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Editorial See other Editorial Articles Title: Tips for Getting Rich: Knock on Mansion Doors, Invade Privacy Tips for Getting Rich: Knock on Mansion Doors, Invade Privacy Email | Print | A A A Review by James Pressley Jan. 9 (Bloomberg) -- Forget, for a moment, the blizzard of grim economic indicators and the suicides of billionaire Adolf Merckle and money manager Thierry Magon de La Villehuchet. Go out instead and knock on some doors, as Ryan DAgostino does in his new book, Rich Like Them. It might restore your hope. This is an infectious account of one journalists quirky quest to unlock the secrets of American wealth by showing up, unannounced, at some 500 homes in affluent neighborhoods across the U.S. and asking, in essence, How did you do it? He got some unexpected answers. In a mansion in Lake Forest, Illinois, he met Frank Heurich, a man in a faded purple Northwestern University sweatshirt who made and leased shrimp-peeling machines. In a house along Long Island Sound, he talked to Arthur Tauck, who ran Tauck World Discovery, a niche travel company. He found more wisdom from a rare-book seller in Beverly Hills and a cabinet maker in Paradise Valley, Arizona, among many others. DAgostino began Project Door Knock as a series of articles for Money magazine. He got a list of the 100 richest zip codes in the land, from Atherton, California -- identified here as having the countrys wealthiest zip code -- to Westport, Connecticut. Then he caught redeye flights and pounded the streets of landscaped neighborhoods until he got blisters and plenty of strange looks. Politely Invading I was invading, after all, he writes. Politely invading, but still invading. I was knocking on the door and saying, in effect, Tell me who you are. This is your home, presumably bought with money you earned. Tell me how. Most reporters would have called it quits after one afternoon. DAgostino, who now works for Esquire magazine, persisted, visiting 19 towns in 11 states and tramping almost 60 miles (about 100 kilometers), he writes. All told, about 50 people -- 10 percent -- talked to him. More than a few of these wealthy occupants had made their bundles from real estate, which makes the timing of this book less than ideal. You cant help but wonder if some of these folks are still rich today. Yet DAgostino also found Andy Schachat, a driven ophthalmologist in a sprawling Tudor house in Shaker Heights, Ohio; the widow of a fashion designer, Philip Hulitar, in Palm Beach; and Bob Grosnoff, a man who as a starting stockbroker in the late 1960s and early 1970s hit on an unorthodox method for attracting high-net-worth clients. Lucrative Orders While his colleagues focused on making a quick buck, Grosnoff put in long hours selling short-term municipal debt that paid low commissions but was good for his clients in the seesawing market of those days. His gamble was that the clients would reward him with more lucrative orders when the market revived. And when it did, they did. DAgostino found Grosnoff in a home with a view of Camelback Mountain in Scottsdale, Arizona. Each of these wealthy individuals has some prosaic yet powerful lessons to impart. Open your eyes; youll see the opportunities right in front of you. Luck doesnt exist; it comes to those who have worked hard to prepare for it. Obsession makes you work harder; so do something you love. And remember humility, the secret ingredient. Dont ever get complacent. Beverly Hills Take Ted Kaplan, whom DAgostino talked to during a trip to Beverly Hills. A fruit-and-vegetable distributor, Kaplan tells DAgostino that he moves $80 million of produce each year. But youre only as good as your last load, he says. What does humility get you? DAgostino cites figures for each neighborhood. For Atherton, the wealthiest, he lists a median household income of $226,414; an average home value of $1,236,572; and an average net worth of $1,505,508. DAgostino can lean toward hyperbole, calling one dining table as long as a high-school hallway. He also tends to flatter his subjects: One is quarterback handsome, others remind him of Donald Sutherland and Ali MacGraw. These are mere quibbles. The book clips along in a nice breezy style laced with crisp descriptions: A house overlooking Austin, for example, affords a view of the meandering Lake Austin, the valley like a bowl full of trees, the pale, dry Texas sky painted like a wash above everything. All of this adds up to an amusing and at times inspiring break from our days of market doom and gloom. Rich Like Them: My Door-to-Door Search for the Secrets of Wealth in Americas Richest Neighborhoods is from Little, Brown (247 pages, $25.99). (James Pressley writes for Bloomberg News. The opinions expressed are his own.) To contact the writer on the story: James Pressley in Brussels at jpressley@bloomberg.net. Last Updated: January 8, 2009 19:00 EST
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#1. To: All, PUSA (#0)
poing
Turtle considers himself rich. He has a Ford van, a pug, enough to eat and drink, a job, and money in the bank. Then there's the occasional gurl.
"Miscellaneous is always the largest category."--Walter Slovotsky
Is not. Total nonsense.
I used to date this one but she wanted to get serious.
Enough is as good as a feast.
I'd rather be poor and in good company than rich and hang with these people. .
Click for Privacy and Preparedness files Nehemiah 4:14 And I looked and arose and said to the nobles and to the officials and to the rest of the people, Do not be afraid of them. Remember the Lord, who is great and awesome, and fight for your brothers, your sons, your daughters, your wives, and your homes.
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