In Profile : RCA, a London corporation with an American front


RCA Electronics

 

 

 

 

26 October 2015

Dividing of the world with seemingly all things American one side while forming the same onslaught as coming from the East, is a trick achieved in the control of technology, through which they have presented a script to each side.

With just a little perseverance and a bit of luck you find a gem people have forgotten, a piece of the puzzle that connects information from the past to today’s dilemma.

In the West we see the giant Intelligence operation SERCO GROUP PLC taking full control of all contingency systems administered by their own corporate government as outsource contractors.

They come in many forms with charitable status giving unaccountability and limited liability, ergo the taxpayers have no way of learning how much money they suck from the voters or how they actually spend that cash.

One thing we can state with absolute clarity is the fact the contracts (if you can find them) cost the taxpayer more each week while the services they are contracted to provide, disappear.

Serco is a prime example of the super spider in a web of deception, acting as king in all things contingency governance and as a subsidiary of RCA, for all its appearance for the masses it would seem to be an American affair, but this is certainly not the reality of the situation.
One thing to keep in mind, this system is today fully set up in the East, and, under the control of the same people controlling and dismantling  the West. It’s the Central Banks
 
Radio Corporation of America
RCA Corporation, founded as the Radio Corporation of America, was an American electronics company in existence from 1919 to 1986. The RCA trademark is currently owned by the French conglomerate Technicolor SA through RCA Trademark Management SA, a company owned by Technicolor. The trademark is used by Sony Music Entertainment and Technicolor, which licenses the name to other companies like Audiovox and TCL Corporation for products descended from that common ancestor.[2]

Origins
Organisation by General Electric
In August 1914, the German Empire declared war on France and Belgium, the United Kingdom declared war on Germany, and the United Kingdom and France declared war on Austria-Hungary. This following the German and Austrian invasions of their neighbours, including Serbia and the Russian Empire, thus starting World War I. Radio traffic across the Atlantic Ocean increased dramatically after the western Allies cut the German transatlantic submarine communication cables (telegraph-only at that time, well before the first transatlantic telephone cable connected the United States with France in 1956). Germany, Austria-Hungary, and their allies in Europe (the Central Powers) maintained contact with neutral countries in the Americas, such as the United States, Mexico, Brazil, Argentina, Chile, and Peru via long-distance radio communications, as well as via telegraph cables owned by neutral countries such as the Netherlands and Denmark.

In 1917 the US Government took charge of the patents owned by the major companies involved in radio manufacture in the United States in order to devote radio technology to the war effort. All production of radio equipment was allocated to the US Army, US Navy, US Marine Corps, and the US Coast Guard. The War Department and the Navy Department sought to maintain a Federal monopoly of all uses of radio technology. However, the wartime takeover of all radio systems ended late in 1918, when the US Congress failed to pass a bill which would have extended this monopoly; the War ended in November of that year.

The ending of the Federal Government’s monopoly in radio communications did not prevent the War and Navy Departments from creating a national radio system for the United States.[3] On 8 April 1919, naval Admiral W. H. G. Bullard and Captain Stanford C. Hooper met with executives of the General Electric Corporation (GE) and asked them to discontinue selling the company’s Alexanderson alternators (used in the high-power AM radio transmitters of that era) to the British-owned Marconi Company, and to its subsidiary, the Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America.

The proposal presented by the government was that if GE created an American-owned radio company, then the Army and Navy would effect a monopoly of long-distance radio communications via this company. This marked the beginning of a series of negotiations through which GE would buy the American Marconi company and then incorporate what would be called the Radio Corporation of America.[4]
 
Establishment
Original RCA logo. A later variation of this logo was revived by BMG after it bought RCA Records from GE, and is still used by Sony Music today. (below left)

RCA Original LogoThe incorporation of the assets of Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America (including David Sarnoff,[5]) the Pan-American Telegraph Company, and those already controlled by the United States Navy led to a new publicly-held company formed by General Electric (which owned a controlling interest) on 17 October 1919.[6] The following cooperation among RCA, General Electric, the United Fruit Company, the Westinghouse Electric Corporation, and American Telephone & Telegraph (AT&T) brought about innovations in high-power radio technology, and also the founding of the National Broadcasting Company (NBC) in the United States. The Army and the Navy granted to RCA the former American Marconi radio terminals that had been confiscated during the War. Admiral Bullard received a seat on the Board of Directors of RCA for his efforts in establishing RCA. The result was Federally-created monopolies in radio for GE and the Westinghouse Corporation and in telephone systems for the American Telephone & Telegraph Company.

