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         Astor John Jacob:     more detail
  1. American Fur Company Ledger Account Summary for 1822-23 signed by John Jacob Astor (1763-1848). by John Jacob Astor, 1823-01-01
  2. Letter Signed and Handwritten by John Jacob Astor (1763-1848). by John Jacob Astor, 1830-01-01
  3. John Jacob Astor: And the Fur Trade (American Tycoons) by Lewis K. Parker, 2003-08
  4. John Jacob Astor: America's First Multimillionaire by Axel Madsen, 2001-01-19
  5. John Jacob Astor: Business and Finance in the Early Republic (Great Lakes Books) by John D. Haeger, 1991-05
  6. Six Tycoons: The Lives of John Jacob Astor, Cornelius Vanderbilt, Andrew Carnegie, John D Rockefeller, Henry Ford and Joseph P Kennedy by Wyn Derbyshire, 2008-10-15
  7. Astoria, or Anecdotes of an Enterprize Beyond the Rocky Mountains by Washington Irving, 1982-09-01

41. Classic Literature, Titles, Authors, Birthdates
18641945. Astor, John Jacob,, Journey In Other Worlds, A,, 1763-1848.Atherton, Gertrude Franklin Horn,, Rezanov,, 1857-1948. Atherton
http://www.nonstopenglish.com/Classic_literature.asp?PagePosition=6

42. HIST419 - Sicilia
2/7 The case of John Jacob Astor. HBS case TK McCraw, John Jacob Astor 1763-1848, 9-391-261. WEEK 3 EARLY INDUSTRIALIZATION 2/12 Textile industry pioneers.
http://www.inform.umd.edu/HIST/Faculty/DSicilia/courses/419/
THE EVOLUTION OF AMERICAN BUSINESS
The course
History 419A
Spring 1996
M/W 11:00-12:30
IBM-TQ Teaching Theater
Van Munching Hall 2203
The instructor
Dr. David Sicilia
Office: Key 2101-J
Office phone: 405-7778 E-mail: DS190@umail.umd.edu Office hours: M 9:00-10:00, W 8:30-10:00
This course explores the evolution of American entrepreneurship, businessmanagement, and organizational structure within the context of changing publicpolicy, technology, labor, ideology, and markets. We will give special emphasis toentrepreneurial innovation, the rise of big business, regulation, mass marketing,and global competition. "The Evolution of American Business" is designed to facilitate student-centered,interactive learning. We will rely on the case method developed at the HarvardBusiness School and utilize many of the powerful instructional hardware andsoftware tools in the IBM-TQ Teaching Theater. Students will be expected to engageregularly and thoughtfully in class oral and electronic discussions, collaborativeprojects, and electronic reflector dialogues. Prerequisites: None. Typing skills useful.

43. Anecdote Realer Dealer? Astor Business Investing
States, once declared that a man who has a million dollars is as well off as ifhe were rich. Astor, John Jacob (17631848), American financier Sources C
http://anecdotage.com/index.php?aid=7029

44. Index
Culture and Anarchy Astor, John Jacob (17631848) A Journey in OtherWorlds Atherton, Gertrude Franklin Horn (1857-1948) Rezanov The
http://www.changanyouth.xahu.edu.cn/pages/novel/A/
English Classics 3000 A ( Listed by Author )

45. Astoria
A bitter battle for naming the village was finally named by supporters andfriends of John Jacob Astor (17631848), not least Stephen Halsey.
http://www.forgotten-ny.com/streetnecrology/astorianecro/astoria.html
HOME LAMPS ADS TROLLEYS ... CEMETERIES Turning to the dusty, dogeared Book of Forgotten Street Names, making a mental note to replace the yellowed scotch tape that holds the cover together, we see that the tome plops open to... Astoria, Queens. Like Flushing, Astoria's pedigree dates to the mid-1600s, when William Hallett received a grant for the area surrounding what is now Hallett's Cove by Peter Stuyvesant. However, the oldest structures in the region date to the mid-1800s, after fur merchant Stephen Ailing Halsey had incorporated the village in 1839. Astoria was named for a man who apparently never set foot in it. A bitter battle for naming the village was finally named by supporters and friends of John Jacob Astor (1763-1848), not least Stephen Halsey. Astor, entrepreneur and real estate tycoon, had become the wealthiest man in America by 1840 with a net worth of over $40 million. (As it turns out, Astor did live in "Astoria"his summer home, built on what is now East 87th Street near York Avenuefrom which he could see the new Long Island Village named for him.) Like most other towns and villages in Queens, Astoria (which on this Forgotten page we'll describe as having the East River on the north and west, Broadway on the south, and Hazen and 51st Streets on the east as its boundaries) carried names for its streets, but it also had its own numbering system, which we'll also touch on.

