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Jimmy Buffett?
You like Jimmy Buffett? He's so mellow.
For those of you shooting for warren buffett status, there is a cash prize -- oooh!
Jimmy Buffett.
So there I am, on my 25th birthday, driving from Wheeling, West Virginia, to Bensonhurst, in a Dodge Dart with no radio and a gunrunner named Barrelhead, who insisted we sing every Jimmy Buffett song he could recall.
If you want a special experience, go to a Jimmy Buffett concert.
The decor reminds me of the Jimmy Buffett concert.
I've seen Buffett like. ten times.
Which isabelle settled by calling warren buffett.
You know,I was talking to Jimmy Buffett this morning about trans fats.
I guess, but I'm not Warren Buffett.
Oh, and, Jack. Jimmy Buffett called. He wants his shirt back.
Hmm. Buffett rich.
Blackberry, Warren Buffett.
What? - Jimmy Buffett?
You like Jimmy Buffett?
Well, today there was a rousing debate about inflation versus liquidity which Isabel settled by calling Warren Buffett.
Bill Gates and Warren Buffett from the USA.
Warren Buffett goes to this conference, and Bill Gates, and Oprah!
And don't push Warren Buffett in the pool.
Yeah, you, Warren Buffett and every other finance and media titan.
All those who pitched business models to Warren Buffett as a member of the Phillips Exeter Entrepreneurs Club raise their hands.
You know Warren Buffett?
Buffett, Icahn, Wilson.
Zuckerberg, Jobs, Buffett and Gates all rolled into one.
Um, well, today there was a rousing debate About inflation versus liquidity, Which isabelle settled by calling warren buffett.
Buffett rich.
In demand. You're like jimmy buffett tickets To these hybrid-driving, straight white folks.
The multibillionaire Warren Buffett once spoke at a dinner in honour of Professor Murray.
Oh, right, right. Like, that's how Warren Buffett got rich.
Just last week, Warren Buffett comes through.
Partying with Jimmy Buffett on the back of Willie Nelson's bus.

News and current affairs

Consider, in this light, the life of the American investor Warren Buffett.
For 50 years, Buffett, now 75, has worked at accumulating a vast fortune.
From this perspective, once Buffett earned his first few millions in the 1960's, his efforts to accumulate more money can easily seem completely pointless.
Even when the donations made by Andrew Carnegie and John D. Rockefeller are adjusted for inflation, Buffett's is greater.
At a single stroke, Buffett has given purpose to his life.
What, then, does Buffett's life tell us about the nature of happiness?
Perhaps, as Kahneman's research would lead us to expect, Buffett spent less of his life in a positive mood than he would have if, at some point in the 1960's, he had quit working, lived on his assets, and played a lot more bridge.
Buffett reminds us that there is more to happiness than being in a good mood.
The billionaire investor Warren Buffett argues that he should pay only the taxes that he must, but that there is something fundamentally wrong with a system that taxes his income at a lower rate than his secretary is required to pay.
Warren Buffett, by contrast, is 76, so he has missed his chance to apply his talents to running a charitable foundation.
Certainly, Gates and Buffett claim nothing of the sort.
Of course, Gates and Buffett deserve praise, and we should certainly wish them well.
Even legendary investors like Warren Buffett, it is argued, are not really outperforming the market.
Maybe Buffett's past investing style can be captured in a trading algorithm today.
While Buffett's prescription of higher taxes for America's wealthy is entirely desirable, will Obama realize that a genius in one area may be a dunce in another?
The money needed to launch an LEU bank is in place, thanks primarily to a non-governmental organization - the Nuclear Threat Initiative - and initial funding from Warren Buffett.
Several of them, including Bill Gates, George Soros, Warren Buffett, and Jeffrey Skoll, are already mega-philanthropists, committing huge sums for the world's good.
We would think differently if Gates and Buffett had enriched themselves not through perspiration and inspiration, but by cheating, breaking labor laws, ravaging the environment, or taking advantage of government subsidies abroad.

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