The argument by the Department of War and the Department of the Navy that the usable radio frequencies were limited, and hence needed to be appropriated for use before other countries, such as the United Kingdom, France, Germany, and Canada monopolised them, collapsed in the mid-1920s following the discovery of the practicality of the use of the shortwave radio band (3.0 MHz though 30.0 MHz) for very long-range radio communications.[7]

The first chief executive officer of RCA was Owen D. Young;[8] David Sarnoff became its general manager. RCA’s incorporation papers required that a majority of its stock be held by American citizens. RCA agreed to market the radio equipment manufactured by GE and Westinghouse, and in follow-on agreements, RCA also acquired the radio patents that had been held by Westinghouse and the United Fruit Company. As the years went on, RCA either took over, or produced for itself, a large number of patents, including that of the superheterodyne receiver.

Over the years, RCA continued to operate international telecommunications services, under its subsidiary RCA Communications, Inc., and later the RCA Global Communications Company.

Broadcast expansion
By 1926 the market for commercial radio had expanded, and RCA purchased the WEAF and WCAP radio stations and networks from AT&T, merged them with its WJZ (the predecessor of WABC) New York to WRC (presently WTEM) Washington chain, and formed the National Broadcasting Company (NBC).

Radio
GE used RCA as its retail arm for radio sales from 1919, when GE began production, until 1930.[9] Westinghouse also marketed home radios through RCA until 1930.[10]

Programming change is about the destruction of the family, Psychotropics, Music and technology 

Phonograph
RCA trademark exhibit at Heritage Museum in Big Spring, Texas (below left)
In 1929 RCA purchased the Victor Talking Machine Company, then the world’s largest manufacturer of phonographs (including the famous Victrola) and phonograph records. This included a majority ownership of the Victor Company of Japan (JVC). The new subsidiary then became RCA-Victor. With Victor, RCA acquired New World rights to the Nipper trademark. Elvis Aaron Presley wore a belt buckle with the logo below, and written below it was the phrase “his masters voice.” Aaron..

Revised RCA Emblem from Big Spring, TX, MuseumThis Trademark is also the trademark for the British music & entertainment company HMV who now display Nipper in silhouette. RCA Victor produced many radio-phonographs and also created RCA Photophone, a sound-on-film system for sound films that competed with William Fox’s sound-on-film Movietone and Warner Bros. sound-on-disc Vitaphone. RCA began selling the first electronic turntable in 1930. In 1931 RCA Victor began selling 33…“ rpm records. These had the standard groove size (the same width as the contemporary 78 rpm records), rather than the microgroove used in post-World War II 33…“ Long Play records. The format was a commercial failure at the height of the Great Depression, partly because the records and playback equipment were expensive, and partly because the audio performance was poor (tracking ability depends upon, among other things, the stylus’s radius of curvature, and it would require the smaller-radius stylus of the microgroove system to make slower-speed records track acceptably).

The system was withdrawn from the market after about a year. (This was not the first attempt at a commercial long play record format, as Edison Records had marketed a microgroove vertically recorded disc with 20 minutes playing time per side the previous decade; the Edison long-playing records were also a commercial failure.)

In 1930 RCA agreed to occupy the yet-to-be-constructed landmark building of the Rockefeller Center complex, 30 Rockefeller Plaza, which in 1933 became known as the RCA building, now the GE Building. This critical lease in the massive project enabled it to proceed as a commercially viable venture.[11]
Separation from General Electric

In 1930 the US Department of Justice brought antitrust charges against RCA, General Electric and Westinghouse. As a result, GE and Westinghouse gave up their ownership interests in RCA. RCA was allowed to keep its radio factories, and GE and Westinghouse were allowed to compete in that business after 30 months.

Electronic television
Old television test pattern, created by RCA in 1939 and widely used until colour television gained in popularity (below left)

RCA demonstrated an all-electronic television system at the 1939 New York World’s Fair, and developed the USA’s first television test pattern. With the introduction of the NTSC standard, the Federal Communications Commission authorised the start of commercial television transmission on 1 July 1941. World War II slowed the deployment of television in the US, but RCA began selling television sets almost immediately after the war was over. (See also: History of television) RCA was closely involved in radar and radio development in support of the war effort. These development efforts greatly assisted RCA in its television research efforts.