46. Germans In America - Chronology
1784 John Jacob Astor (17631848) left his village of Waldorf in Germanyand arrived in the United States in 1784 with $25 and seven flutes.
http://www.usembassy.de/usa/etexts/ga1-chronology.htm
Germans in America - Chronology
Several Germans were among the settlers at Jamestown.
Peter Minuit, a German, came to New Amsterdam to serve as the governor of the Dutch colony, New Netherlands. Later he governed the Swedish colony in Delaware.
Thirteen families of German Mennonites seeking religious freedom arrived in Pennsylvania; led by Franz Pastorius, they purchased 43,000 acres of land and founded Germantown, six miles north of Philadelphia.
The settling of the British colonies by small German-speaking religious groups continued. The groups included Swiss Mennonites, Baptist Dunkers, Schwenkfelders, Moravians, Amish, and Waldensians; most German immigrants belonged to the main Lutheran and Reformed churches. The central colonies received the greatest part of this immigration, especially Pennsylvania. As many as half of these immigrants came as redemptioners, that is, they agreed to work in America for four to seven years in exchange for free passage across the Atlantic. German settlers designed and built the Conestoga wagon, which was used in the opening of the American Frontier.
Protestants were expelled from Salzburg, Austria, in this year. They subsequently founded Ebenezer, Georgia.

47. Astor - AnsMe.com Dictionary (define)
1. American capitalist (born in Germany) who made a fortune in fur trading (17631848)Synonyms John Jacob Astor 2. British politician (born in the United
http://define.ansme.com/words/a/astor.html
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... astragalus Dictionary - Astor Show Definition Sounds Similar Relations Rhymes Translate Definition for Astor Astor (noun) American capitalist (born in Germany) who made a fortune in fur trading (1763-1848) Synonyms: John Jacob Astor British politician (born in the United States) who was the first woman to sit in the British House of Commons (1879-1964) Synonyms: Nancy Witcher Astor Viscountess Astor Source: WordNet ® 1.7, © 2001 Princeton University All other brands are property of their respective owners. Directory Dictionary AIM Smileys Contact Us

48. I MASSONI FAMOSI
Translate this page Astor, John Jacob, (1763-1848), Finanziere, USA. Atatürk, MustaphaKemal, (1881-1938), Soldato, leader nazionalista e statista, Turchia.
http://www.lamelagrana.net/famosi/A.html

Abancourt, Charles Xavier Joseph Franqueville d’
Uomo di stato [Francia] Abarca de Bolea, Pedro Pablo (conte di Aranda) Politico, diplomatico e militare [Spagna] Abba, Giuseppe Cesare Patriota e scrittore [Italia] Abbott, Houghton R. Deputato del West Virginia [U.S.A.] Abbott, John Joseph Caldwell Primo Ministro e politico [Canada] Abbott, Robert Sengstacke Direttore ed editore di giornale [U.S.A.] Abbott, Sewall W. Senatore del New Hampshire [U.S.A.] Abbott, Walter W. Deputato dello stato di New York [U.S.A.] Abbott, William Alexander (Bud) Attore [U.S.A.] Abd-el-Kader Patriota [Algeria] Abdnor, James Deputato e Senatore [U.S.A.] Abdhu, Muhammad Religioso musulmano e riformatore politico [Egitto] Abel, Niels Henrik Matematico [Norvegia] Abele, Homer E. (Pete Abele) Deputato [U.S.A.] Abercrombie, John William Deputato [U.S.A.] Abercromby, Ralph Generale e parlamentare [Inghilterra] Abernathy, Ralph Attivista politico, religioso [U.S.A.] Abernethy, Charles Laban Deputato [U.S.A.] Abernethy, Thomas Gerstle

