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purse prada noting, among other things, that his son was buying and selling handbags in Hong Kong, Indonesia, and Europe. "That was the first time I understood the depth of his knowledge and how seriously he took it, and how good he was at it," he says.Though his parents paid for college, Rubinger kept up the business while majoring in European history at Vanderbilt University. "I was working because I liked it I was interested in it," he says. Phair offered him a summer internship at her company, which by then had changed its name to Portero, and persuaded him to come work for them fulltime after his junior year, authenticating handbags.By that point Rubinger had already made a name for himself. Some of the wives of venture capitalists who had invested in the company became his private clients. A 2007 Washington Post profile of Portero referred to Rubinger, then 22, as the company's "secondhand nose."Since both parents came from the nonprofit world his mother runs a foundation that supports the careers of women in science, there wasn't much they could do to teach him about the luxury goods market. This distinguished him from others of his generation, who rely on family to help them network or fund their enterprises. See my post, "Recent Grad Finds Job Through Her Dad's LinkedIn Account." Rubinger made his own connections. "My job was to see to it that he didn't get into any difficulty" that he kept good records and paid taxes, his father says.But when Rubinger announced he was taking time off from college to work, they felt horrible about it, especially because there was no financial need to do that and since he was a good student. "My husband and I were ready to throw ourselves in the Long Island Sound," says his mother, Karla Shepard Rubinger, who works for Mary Ann Liebert, an academic publishing company in New York. Their fear was that he would make so much money and have so much fun that he would never go back to school."If these people want you now, they'll want you next year too," they argued, pleading with him to finish the last year of college before taking the job. "Your friends are there. Army mess officer in Joseph Heller's novel, Catch 22. Finally, they reached a