RCA Indian Head Test PatternRCA was a major producer of vacuum tubes (branded Radiotron) in the USA, creating a series of innovative products ranging from octal base metal tubes co-developed with General Electric before World War II to the transistor-sized Nuvistor used in the tuners of the New Vista series of television sets. The Nuvistor tubes were a last hurrah for vacuum tubes and were meant to be a competitive technology against the newly introduced transistors. RCA also partnered with Tung-Sol to produce the legendary KT88/6550 hi-fi vacuum tube. Their combined power in the marketplace was so strong that they effectively set the selling prices for vacuum tubes in the USA. Except for the main cathode ray tube (CRT), the company had completely switched from tubes to solid-state television sets by 1975.

Antitrust concerns led FCC to force the breakup of the NBC radio networks, a breakup affirmed by the United States Supreme Court. On 12 October 1943, the NBC Blue radio network was sold to Life Savers candy magnate Edward J. Noble for $8,000,000, and renamed The Blue Network, Inc. It would become the American Broadcasting Company (ABC) in 1946. The NBC Red network retained the NBC name, and RCA retained ownership.

Diversification
In 1941, before the attack on Pearl Harbour, the cornerstone was laid for a research and development facility, RCA Laboratories, on Route 1 just north of New Jersey Rte 571 in Princeton, New Jersey. This lab developed many innovations, such as colour television, the electron microscope, CMOS-based technology, heterojunction physics, optoelectronic emitting devices, liquid crystal displays (LCDs), videocassette recorders, direct broadcast television, direct broadcast satellite systems and high-definition television. From 1988 to January 2011, the Lab was called Sarnoff Corporation, a subsidiary of SRI International, after which it was fully integrated into SRI.[12]

During World War II and beyond, RCA set up several new divisions, for defence  space exploration and other activities. The RCA Service Corporation provided large numbers of staff for the Distant Early Warning (DEW) Line. RCA units won five Army Navy Awards for Excellence in production.[13] Also during the war, ties between RCA and JVC were severed.

In 1947 RCA-Victor developed and released the first 45 rpm record to the public, answering CBS/Columbia‘s 33…“ rpm LP.[14]

In 1953 RCA’s all electronic colour-TV technology was adopted as the standard for American colour TV; it is now known as NTSC (after the National Television System Committee that approved it). RCA cameras and studio gear, particularly of the TK-40/41 series, became standard equipment at many American television network affiliates, as RCA CT-100[15] (RCA Merrill to dealers) television sets introduced colour television to the public.

RCA Television Quad head 2 colour recorder/reproducer used at broadcast studios in the late 1960s, 70s and early 80s. It used a vertical scanning drum with head motion at 90° to tape direction. This unit was developed before the now-common helical scanning used in commercial and home tape machines.

In 1955 RCA sold its Estate large appliance operations to Whirlpool Corporation. As part of the deal, Whirlpool was given the right to market RCA Whirlpool appliances through the mid-1960s.
Despite the company’s indisputable leadership in television technology, David Sarnoff in 1955 commented, Television will never be a medium of entertainment.

RCA was one of several major computer companies (see also: Computing) that also included IBM, Digital Equipment Corporation, Burroughs, Control Data Corporation, General Electric, Honeywell, NCR and Sperry Rand through most of the 1960s. RCA marketed the Spectra 70 Series (models 15, 25, 35, 45, 46, 55, 60 and 61) that were hardware, but not software, compatible with IBM’s 360 series, and the RCA Series (RCA 2, 3, 6, 7) competing against the IBM 370.[16]

These systems all ran RCA’s real-memory operating systems, DOS and TDOS. RCA’s Virtual Memory Systems, the Spectra 70/46 and 70/61 and the RCA 3 and 7 could also run their Virtual Memory Operating System, VMOS. VMOS was originally named TSOS (Time Sharing Operating System), but was renamed in order to expand the system beyond the time-sharing market. RCA was credited with coining the term Virtual Memory. TSOS was the first mainframe, demand paging, virtual memory operating system on the market. The English Electric System 4 range, the 4-10, 4-30, 4-50,4-70 and the time-sharing 4-75 computers were essentially RCA Spectra 70 clones of the IBM System /360 and 370 range. RCA abandoned computers in 1971. Sperry Rand officially took over the RCA base in January 1972.

RCA Graphic Systems Division (GSD) was an early supplier of electronics designed for the printing and publishing industries. It contracted with German company Rudolf Hell to market adaptations of the Digiset photocomposition system as the Videocomp, and a Laser Colour Scanner. The Videocomp was supported by a Spectra computer that ran the Page-1 and, later the Page-II and FileComp composition systems. RCA later sold the Videocomp rights to Information International Inc. (III).