49. CARPATHO-RUTHENICA
The idea of creating the New York Public Library developed in 1895, when the libraryof John Jacob Astor (17631848), which included a great number of rare
http://www.carpatho-rusyn.org/ruthenic.htm
CARPATHO-RUTHENICA
IN THE SLAVIC AND BALTIC DIVISION
OF THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY
THE NEW YORK PUBLIC LIBRARY AND ITS SLAVIC AND BALTIC DIVISION The idea of creating the New York Public Library developed in 1895, when the library of John Jacob Astor (1763-1848), which included a great number of rare books, was unified with the library of James Lenox (1800-1880). A donation of 15,000 volumes from the library of Samuel Jones Tilden (1814-1886), together with $2,000, 000 for the new library, made the foundation possible. In 1901, eleven public libraries from all over the city joined The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox and Tilden Foundation. The first site of the Library (Lower Manhattan) soon turned out to be too small and necessitated construction of new home for the Library (completed 1911). The building, which is a national landmark, was located at the corner of 5th Avenue and 42nd Street. The main reading room of the Library can accommodate 800 people. The New York Public Library is a private institution which serves readers on a non-paying basis. It is responsible for operating of 4 research centers (with 39 million items, including 12 million books) and 82 branch libraries (10,5 million items, including 5,9 million books) and is governed by a 43-member Board of Trustees. The Research Libraries depend heavily on private contributions. The Branch Libraries are primarily supported by the City and State of New York. The acquisition of materials is done in a variety of ways. The library mostly buys (sometimes also exchanges) books. The growth of the collection is also a direct result of valuable gifts.

50. Author Index
1941 Arnim, Ludwig Achim, Freiherr von, 17811831 Arnold, Edwin Lester Linden, d.1935 Ascham, Roger, 1515-1568 Astor, John Jacob, 1763-1848 Atherton, Gertrude
http://www.worldwide-library.co.uk/Authors/author_index.htm
Home Author Title Topic ... Book Club The Worldwide Library making e-books available to everyone worldwide without charge now.
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Author Index
Select the letter the authors surname begins with, or below in the editors and compilers index, to go to the listing of authors with this letter and then click on the authors name to see information on the author and what books they are known to have written. there are a number of authors with the same name, and in those cases the lifespan dates will help. Let us know of any errors you see.
Authors
A B C D ... Z
Editors and compilers
A B C D ... Z
Authors
A
Abbott, David Phelps, 1863-1934
Abbott, Edwin Abbott, 1838-1926 AKA: Square, A
Abbott, John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot), 1805-1877
Adams, Andy, 1859-1935
Adams, Henry, 1838-1918
Adams, John Quincy, 1767-1848
Adams, Samuel, 1722-1803

51. ZSA Legal Recruitment
1919) $110 billion; Cornelius Vanderbilt (17941877) $100 billion;John Jacob Astor (1763-1848) $85 billion; Bill Gates (Microsoft
http://www.zsa.ca/En/
Home Links Contact Us About ZSA HOME ...
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ZSA Legal Recruitment is Canada's leading legal recruitment firm. We have offices across the country and offer the only national database of lawyers, law clerks and legal support staff in existence. Recent Legal News Mar 31 The US-Canada Partnership Mar 24 Incorporation Offers Lawyers Valuable Tax Benefits Mar 24 The Supreme Court's Recent Navajo Nation Decision: Ignoring Longstanding Fiduciary Duties to Tribes Mar 19 Goodman and Carr Wows Industry with Research Report Mar 17 Jury Deliberating Bayer Drug Lawsuit Mar 17 Reps Order Shell to Pay Ijaw $1.5b Compensation Mar 13 The Family that Dare Not Speak Its Name: Florida’s Ban on Gay Adoption Reaches the U.S. Court of Appeals For the Eleventh Circuit Mar 6 From Adult Entertainment to Toll Roads: How the New Municipal Act Affects You Mar 5 Canadian IP Border Measures Mar 3 Miller Thomson Foundation Scholarships to Top $1.15 Million
Sandra Rubin's Recent Legal Post Articles Mar 27 The retainer from hell Mar 26 Tough love contagious?

