Word: bustani
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Dates: during 1960-1969
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Though better known for its shrewd bankers and sharp traders, tiny Lebanon has the nearest thing to a major industrialist in the Arab world. He is Emile Bustani, 54, who, as chairman of Beirut's Contracting & Trading Co. (CAT), bosses the biggest of all Arab-owned industrial enterprises...
Renaissance Man. Beefy, ebullient Emile Bustani, who runs all this from a Beirut office littered with statues and drawings of bushy-tailed cats, is a kind of one-man Arab renaissance. Born in a primitive mountain village and raised in an American mission orphanage, he worked his way through the American University in Beirut by waiting on tables, then sailed steerage to the U.S., where he earned an engineering degree at M.I.T...
After M.I.T., Bustani settled in Palestine, where he set up a contracting firm that specialized in installing bathrooms. His first big expansion came during World War II, when CAT became a major builder of British military installations in the Middle East. Even its exodus from Palestine after the establishment of Israel did not slow CAT down. By insisting on high standards and by patiently training local labor, Bustani proved that Arabs could do as good a construction job as anyone else. During the great postwar rush to expand Mideastern oil output, CAT began taking contracts away from Western companies, eventually...
Speaking on the topic "National Aspirations," Dr. Bustani Proclaimed the Middle East's intention to play an "increasingly important part in modern civilization." Protesting that the Arab's aspirations have been hindered by the Western world during "the past 300 years perhaps," the speaker told a Sanders Theater audience that "from now on we're going forward--no one can stop...
Whether this is accomplished by one particular form of government or another, Dr. Bustani declared, is "relatively immaterial...