RCA was a major proponent of the eight-track tape cartridge, which it launched in 1965. The eight-track cartridge initially had a huge and profitable impact on the consumer marketplace. However, sales of the 8-track tape format peaked early on as consumers increasingly favoured the compact cassette tape format developed by competitor Philips.
 
Later years
David Sarnoff, whose ambition and business acumen had helped RCA become one of the world’s largest companies, turned the company over to his son Robert in 1970. David died the next year, aged 80.

On 17 September 1971, NBC’s Huntley-Brinkley Report read a news bulletin issued by the RCA Board of Directors just minutes before the broadcast, announcing the Board’s decision to cease operation of its general-purpose computer systems division (RCA-CSD). This marked a milestone in RCA’s move away from technology and into a diversified conglomerate. (The introduction by IBM of the 370 series required RCA to make a substantial new investment in its computer division, and the Board decided against making that investment.)

During the late 1960s and 1970s, RCA Corporation, as it was now formally known, ventured into other markets. Under Robert Sarnoff’s leadership, RCA diversified far beyond electronics and communications, in a broader American corporate trend toward conglomerates. The company acquired Hertz (rental cars), Banquet (frozen foods), Coronet (carpeting), Random House (publishing) and Gibson (greeting cards), yet slipped into financial disarray, with wags calling it Rugs Chickens & Automobiles to poke fun at their attempt at becoming a conglomerate.[17]

Robert Sarnoff was ousted in a 1975 boardroom coup by Anthony Conrad, who resigned a year later after he admitted failing to file income tax returns for six years. RCA maintained its high standards of engineering excellence in broadcast engineering and satellite communications equipment, but ventures such as the NBC radio and television networks declined.

In about 1980 RCA corporate strategy reported on moving manufacture of its television sets to Mexico. RCA was still profitable in 1983, when it switched manufacturing of its VHS VCRs from Panasonic to Hitachi.

Forays into new consumer electronics products lost money. The SelectaVision videodisc system, not to be confused with the same trademark that RCA applied to its VCRs, never developed the manufacturing volumes to substantially bring down its price, could not compete against cheaper, recordable videotape technology, and was abandoned in 1985 for a write-off of several hundred million dollars.

In 1984 RCA Broadcast Systems Division moved from Camden, New Jersey, to the site of the RCA antenna engineering facility in Gibbsboro, New Jersey. In the years that followed, the broadcast product lines developed in Camden were terminated or sold off, and most of the buildings demolished, save for the original RCA Victor buildings that had been declared national historical buildings.[18] For several years, RCA spinoff L-3 Communications Systems east was headquartered in the building, but has since moved to an adjacent building built by the city for them. The building now houses shops and luxury loft apartments.[19]

Takeover and break-up by G.E
Business and financial conditions led to RCA’s takeover by GE in 1986 and its subsequent break-up. GE sold its 50% interest in then-RCA/Ariola International Records to its partner Bertelsmann and the company was renamed BMG Music, for Bertelsmann Music Group.

GE then sold the rights to make RCA- and GE-branded televisions and other consumer electronics products in 1988 to the French Thomson Consumer Electronics, in exchange for some of Thomson’s medical businesses.

RCA Laboratories was transferred to SRI International as the David Sarnoff Research Center, subsequently renamed Sarnoff Corporation. Sarnoff Labs was put on a five-year plan whereby GE would fund all the labs activities for the first year, then reduce its support to near zero after the fifth year. This required Sarnoff Labs to change its business model to become an industrial contract research facility.

The only RCA unit which GE kept was the National Broadcasting Company. GE sold the NBC Radio Network to Westwood One and all of its radio stations to various owners.
For information on the RCA brand after 1986, see RCA (trademark).

Legacy
RCA antique radios and RCA Merrill/CT-100s and other early colour television receivers are among the more sought-after collectible radios and televisions, thanks to their popularity during the golden age of radio, they’re manufacturing quality, they’re engineering innovations, they’re styling and their name, RCA.
The Nipper stained glass atop the Nipper Tower in the former Building 17. This photo, taken from inside the Nipper Tower,” shows the 2003 replacement of the 1978 replacement of the 1915 original glass.