52. GENERAL COLLECTION MANUSCRIPT MISCELLANY
expand/contract this heading, ASKIN, ARNOLD. expand/contract this heading, Astor,John Jacob, 17631848. expand/contract this heading, ATHERSTONE, EDWIN, 1788-1872.
http://webtext.library.yale.edu/xml2html/beinecke.genmisc1.nav.html
GENERAL COLLECTION MANUSCRIPT MISCELLANY
GEN MSS MISC
Click text below to navigate Finding Aid
PROVENANCE
CITE AS RESTRICTIONS ON ACCESS PROCESSING NOTES ... DESCRIPTION OF THE COLLECTION Collection Series "A" ABBA, B. ABBEY, EDWIN AUSTIN, 1852-1911 ABBOT, EDWIN ABBOTT, 1838-1926 ... CUTTEN, GEORGE BARTON, 1874-1968

53. German Names (2) - German Language
To name just a few John Jacob Astor (17631848, millionaire), Claus Spreckels(1818-1908, sugar baron), Dwight D. Eisenhower (Eisenhauer, 1890-1969), Babe
http://german.about.com/library/weekly/aa050399.htm
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German Names
Deutsche Namen
Part 2: Surnames ( Nachnamen
Tracing your Germanic roots ALSO SEE: Germanic Surname Lexikon T
Also see: German Roots: A Personal Search
The personal story of a genealogical search for family documents in a small town in Germany. With sample documents and lessons learned. As we mentioned in German and Genealogy , family names can be tricky things. The origin of a surname may not always be what it seems. The obvious changes from the German "Schneider" to "Snyder" or even "Taylor" or "Tailor" (English for Schneider Nachnamen Surnames German Name English Name Bauer (farmer) Bower Ku(e)per (cask maker) Cooper Klein (small) Cline/Kline Kaufmann (merchant) Coffman Fleischer/Metzger Butcher Dyer Huber (manager of a feudal estate) Hoover Kappel Chapel Koch Cook Schuhmacher, Schuster

54. A
John Jacob Astor (17631848) Founder of the Astor family fortune based in NewYork City. He was born in Waldorf, Germany, and came to the US in 1764.
http://members.tripod.com/slalli/a.htm
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Immigrants Hall of Fame Home Name Field Country ... Email
Hallway A
Sidebar Louis Agassiz
Naturalist and educator. Agassiz was the first to set forth the theory of the earlier existence of a great Ice Age, during which an ice sheet covered much of the Northern Hemisphere. An influential teacher and lecturer, Agassiz gave impetus to the study of natural history.
He was born in Motier-en-Vuly, Switzerland. In 1848 Agassiz accepted the chair of natural history at Harvard, a post he held until his death. For all his scientific knowledge of zoology and geology, he was a leading opponent in the United States of Darwin's theory of evolution. (He was a minister's son.) He became a United States citizen in 1861. Madeleine Korbel Albright
First female U.S. Secretary of State. When appointed to the post by President Bill Clinton in 1996, Albright also was the highest ranking woman in the U.S. government.
Born in Prague, Czechoslovakia. Her father, Josef Korbel, was a diplomat who fled the country when Hitler invaded. The Korbels stayed in London until 1945 when they returned to Prague. Korbel then served as ambassador to Yugoslavia, but in 1948 a Communist coup again drove the family from Prague. This time, under United Nationas auspices, they came to the United States.

55. Correspondence Of Thomas Jefferson / Addressee Listing / A-C
Astor, John Jacob (17631848) German-born; became leader in fur trade and thena major New York City real estate speculator. COMMERCE Fur Trade, 13 Apr 1808.
http://www.cooperativeindividualism.org/jefferson_1.html
S chool of C ooperative I ndividualism
HOME
This is a searchable data base of excerpts from Thomas Jefferson's correspondence. The excerts re organized alphabetically by subject. A special index to each subject section takes you to a complete listing. Or, you may browse the data base alphabetically by addressee.
The Correspondence of
Thomas Jefferson
* Addressees A - C *
GO TO SUBJECT INDEX ADDRESSEE SUBJECT DATE A Adams, Abigail

(1744-1818) Wife of John Adams. ADAMS, JOHN
Relationship With 13 Jun 1804
Adams, Abigail
CALLENDER, JAMES T.
Relationship With 22 Jul 1804
Adams, Abigail CONSTITUTION
United States
Sedition Law 11 Sep 1804
Adams, Abigail EDUCATION
Reading 22 Aug 1813
Adams, Abigail ENGLISH PEOPLE 21 Jun 1785 Adams, Abigail

