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Rich was the guest speaker at the yearly Maureen and Robert Rothschild Lecture, held yesterday at the Schlesinger Library. [CORRECTIONS BELOW...

Author: By Jessica O Matthews, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Poetic Icon Returns for Reading | 4/29/2008 | See Source »

...first poet chosen to be as a Rothschild lecturer, said Nancy F. Cott, director of the Schlesinger Library...

Author: By Jessica O Matthews, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Poetic Icon Returns for Reading | 4/29/2008 | See Source »

...European Union (EU), such a strong euro is not in the region’s best interest. Just as high prices may lead a backpacker to choose to venture elsewhere this summer, airlines considering Airbus planes and bankers wondering about BMW coupes and Château Lafite Rothschild wines may think twice before purchasing. In fact, Airbus’s parent company European Aeronautic Defence and Space Company announced this week its flagship plane, the A380, will cost five million dollars more starting next month, for it has always been quoted in American currency. In short, a strong euro reduces...

Author: By Pierpaolo Barbieri | Title: Stay the Course | 4/23/2008 | See Source »

...exhibitions also reveal how much Hitler loathed the Rothschilds, the famous Jewish family of financiers and art collectors. An ex-Gestapo officer and biographer, Hansjürgen Koehler, has claimed that Hitler's grandmother once worked as a maid for the Vienna branch of the family, giving rise to rumors that she may have sired a bastard son, Hitler's father, with a Rothschild. Whatever the real reason for his enmity, Hitler, a failed art student, ordered the plunder of Rothschild collections in both Paris and Vienna to help stock his Führermuseum...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spoils of War: Looted Art | 3/6/2008 | See Source »

...Rothschild collections were so well known that many works were traced and returned after World War II. The Israel Museum exhibits one luminous Dutch canvas by Pieter de Hooch stolen in Paris from Edouard de Rothschild and seized by Hitler's boundlessly rapacious second in command, Hermann Goering. But greed alone hardly explains the Nazis' frenzied grasp for Jewish-owned art, says curator Steinberg: "Taking an art collection was a way of stripping the Jew of what made him a citizen in the world." Out of gratitude for French help in restoring their stolen art, the Rothschilds donated...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Spoils of War: Looted Art | 3/6/2008 | See Source »

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