Wealthy Cities In New York


Cities III: New York


Cities III: New York


$8.99


Cities III: New York Art Print by Veronique Charron. Product size approximately 10 x 8 inches. Available at Art.com. Embrace your Space – your source for high quality fine art posters and prints.

Cities III (New York)


Cities III (New York)


$12.99


Cities III (New York) Art Print by Avery Tillmon. Product size approximately 20 x 8 inches. Available at Art.com. Embrace your Space – your source for high quality fine art posters and prints.

Museum of the City of New York


Museum of the City of New York


$10


Museum of the City of New York

Freestyle New York


Freestyle New York


$109


New York Attractions Pass from Gray Line New York

Why the Wealthy Give


Why the Wealthy Give


$32.95


Through a series of candid personal interviews with nearly one hundred donors, Why the Wealthy Give offers an in-depth look at the world of elite philanthropy. Francie Ostrower focuses on the New York City area, with its high concentration of affluent donors, to explore both the motivations of individual donors and the significance of philanthropy for the culture and organization of elite groups. In so doing, she offers an account of why the wealthy give that also provides insight into the nature of elite culture, status, identity, and cohesion. Emphasizing the diversity of philanthropy, the book also shows how and why different types of donors support different causes. It further demonstrates how, in the face of considerable change, elite philanthropy has adapted and therefore endured. A timely discussion explores the ways in which elite donors view the respective roles of government and philanthropy. Why the Wealthy Give shows that elite philanthropy involves far more than writing a check. The wealthy take philanthropy and adapt it into an entire way of life that serves as a vehicle for the social and cultural life of their class. This is reflected in the widespread popularity of educational and cultural causes among donors. At the same time, Ostrower finds divergent patterns of giving that reflect alternative sources of donor identity, such as religion, ethnicity, and gender, and explains why certain kinds of donors are more or less likely to diverge from the prestige hierarchy of their class in their philanthropy.


The Buccaneers


The Buccaneers


$8.71


Based on Edith Wharton’s unfinished novel, this lush “Masterpiece Theatre” production mixes humor and drama in telling the story of four turn-of-the-century American girls who, unable to break into New York’s social circles, are persuaded to “invade” London society in search of proper husbands. Carla Gugino, Mira Sorvino, Cherie Lunghi, James Frain, and Connie Booth head the excellent cast. 5 hrs….

Money Means Nothing (1934)


Money Means Nothing (1934)


$7.99



Money Means Nothing (1934)


Money Means Nothing (1934)


$1.99



How to Teach Filthy Rich Girls


How to Teach Filthy Rich Girls


$1.00


Recent Yale graduate Megan Smith comes to Manhattan with big plans for a career in journalism and even bigger student loan debt: $75,000. When she flails at her trashy tabloid job, she’s given an escape hatch: tutor seventeen-year-old identical twins Rose and Sage Baker–yes, the infamous Baker heiresses of Palm Beach, Florida, best known for their massive fortunes and their penchant for drunkenly…

Enlisting The Power of Your Thinking to Transform Negative Attitudes About Wealth

Money plays a critical part in every person’s life. You could argue that every person alive today has an equal right to be rich. Everybody wants to enjoy life and enjoy the trappings of success. With this in mind, it is perplexing that so many people shy away from creating the wealth they want and deserve because they have misgivings about money.

Consider these examples of reasons perfectly capable people like you use their mindpower to avoid having money.

1. If you believe that money is evil and want to avoid thinking that you are evil, your brain is likely to find ways to avoid having a lot of money.

2. If you regard yourself as a sensitive individual and you think that wealthy people are greedy and uncaring, you won’t want to have a lot of wealth.

3. If you assume that money won’t make you happy, you may likewise stay away from having a lot of money. The presumption is that having wealth will make you unhappy.

Though it is the case that money alone can’t create happiness, it is undoubtedly one of your most important resources. If you plan to claim the wealth that is rightfully yours, a highly effective holistic technology known as EFT, the Emotional Freedom Techniques, can work wonders. It’s unusual, to say the least, but it generally is amazingly effective.

See it for yourself in this insightful video, where Phillip Mountrose and Brad Yates use EFT to improve attitudes about being wealthy and tap into more positive beliefs.

Your opportunities can change in unexpectedly delightful ways when you enlist your most valuable resources. Taking control of your mind can be transformational. Then if you also access the effectiveness of the new healing technology with EFT, you can make rapid progress toward a life of riches and more.

Intrigued? If you want to know what is EFT, follow this link now.

Also learn how you can access the power of your mind to create the best imaginable life with another article on your right to be rich.



 Cities In Vermont


Cities In Vermont


$20.77


Purchase includes free access to book updates online and a free trial membership in the publisher’s book club where you can select from more than a million books without charge. Chapters: Burlington, Vermont, Montpelier, Vermont, South Burlington, Vermont, Winooski, Vermont, Vergennes, Vermont, Newport, Vermont, Rutland, Vermont, Barre, Vermont, St. Albans, Vermont, List of Cities in Vermont. Excerpt: Burlington, Vermont – Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Some believe Burlington was named after Richard Boyle, 3rd Earl of Burlington. Others assert that the name honors the politically prominent and wealthy Burling family of New York. While no family members are listed as grantees of this town, the family held large tracts of land in other nearby towns, some of which were granted on the same day as Burlington. Church Street in 1907One of the New Hampshire grants, it was awarded by Governor Benning Wentworth on July 7, 1763 to Samuel Willis and 63 others. In the summer of 1775, land clearing began and two or three log huts were erected, but the Revolution delayed permanent settlement until 1783, when Stephen Lawrence arrived with his family. The town was organized in 1785. The Church Street Marketplace in 2008, from almost the same positionThe War of 1812 was unpopular in Vermont. Along with the rest of New England, Vermont did not provide militia units or financial support a serious blow to the cause. Vermont voted for the Federalist party, which opposed the war. Nevertheless, 5,000 troops were stationed there at one point during the War of 1812, outnumbering residents; ca 500 of them died of disease. Some soldiers were quartered in the main building at the University of Vermont. A memorial plaque commemorates them. Burlington from the lake in 1858 The Van Ness House, built 1870, once the largest hotel in BurlingtonIn a skirmish on August 2, 1813, the British shelled Burlington. This has either been cited as a bold stroke by the … More:

 Ghost Town: Tales of Manhattan Then and Now


Ghost Town: Tales of Manhattan Then and Now


$9.64


New – One of our most celebrated writers tackles one of our most celebrated cities. In the newest addition to the Writer in the City series, acclaimed novelist Patrick McGrath presents three stories about New York City spanning three centuries. “The Year of the Gibbet” tells the tale of a young boy during the American Revolution, whose mother is hanged for defying the British army–and the tortured sense of complicity the boy carries with him for the remainder of his life. In “Julius,” a wealthy