Word: richest
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...this has made Mallya one of India's richest men (although he's uncharacteristically shy when it comes to discussing how much he's worth). It's a wealth that he's spent liberally, building mansions throughout the country, throwing lavish parties, buying India's most successful football teams-East Bengal and Mohun Bagan-and breeding famous racehorses...
Millions of people in this country are not nearly as lucky as we were. How can we, the richest country on this earth, continue to do nothing while 45 million Americans live without health coverage? In this election, I’m giving voters a simple and clear choice: you can stay with the failed Bush economic policies or you can vote for my bold ideas to turn our economy around and create jobs. My ideas come straight from my personal experience as an elected official and most importantly, as a parent. Everyday I learn from my three kids, Matt...
...peasant garb for snazzy Playboy shirts and gleaming loafers--and in the incongruous mishmash of mud-brick shacks and shiny white-tiled houses with satellite dishes lining the streets of Xiaoli. "You can tell who raided the best tombs just by looking at their houses," says Little Su. The richest citizens even have big-screen TVs and video-game machines. Little Su's favorite game? Tomb Raider...
...accompanying nickname, “Club 8”, the Fox has undertaken a new strategy to sell itself to its punches. The new “Humility First!” campaign acknowledges that the Fox may not be the oldest of the eight final clubs, nor the richest, nor the coolest, nor the cleanest, nor the most freshly painted—and, that’s the point. “We’ve got genuine humility and that’s a rare commodity among final clubs,” says Fox member Daniel T. Erickson...
...time considered the richest man in the Czech Republic, Kozeny reportedly made around $200 million in the early 1990s when the Czech government decided to sell shares in state-owned companies to the public. Under this plan, Czech citizens could purchase vouchers that could, in turn, be traded in for shares in these companies. Kozeny persuaded around 800,000 Czechs to invest their vouchers in his “Harvard” funds, by promising a 10-fold return on their investment...