By Rand Paul
Obama acts as though we no longer have a Constitution
Independent voices from the TWT Communities
Table No. 1 from the famed New York City restaurant Elaine's has sold for almost $9,000 at auction.
Memorabilia from the famed New York City restaurant Elaine's is going up for auction next month.
Memorabilia from the famed New York City restaurant Elaine's is going up for auction next month.
Everyone went to Elaine's _ and now they'll have nowhere to go.
Everyone went to Elaine's _ and now they'll have nowhere to go.
Elaine's is shutting its doors.
A cargo ship that broke down in Alaska's Aleutian Islands while carrying canola seeds and nearly a half-million gallons of fuel oil continued its slow journey to a safe harbor Sunday as a tugboat pulled it through rough seas and up to 25-foot waves.

Celebrities and bold names and the publishing elite made Elaine Kaufman's restaurant famous. But you didn't have to be a star to pass her personal test and join the inner circle of regulars.
Elaine Kaufman, the colorful restaurateur whose East Side establishment, Elaine's, became a haven for show business and literary notables, died Friday at the age of 81.

Elaine Kaufman was a 34-year-old waitress and restaurant manager from the Bronx when she opened her restaurant in 1963, serving unremarkable Italian food in a prosaic space on Manhattan's Upper East Side. With the help of a public relations pal, a fondness for interesting people and a weakness for struggling writers, she turned the humble eatery into a celebrity hangout that attracted the biggest names in film and literature and left New Yorkers wondering: how do I get a table at Elaine's?
"I brought in Buzz Aldrin," she said.
she didn't consider herself a snob and argued that her restaurant simply attracted a sophisticated crowd.