The historic RCA Victor Building 17, the Nipper Building, in Camden, New Jersey, was converted to luxury apartments in 2003.[20][21]

Environmental record
A former RCA facility in Taiwan’s northern county of Taoyuan polluted groundwater with toxic chemicals and led to a high incidence of cancer among former employees.[22] The area was declared a toxic site by the Taiwanese Environmental Protection Agency.[23] Both GE and Thomson spent millions of dollars for cleanup, removing 10,000 cubic yards (7,600 m3) of soil and installing municipal water treatment facilities for neighbouring communities.[24] A spokesman for RCA’s current owners denied responsibility, saying a study conducted by the Taiwan government showed no correlation between the illnesses and the company’s facilities, which shut down in 1991.[25]

A plant in Lancaster, Pennsylvania which RCA operated from the late 1940s to June 1986, released more than 250,000 pounds of pollutants per year from its exhaust stacks.[26] Tested by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) in the late 1980s and early 1990s, the groundwater at the facility is contaminated by trichloroethylene (TCE) and 1,2-dichloroethylene (1,2-DCE).[27] In 1991 and 1992, contaminants were detected in monitoring wells on the east side of the Conestoga River in Lancaster.

The shallow and deep groundwater aquifers beneath the Intersil Facility in Mountaintop, Pennsylvania, which RCA operated in the 1960s and later sold to Harris Corporation, contain elevated levels of volatile organic compounds.[28]

A site in Burlington, Massachusetts which RCA used from 1958 to 1994 to make and test military electronics equipment, generated hazardous waste (VOCs, TCE, toluene, ethylbenzene, and xylenes).[29][30]

In Barceloneta, Puerto Rico, an RCA-operated plant generated wastes containing chromium, selenium and iron. Four lagoons holding chemical waste drained into the limestone aquifer.[31][32] Used water from the manufacturing process (process water), containing ferric chloride, was treated onsite to remove contaminants and then was discharged into a sinkhole at the site. The treatment of process water created a sludge that was stored onsite in drying beds and in surface impoundments.[33]
 
Notes
[1] RCA (Radio Corporation of America). IEEE Global History Network. IEEE. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
[2] RCA.com  RCA-Brand
[3] Robert Britt Horwitz, The Irony of Regulatory Reform
[4] Page, Walter Hines; Page, Arthur W (May 1922 1922). The March Of Events: America in Control Of Its Wireless. The World’s Work: A History of Our Time XLIV: 1113. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
[5] Sunil Annapareddy, Jonathan Jahr, Alexander Magoun. David Sarnoff Library Radio Corporation of America Timeline [1919-1986]  Introduction. Davidsarnoff.org. Retrieved 2011-12-11.
[6] McMahon, Morgan E. A Flick of the Switch 1930 1950 (Antiques Electronics Supply, 1990), p. 51
[7] Winkler, Jonathan Reed. Nexus: Strategic Communications and American Security in World War I. (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008)
[8] Biography of Owen D. Young on the GE website
[9] Mahon, Morgan E. A Flick of the Switch 1930 1950 (Antiques Electronics Supply, 1990), p. 86
[10] Mahon, p. 183
[11] Crucial tenant in 30 Rockefeller Plaza see David Rockefeller, Memoirs, New York: Random House, 2002, p. 55
[12] SRI International Completes Integration of Sarnoff Corporation (Press release.) SRI International. 2011-01-01. Retrieved 2011-11-12.
[13] Radio Age By Radio Corporation of America, p. 26
[14] LP and 45 RPM Records
[15] CT-100 Colour Receiver Gallery
[16] RCA Spectra 70. March 1965. Retrieved 17 May 2009.
[17] Clausing, Don; Victor Fey (2004). Effective Innovation. New York: ASME Press. p. 7. Retrieved 25 February 2012.
[18] RCA TV Equipment Archive
[19] http://www.thevictorlofts.com/ The Victor Lofts website
[20] Preservation New Jersey
[21] New Jersey Historic Preservation Awards Program, 2004. RCA Victor Company, Nipper Building Rehabilitation
[22] Ton, 1999 Ton C-D, Exposure and Health Risk Assessment of Groundwater Contamination A Case Study of Contamination Site of Tao-Yuan RCA. Master Thesis, National Taiwan University. 1999 (in Chinese)
[23] Silicon Valley to Taiwan Silicon Island
[24] Taiwan workers plead cancer case / Link RCA plant to disease
[25] Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition
[26] http://oaspub.epa.govenviromultisys2.get_list?FACILITY_UIN=110000618190
[27] http://www.epa.gov/reg3wcmd/ca/pa/pdf/pad003026903.pdf
[28] INTERSIL CORPORATION, S-1 SEC Filing, 11/10/1999
[29] U.S. EPA Region I. http://yosemite.epa.gov/r1/npl_pad.nsf/8b160ae5c647980585256bba0066f907/c47da9e0cd7a440185256b4200604ad8!OpenDocument US EPA document
[30 ] SUPERFUND ANNUAL REPORT 2001. U.S. EPA Region I
[31] U.S. EPA, Environmental Quality Board, National Priority List (NPL), Site Inspection Report/Site Evaluation Report. EPA, San Juan Barceloneta RCA del Caribe, October 1987
[32] John M. Hunter and Sonia I. Arbona. PARADISE LOST: AN INTRODUCTION TO THE GEOGRAPHY OF WATER POLLUTION IN PUERTO RICO. Soc. Sci. Med. Vol. 40, No. 10, pp. 1331 1355, 1995. Pergamon Press. http://www.seas.columbia.edu/earth/wtert/sofos/paradise%20lost.pdf

