Word: restaurateurs
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Unbrainwashing. The son of a Lebanese-immigrant restaurateur, Nader had the usual American experience with shoddy goods as a boy in Winsted, Conn. He worked in a meat market, had a close friend who was seriously injured in an auto wreck (though not through any fault of Detroit: the friend fell asleep at the wheel). Later, he was horrified during his undergraduate years at Princeton when songbirds on the campus began dying as a result of DDT spray-long before Rachel Carson's Silent Spring raised an anti-pesticide furor...
...popped up like mushrooms; 18 in all put up the unusually low $30 filing fee and ten-signature petition to qualify for the Nov. 7 race. Wilhelm Joerres, a sometime hairdresser and lifeguard, promised that if elected he would spend his first week in City Hall in the nude. Restaurateur Robert le Bugle campaigned as the candidate for "peace, love, happiness." Two candidates used nicknames in their listings on the official ballot for the powerful, $38,365-a-year office...
Harold Dobbs, 48, an attorney-restaurateur, served twelve years on the board of supervisors, campaigned unsuccessfully in the 1963 mayoralty race and now presents himself as "the only experienced candidate"-presumably meaning he is the only one who was a candidate once before. An uninspired campaigner, Republican Dobbs has a chance despite a preponderance of registered Democrats over Republicans of 200,428 to 106,158. With Alioto and Morrison diluting the Democratic vote, Dobbs could conceivably squeak through...
Today business has picked up to the point where Don earns $500,000 a year. He owns a record company, real estate as far east as Salt Lake City, two supper clubs in addition to Honey's. He has just bought out Restaurateur Trader Vic on the island, will expand the chain as Trader...
...quarter of a century under the command of the late Henri Soulé, Manhattan's Le Pavilion was the shrine of haute cuisine in the U.S. Hélas, since Restaurateur Soulé's death last year, the eatery has slipped a bit-at least to the palate of the New York Times's fastidious Gastronome Craig Claiborne, who dropped in a few times to see how the fare was faring under the new management of sometime Hotelman Claude Philippe. Aside from the prices ($173.90 for a relatively modest dinner for six) Claiborne sadly reported that...