56. Discoverers Web Alphabetical List A
John Jacob Astor (Germany (lived in USA), 17631848) New York businessman whofrom 1810 to 1813 owned a fort at the mouth of the Columbia. The Astorians.
http://www.win.tue.nl/~engels/discovery/alpha/a.html
A
James William Abert (USA, 1820-1897)
1845: Explores the upper reaches of the Canadian River.
Antonio de Abreu (Portugal, dates unkown)
1511-1512: Captain of the first Portuguese expedition to the Moluccas.
Tbe Portuguese Empire
Luigi Amedeo di Savoia, Duke of the Abruzzi (Italy, 1873-1933)
1897: First to ascend Mount St. Elias
1899-1900: Leader of an expedition to try to reach the North Pole by dogsleds from Franz Jozefland.
1906: Climbs and explores the Ruwenzori Mountains
1909: Tries to climb the K2
(Spain, 1597?-1676)
1639: Joins Teixeira on his voyage back down the Amazon. His journal is the first published description of the Amazon.
William Adams (England, 1575?-1620)
Mahu and de Cordes
The Voyage of 'de Liefde'
Aelius Gallus (Rome)
25 BC: Undertakes a failed attempt to conquer Yemen.
The Roman period
(Spain, ?-1734)
1720-2: Governor of Coahuila and Texas.
1721-2: Reconquers Texas on the French, builds various missions and presidios.
Aguayo Expedition
(Spain, 1489?-1531?)
1511: Shipwrecks off the coast of Yucatan. Lives among the Maya.
1519: Picked up by the expedition of Cortes, for which he becomes an interpreter.

57. Gates Y Los Ricos Norteamericanos
Translate this page 4. John Jacob Astor (1763-1848) 78.000 millones, comercio de pieles ybienes raíces. 5. Bill Gates (1955-) 62.000 millones, software.
http://www.el-mundo.es/navegante/98/noviembre/19/gates.html
Jueves, 19 de noviembre de 1998
EL MUNDO
DIARIO DEL NAVEGANTE NAVEGANTE ARIADNA
INFORMATICA
Gates y los ricos norteamericanos
ROBERT J. SAMUELSON Una encuesta de CBS News, de 1996, preguntaba: "¿Cree usted que es posible en este país comenzar desde la pobreza, trabajar duro y hacerse rico?". Respuesta: 78%, sí; 18%, no. Pero la riqueza excesiva también es sospechosa. "Los estadounidenses creen que la sociedad, ahora, pone demasiado énfasis en el dinero", escriben los analistas de la opinión pública Everett Caril Ladd y Karlyn Bowman, en Actitudes hacia la desigualdad económica. En el año 1992, alrededor de dos tercios de los estadounidenses creían que los ricos usaban "su riqueza principalmente para proteger sus posiciones en la sociedad". 2. Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919): 101.000 millones, acero. 3. Cornelius Vanderbilt (1794-1877): 96.000 millones, navieras y ferrocarriles. 5. Bill Gates (1955-): 62.000 millones, software. Pocos magnates del siglo XIX eran populares. "Los caricaturistas los representaban con chistera, hocico de cerdo... manipuladores de los políticos y de la gente", según escribe el columnista John Steele Gordon, de American Heritage. Pero los estereotipos eran demasiado intolerantes y de miras estrechas. Los superricos elevaron los niveles de vida, al reducir los costos y expandir los mercados.

58. Forbes.com: Richest Americans In History
3 John Jacob Astor (17631848) Wealth 0.93% of the US economy. His initialfortune came from the fur trade, then later in New York real estate.
http://www.forbes.com/asap/98/0824/032.htm
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Richest Americans in History
NEW YORK - 1 John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) Wealth: 1.53% of the U.S. economy.* America's first billionaire thanks to oil. 2 Cornelia Vanderbilt (1794-1877) Wealth: 1.15% of the U.S.economy. Built an impressive empire of steamboats and railroads. 3 John Jacob Astor (1763-1848) Wealth: 0.93% of the U.S. economy. His initial fortune came from the fur trade, then later in New York real estate. 4 Stephen Girard (1750-1831) Wealth: 0.67% of the U.S. economy. Made his money in shipping and later was the largest investor in the First Bank of the United States. 5 Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919) Wealth: 0.60% of the U.S. economy. Started by building iron bridges for the railroads, then cashed in with steel. 6 Bill Gates (1955-) Wealth: 0.58% of the U.S. economy. King of the operating system; emperor of software. 7 Alexander Turney Stewart (1803-1876) Wealth: 0.56% of the U.S. economy.

