scudder was elected as a Republican to the Forty-third Congress, holding office from March 4, 1873, to March 3, 1875. While in Congress, he was assigned to the Committee on War Claims.[7] He declined to be a candidate for renomination in 1874 and was a trustee of
Trinity College for over twenty years. He resumed the practice of law in New York City,[2] where he was principal counsel for the Standard Oil Company. His funeral, held at Calvary Church in New York, was attended by Joseph Hodges Choate, Sen. William M. Evarts, Mayor Grace,