Ugland House: Difference between revisions
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[[File:Ugland House.jpg| | {{a|cayman|[[File:Ugland House.jpg|450px|thumb|center|The building which stands today in memory of [[George Robert Maguire Ugland]]]]}} | ||
A grand, ocean-fronted five-story Spanish hacienda, [[Ugland House]], houses tens of thousands of homeless, cold, starving [[orphan ownership|orphan]] [[special purpose vehicles]]. It was named after the founding father of Caribbean [[high finance]], [[George Robert Maguire Ugland]], who set up the first orphanage for parentless [[espievie]]s in the [[Cayman Islands]] in the 1950s | A grand, ocean-fronted five-story Spanish hacienda, [[Ugland House]], houses tens of thousands of homeless, cold, starving [[orphan ownership|orphan]] [[special purpose vehicles]]. It was named after the founding father of Caribbean [[high finance]], [[George Robert Maguire Ugland]], who set up the first orphanage for parentless [[espievie]]s in the [[Cayman Islands]] in the 1950s. | ||
Ugland’s protogés the [[Maple brothers]], together with their long-time collaborator, dour Glaswegian botanist [[A. J. N. Calder]], built [[Ugland House]] into a magnificent charitable alms house. The building has supplied the world’s asset management sweatshops with a never-ending stream of disciplined, well-schooled orphan [[espievie]]s for over forty years now. | |||
{{ugland quote}} | In G. R. M. Ugland’s own immortal words: | ||
{{quote|''{{ugland quote}}''}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 14:16, 17 December 2020
The culture and history of the Cayman Islands
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A grand, ocean-fronted five-story Spanish hacienda, Ugland House, houses tens of thousands of homeless, cold, starving orphan special purpose vehicles. It was named after the founding father of Caribbean high finance, George Robert Maguire Ugland, who set up the first orphanage for parentless espievies in the Cayman Islands in the 1950s.
Ugland’s protogés the Maple brothers, together with their long-time collaborator, dour Glaswegian botanist A. J. N. Calder, built Ugland House into a magnificent charitable alms house. The building has supplied the world’s asset management sweatshops with a never-ending stream of disciplined, well-schooled orphan espievies for over forty years now.
In G. R. M. Ugland’s own immortal words:
“Give me your poor, huddled, lost little special purpose vehicles. Give them all to me: yea, even unto their tens of thousands. I will nourish them. I will feed them. I will shelter them, just as they will shelter you, and your taxable income.”