59. South Dakota Fast Facts And Trivia
Built in 1832 by John Jacob Astor's (17631848) American Fur Company as part ofits expansion into the Upper Missouri region, the trading activities at the
http://www.50states.com/facts/sdakota.htm
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  • Sculptor Gutzon Borglum began drilling into the 6,200-foot Mount Rushmore in 1927. Creation of the Shrine to Democracy took 14 years and cost a mere $1 million, though it's now deemed priceless.
  • The faces of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Theodore Roosevelt, and Abraham Lincoln are sculpted into Mount Rushmore the world's greatest mountain carving.
  • Fossilized remains of life 50 million years ago have been arranged in unusual forms, which is Lemmon's mark of distinction at the world's largest petrified wood park.
  • Perhaps the most significant fur trade/military fort on the western American frontier, Fort Pierre Chouteau was the largest (almost 300' square) and best equipped trading post in the northern Great Plains. Built in 1832 by John Jacob Astor's (1763-1848) American Fur Company as part of its expansion into the Upper Missouri region, the trading activities at the site exemplified the commercial alliance critical to the success of the fur business.
  • Jack McCall was tried, convicted and hanged two miles north of Yankton in 1877 for the shooting of Wild Bill Hickok. He is buried in an unmarked grave in the Yankton cemetery.
  • 60. Untitled
    Andrew Carnegie (18351919) $110 billion 3. Cornelius Vanderbilt (1794-1877) $100 billion 4. John Jacob Astor (1763-1848) $85 billion 5. William Gates
    http://smi.stanford.edu/people/isg/facts.html
    Does money favour people with the "right names"? NEW SCIENTIST WEEKLY NEWSLETTER No. 111, 17 November 2001 NOMINATIVE determinism took a new twist in the 1 September issue of The Economist, which noted the alphabetic bias among the names of the world's richest five men at the time: Gates, Buffet, Allen, Ellison and Albrecht. Moreover, it noted, the heads of government of the G7 industrialised nations were Berlusconi, Blair, Bush, Chirac, Chrétien, Koizumi and someone in the second half of the alphabet. What can be going on here? Not as much as it might seem at first sight. Feedback has weighed the London telephone directories, and it appears that approximately 65 per cent of the entries are in the first half of the alphabet. Even so, a skilled statistician could no doubt find something significant about these distributions. The Economist's columnist hypothesises that the effect may start in school, with Zysman sitting at the back of the class and Aaronson getting all the attention. Perhaps a reader with access to a citation index can dig up some more data to help the investigation. Does this phenomenon occur in science, and is it related to discipline? What about the social sciences, where authors are listed alphabetically? Top 10 Richest Men Of All Time (as of October 2002) 1. John D. Rockefeller (1839-1937) $200 billion 2. Andrew Carnegie (1835-1919) $110 billion 3. Cornelius Vanderbilt (1794-1877) $100 billion 4. John Jacob Astor (1763-1848) $85 billion 5. William Gates III $60 billion 6. Lawrence J. Ellison $55 billion 7. King Fahd Bin Abdul Aziz Alsaud $30 billion 8. Warren Buffett $28 billion 9. Paul Allen $25 billion 10. Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan $ 23 billion - The Luck Project http://www.luckfactor.co.uk/ The results of this work reveal that people are not born lucky. Instead, lucky people are, without realising it, using four basic principles to create good fortune in their lives. Principle One: Maximise Chance Opportunities Lucky people are skilled at creating, noticing and acting upon chance opportunities. They do this in various ways, including networking, adopting a relaxed attitude to life and by being open to new experiences. Principle Two: Listening to Lucky Hunches Lucky people make effective decisions by listening to their intuition and gut feelings. In addition, they take steps to actively boost their intuitive abilities by, for example, meditating and clearing their mind of other thoughts. Principle Three: Expect Good Fortune Lucky people are certain that the future is going to be full of good fortune. These expectations become self-fulfilling prophecies by helping lucky people persist in the face of failure, and shape their interactions with others in a positive way. Principle Four: Turn Bad Luck to Good Lucky people employ various psychological techniques to cope with, and often even thrive upon, the ill fortune that comes their way. For example, they spontaneously imagine how things could have been worse, do not dwell on the ill fortune, and take control of the situation.

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