[33] 20058 20060 Federal Register / Vol. 70, No. 73 / Monday, 18 April 2005
Also see :Robert N. Sobel : RCA New York: Stein and Day Publishers, 1986. ISBN 0-8128-3084-9

Historic Board of Directors
NBC, a subsidiary of RCA, has the following directors :

John Brademas, president of New York University, chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York (which dominates the other Federal Reserve Banks by its control of the money market), and director of the Rockefeller Foundation. Brademas has received the George Peabody Award (George Peabody established the Peabody Educational Fund which later became the Rockefeller Foundation), and he was named Humanist of the Year in 1978.

Cecily B. Selby, born in London, England, national director of the Girl Scouts, director of Avon Products and Loehmann’s, a dress firm. She is married to James Coles, president of Bowdoin College since 1952.

Peter G. Peterson, former head of Kuhn, Loeb Co., and ex-Secretary of Commerce.
Robert Cizik, chairman of Cooper Industries (sales of $1.5 billion), and director of RCA and First City Bancorp. First City was identified in Congressional testimony as one of the three Rothschild banks in the United States.

Thomas O. Paine, President of Northrup Co., a large defense contractor. Paine is a director of the influential Institute of Strategic Studies in London, director of the Institute of Metals, London, American Ordnance Assn., and many other professional munitions associations.

Donald Smiley, chairman R.H. Macy Co. since 1945; he is also a director of Metropolitan Life and US Steel, known as Morgan-controlled firms, and director of Ralston-Purina Co., and Irving Trust.

David C. Jones, president of Consolidated Contractors, director of U.S. Steel, Kemper Insurance Co.
Thornton Bradshaw, chairman of RCA, director of Champion Paper Co., Atlantic Richfield Oil Co., Rockefeller Brothers Fund, and the Aspen Institute of Humanistic Studies.

Although not listed as a director of NBC, Andrew Sigler is a director of its parent company, RCA. Sigler is chairman of Champion Paper Co., and director of General Electric, Bristol Myers, and Cabot Corp. (which traditionally has had heavy CIA involvement).

Thus we find that NBC has many Rothschild and JP Morgan connections among its directors, who include the chairman of the key to our monetary control, the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and other directors associated with such Rothschild operations as Kuhn, Loeb Co., First City Bancorp, and the Institute of Strategic Studies in London.
 
Further Study
RCA History from Thomson Consumer Electronics
Intech Contractors/Construction Managers. The Victor Project. Converting the Nipper building into apartments
RCAGlobal.com  a web site dedicated to what was RCA Global Communications
The Victor Lofts
RCA Radio Central, Rock Point, Long Island, NY
RCA Taiwan factory pollution
RCA TV equipment archive
Who Owns the Television Networks?
Froebel Education Method and the Third Reich
The Symmetry Lessons From Froebel Building Gifts
In Profile G4S
In Profile : Wackenhut Corporation
In Profile : György Lukács and the Frankfurt School

Tags : American Telephone & Telegraph (AT&T), Audiovox, Edison Records, General Electric, Marconi Company, Marconi Wireless Telegraph Company of America, Radio Corporation of America, RCA, RCA is Serco, RCA Records, Serco Group Plc, Sony Music, SRI International, TCL Corporation, the United Fruit Company, Victor Talking Machine Company, Westinghouse Electric Corporation