( P)- In money- orld forever ch nting " ore," ic i Robin and Joe Doming z tnd imple pI ure in yin "Enough." ch liv on yearly budget of bout $6, t ell below the federal poverty level. And while that' not unu u I the e d y t Robin nd Dominguez t nd out for three OIlS: -They live th y do by choice. -They wrote a boo urging everyone to do the m. -People dually are buying it. Th authors have me gurus of the New Frug lily, offering a morn­ ing-after remedy of thrift for the 19 bacchanal of consumeri m. The 00 "Your Money Or Your Life," i amonga helffullofpopul new busine and personal-finance offering ernpha izing piritual as well as material gains. GRABBI G ALL YOU can is out; making do with what you have is . in. Instant gratification is out; long­ term gains are in. Conspicuous is out; conscious is in. At the heart of it all is a concept that may seem revolutionary to a credi t-card generation of baby , boomers but was obvious to their grandparents: Live within your means. "This is not a fad," Dominguez insisted. "It's a philosophy upon which this country was founded. It's about squeezing the buck until the eagle 'grins. This is where we come from. WC''' ... forgo.t •• THERE ARE PLENTY of new books and newsletters to help us remember: -"Your Money Or Your Life," published by Viking in- -"September, already is in its sixth printing with . more than 100,000 copies dis­ tributed. It has made the New York Times' best-seller list of how-to books four times. -' 'The Tightwad Gazette," by Amy Dacyczyn, a housewife in Leeds, Maine, is full of homespun hints for pinching pennies: Buy peanut butter by the case, make your own pizz instead of ordering out. Published by Villard, the book com­ pi les the fi rs t two years of Dacyczyn's monthly newsletter, which has grown from 1,700 sub­ scribers to 80,000 since 1990. -The Living Cheap News, pub­ lished in San Jose, Calif., was started last February by Larry Roth, who found "The Tightwad Gazette" too countrified. His monthly newsletter offers _!!loney�saving tips for city slickers. Some advice' treads the line be­ tween frugal and downright miserly. Roth, for example, ays he uses the same coffee ground for days but concedes (hat might not be to everyone.' taste. The goal, he and the others say, is conscious spending, not deprivation. "I'm not into hair hirts and tom Levi," Dominguez aid. "I'm into: 'Cool it, the mall is not the new temple.' Slow it down. Most middle- cIa folk s are not going to sur er if they are alting away 10 percent to 2 percent of their income instead of spending it at the mall." nOMI U Z D ROBI ---'- ugge t that instead of mea uring purchase strictly by the dollar, people' hould consider how much time, or "life energy," they lo e on the earn-and- p nd treadmill. In "Your Money," they ffer a sobering cal ulation of how a eem­ -Ingly high-paying job can yield urprisingly little per hour-once the co ts of cornmu ting, parking, meal d nice clothes are dedu ted and then divided by hours working, traveling and recovering fromjob-in- duced tr and illnes . Domin uez d Robinjumped off their own treadmill more than 20 yea go. Domin z, 5 ,wor ed W 11 Street naly t But fter hi company o ded, h re 01 d t 25 never to be dependent on an 'employer gain. got a nother job, tarted aving, nd within fiv y IS h d oc ed w yS80,OOO.Hequithi jo _and been living off the interest ever ince. Robin, 47, grew up in a well-off family on Long Island. Graduating from Brown, he pursued cling in New York but grew disill ioned and hit the road with a S20,000 in­ heritance .. She met Dominguez while traveling in Mexico. Dominguez and Robin re m ters t keeping other co to bare bon . hoppin pree for Robin i buyin a d jump uit t thrift hop. Dominguez does his erran , rain or hine, by bicycle. R tber than go to re taur nt , they'll invite friend over for a potluc dinn r. Th ir imple life tyle w up- po ed to be me ns to an end. Dominguez nd Robin aid it gave them more time for volunteer work and m hed with their goal of moving ociety toward more ustainable, le environmentally destructive ways. , H'ut friends wondered how they made end meet, 0 Dominguez started giving living-room talks on his financial strategy in 1980. By 1985, he w traveling tpe country, giving seminars in packed auditoriums. When it tarted eeming too much like work, Dominguez produced an audio-ca ette cours in venue ide I of con­ ume m, nd they I in hope t t they ever ill. Fru lity i a e­ ful philo ophi underpi nning for reduced expec tio . or tiU oth , it' ofmaturity. Young ple, tl h the n wfound power of pay h often feel they have their entire live to m e up for th mon y they're bout to merrily quand r, But a t r age 30, visions of mortality (and meager retirem nt benefi ) tart to gna . Co ider Mike and Lind Lenich of the Clicago uburb of South Hol­ land. They followed the run - tep program in "Your Money Or Your I frug lity pre d lowly in the 1 , then mu h- roomed in 1990, Robin ide UIt' m t if e turned the decade, and the morning fter, people kn w we were going to ve to do something different," he aid. "Th y knew th e free flow of money of the ' w a r- that the faucet w huttin down." More recently, rece ionary fears have kept Interest high, but d�per motivations will rna e {rug lity defining social trend of the 199Ot, Robin aid. For some aging baby boomers, it's matter of valuing tim more than nothi 0 how Th Lenich themselve wild penders, b they probed their financea. found plenty of hole where money Ie ked through. TH FRIENDS NOW live in Seattle, baring a 3,600-square-foot ho with three others. They paid off the mortgage three years ago, and III .... 6 •• i ., ••••• f ,. _ , i,.1 ivilizations come and go" often leaving their. art as .the �only record of their _ .. accomplishments. It has been ,said tha a nation that doesn't express itself in art is a contradiction in terms; I_ike a person without a perso ality. A nation, like a person. must Identify with its past as well as its fu ure. .. U.S.A. \ I