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Millionaire Publishers Creativity hasn't wavered with retirementGEORGE DELACORTE ... original ideas Millionaire publisher's create1V*t* y hasn't wavered- with retirement Uy RICHARD KAHN 'dines Correspondent LOST TREE VILLAGE = For George T. Delacorte, originality equals success. "All you have to do is have ori- ginal ideas -- , that's how I made most. ofiny money," says Delacorte, a pioneet in -the publishing industry in the Unod States. With duly $5,000 to start, De- lacorte became the founder of Dell Publishers in 1921. He was the first to publish comic books and paper- back boob in America and the first to publish magazines featuring crossword puzzles. Now he's a millionaire with a pen- chant f of original ideas in the field of philanthropy. A native of New York, hO has built several lavish f ountain� throughout the city, includ- ing . one i in Times Square. He also donated ''d built . a . 2,000 seat the- ater in dentral Park and sponsors a traveling; Shakespearean theater that entertains in the parks and boroughs of New York. He admits it was not originality alone that advanced his career, how- ever. "Luck , is one of the greatest ele- ments that controls your destiny," he said with a grin. "Genes aren't all of it. Look at Benjamin Franklin. He was one of 14 children and you never heard of any of them." Before he sold his company to Doubleday so he could retire, he worked with authors James Bald- win, Kurt Vonnegut, and Irving Shaw. But Delacorte says he (never reads novels, only non-fiction like history books and economic publica- tions. They interest him because of his financial holdings and because of his fascination with history. "I think in' .50 to 75 years we'll have another civil war that will make the last one look like nothing, he says, adding he does not see blacks ever being fully integrated into society. "Blacks don't have the same op- portunity, the same home back- ground. They live in ghettos. That's not to say they are not as capable (as whites). They just don't get the opportunities." During the winter, he lives in his ocean front home . at Lost Tree Vil- lage, keeping up his tan. For an 88- year -old man, he is deceptively spry and alert. "I still play tennis, doubles of course," remarks Delacorte with a smile. He is fascinated by Roman archi- tecture and European culture, which has given rise to some of his ideas. He saw his first comic book in France, and instinctively knew they would sell in America. But he had to discontinue selling them after he was forced to raise the price from 10 cents to 15 cents. "Kids are the toughest customers in the world," he says. "They will go into a store with a few cents and shop for hours. When -I had to raise the price a nickel they stopped buy- ing them." Throughout his career as owner of ® Dell Publishers, he says he always promoted women as much as men. "Women are just as capable as men, and are a lot more loyal when they're working for you." �■� One trend in the publishing in- dustry that worries Delacorte is the increasing concentration of money into a few major companies. "I think it's exceedingly dangerous. An advertiser will spend money in the biggest paper he can afford," and nothing in the small ones. This is threatening the individ- ual in the publishing industry." ize: Since retiring from publishing, he iltant has, has concentrated ' on beautifying Iuest his environment, aesthetically . and writ- culturally. He has' -donated $600,000 rent- to the village of North Palm Beach for the building of a community cen- f or ter. to "It bothers me that in a commu- nity like Palm Beach, there isn't a cuss soul living in - that town who has 1 by donated anything for the. cultural re- benefit of the public. It's not right." ntal He still thrives on creativity and in giving unusual gifts to the public, but he has a word of caution to any - and one who wants to cultivate creative be potential. n• "Your creative ability is like your ,vas sex drive; ' it goes down as age goes of up » by