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Millennial s Guide to Palm Beach County Dining - Palm Beach Illustrated

Palm Beach Illustrated Millennial’s Guide to Palm Beach County Dining A few of our favorite local millennials highlight their top picks for dining and drinking across the Palm Beaches Photo by Chris Joriann Millennials sometimes get a bad rap, but if there’s one thing we understand, it’s the holistic experience of dining from an Instagrammable ambiance to the flavors and presentation of the food (yes, we’re always going to snap a photo before we dig in). Here, a few of our favorite local millennials highlight their top picks for dining and drinking around town. Michael Gregson Reinert

Cartoonisty: Palm Beach s economy of favors should be spread more widely

David Willson Special to the Daily News I was reading “Lock In,” a novel by John Scalzi, when this passage caught my eye:  “When everyone you know has more money than they know what to do with, money stops being a useful transactional tool. So instead you offer favors. Deals. Quid pro quo. Things that involve personal involvement rather than money. Because when you’re that rich, your personal time is your limiting factor.” Many of my cartoons for Palm Beach Daily News have touched on various aspects of the Palm Beach money culture, but Scalzi nailed it in a paragraph.

West Palm antiques shop going strong 58 years later

Marvin Ray was visiting Palm Beach on vacation in 1963 when he ventured into an antiques shop on North County Road. He bought the shop, The Elephant’s Foot. Now 58 years later, Ray, who is now 90, and the antiques-and-consignment emporium, which relocated to West Palm Beach in 1978, are still going strong. “I was here for a week, and I bought it,” Ray recalls. Originally from Chattanooga, Tenn., Ray worked in combustion engineering at IBM. “I went into this business to get away from computers. I have never had one since. I don’t have a cellphone, either,” Ray said on a recent morning at the 6,500-square-foot shop filled with elegant merchandise such as an Edwardian secretary from the early 20th century that’s sold after less than a month.

There are 12 island residents who have died from complications of COVID-19

Daily News staff report There are officially 12 island residents who have died from complications of COVID-19. These are the five who were publicly identified as having died from the disease.   Carole L. Brookins, a Wall Street pioneer and a former executive director at the World Bank, died March 23, 2020. She was 76. Ms. Brookins began her financial career in Chicago and eventually joined E.F. Hutton, then the nation s second-largest stock brokerage firm. At a time when few women were among Wall Street s executives, she rose to become E.F. Hutton s vice president of the commodities division. In 1980, Ms. Brookins left Wall Street to create World Perspectives, a Washington, D.C.-based agricultural market analysis and consulting firm. From 2001 to 2005, she served as executive director of the World Bank, representing the United States. 

A year into the pandemic, life in Palm Beach is slowly returning to some level of normalcy

A year into the pandemic, life in Palm Beach is slowly returning to some level of normalcy
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