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Jan 1, 1901 — Jan 1, 1978· 77 yrs

UNITED KINGDOM OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND AUTHOR · HISTORY · BIOGRAPHY

Hugh Ross Williamson

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Hugh Williamson (1735–1819) was an American politician. Hugh Williamson may also refer to: Hugh Ross Williamson (1901–1978), British historian and dramatist Hugh D.T. Williamson (1901–1985), Australian banking executive and philanthropist Hugh Williamson (book designer) (1918–1992), British book designer and author Hugh G. M. Williamson (born 1947), Regius Professor of Hebrew at the University of Oxford Hugh Williamson, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights Watch.

Romsey, United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland
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So consider fraud.

— from The great betrayal

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#1

The walled garden

4.0 (2)

No, Ann confided to her godmother, there was not the slightest possibility that she would fall in love with her new employer, Michael Falcon, the head of St. Cyprian's Preparatory School. He was inconsiderate, unreasonable, dogmatic; he was also engaged to a beautiful but most unpleasant girl; and he thought that Ann was frivolous and had far too good an opinion of herself. Quite obviously two such people could never like or understand one another, and it was a good thing that he was only filling in at St. Cyprians for one term. At least they weren't indifferent to each other, and even out of such unpromising beginnings romance can grow. All of which showed that Ann still had a great deal to learn about love and life!

#2

The great betrayal

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In The Great Betrayal, Buchanan charges the architects of NAFTA and GATT with selling out the middle class and turning their backs on the nation. As the voice of populist conservatism, he speaks to the desperation of the millions of Americans who have lost their jobs as a result of the free-trade policies of the Global Economy. He shows how by exporting jobs to Asia and Mexico, the corporate elite is destroying the American dream and profiting from the exploitation of sweatshop labor. Abandoned by their government, American workers are being forced to compete with cheap Third World labor and, inevitably, are losing out. Basing his arguments on the principles of our Founding Fathers and using real-life stories to illustrate the plight of the working class, Buchanan raises an impassioned call to arms. He offers a "new economic nationalism" and invites a battle for the heart and soul of the Republican Party in 2000 on the issues of national sovereignty and social justice. Republicans, neoconservatives, and Democrats cannot let his charges go unanswered.

#3

Captain Thomas Schofield

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