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1674-58 Morris Lansburgh t ¢ } "r.a otelmani Lost Sneeze, ; • • int y at the Beach f- cR :'end in a Series Thirty-two million dollars burgh hits every hotel ever OY REESE SHAW worth of hotels kept him here. I day. Keeping up with him t l Monad Starr writer We sat rim in one of them I the somdespetimes of the office sial the one Lansburgh calls and sometimes of visitors me Fear has most people by the - g appointments • . Coat-tails, dragging them back I Susie." ! The phone rang. from success. I He is general manager a n d co-owner 'dr Miami Beach's "Horrible!" said LansburgIt "You have to take a few cal-; He listened awhile. "Rotted: Sans Souci and Versailles. He culated risks in this oworld,"�is co-operator of the Casablan- What about Sherry?" There said Tris Lansburgh getting!ca, Sherry Frontenac and big I wap some talk about other up from ms chair aniwalking new Deauville, all corporation hetels. "Good. Great. Sure — around as he talked. ventures. g�ahead." Hay fever brought the Headquarters is "Susie" — He put down the receive- dark, lean man to Miami. the Sans Srnrei — but Lens- and smiled: "Now, where wens ar- ..- - -- , we?" This was a pattern the repeated itself all through the interview as he phoned or was phoned. Be•he denies that he h as ulcers or a split personality "Only hay fever," he laugher •"and I got complete relief fron- that here." i:N 5011-‘4 Born in Baltimore, 41-year- , old Lansburgh moved to Mi- C4y (,f, ami in 1940. He'd spent a year at Johns Hopkins University 912-01 15114- and five years in his father's distillery business. l�`v e „„' www1 U "I had to make a living," VY V"`111 he recalled. "So I leased the Wofford Hotel for the sum• mer." Lansburgh figured it was a calculated risk. The rent•was only some $7,000 to $8,000 for the season and be put a couple of thousand down. "There was no money bete in those days; he recalled. The deal worked out fine Later, he leased the Strath Haven, too, and sold Miami's first "package tours." "We brought folks down on the Clyde Mallory steamship lines to Jacksonville, switches: them to a hus and brought them into Miami for a quiche 'vacation while the boat y:orlced its way to port here.They pick- •ed up the boat, then, and re- turned." When the Army took over Miami Beach hotels, I.ans- burgh sold imported Swiss watches4 After the war, he launched a series of calculated risks. I buying or leasing hotels and picking up associates along the way. When he felt it was wise, he shed old investments and I moved into new operations. Lansburgh's biggest thrill came in 1956 when he rebuilt and doubled capacity of the Versailles, which he'd purchar ed in 1950. • I "It was a very rewarding ex- perience." He attributes his success 'chiefly to"timing." "I grew up with the resort business." he explained. `I guess I've been intelligent enough to see the opportuni- ties — and quick enough to •keep ahead of the pace. "It's a last-moving busi-