Word: warrens
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Dates: during 2000-2009
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...still make money in energy if you're careful, and you should be exposed to this sector for the long term anyway. Warren Buffett said earlier this year that "the energy field is the single most likely area" where he "can find places to put significant capital" to work. He said he expects his Berkshire Hathaway to be making power-related acquisitions for 20 years...
...Reports of a suspicious person in the Warren Alpert Building sent Harvard University Police Department (HUPD) officers to 200 Longwood Ave. The responding officers found the individual and searched for any outstanding wants and warrants under his name without success. Carlos Gonzalez, 18, of Roxbury, Mass. was then arrested for trespassing. Oct. 29: 2:53 a.m.—Officers were sent to Holmes Hall in the Quad in response to a report that someone had been smoking in the bathroom. Police found the bathroom empty and were unable to locate the alleged smoker...
...ballot initiatives that pit his government-reform agenda against organized labor. He wanted the special election, which will cost the state more than $50 million, but Republicans now think it may have been a mistake. On Saturday, a Schwarzenegger aide blocked perhaps his two most famous critics-liberal actor Warren Beatty and his wife, Annette Bening-from crashing a gubernatorial event at an airport hangar in San Diego...
...last week, 350 experts and policymakers gathered in New York City to discuss the challenges for public health around the world--and why it is in the interest of Americans to care. The TIME Global Health Summit, whose participants included Bill Clinton, Bill Gates, Kofi Annan, Madeleine Albright, Rick Warren, Ted Turner, Paul Wolfowitz of the World Bank and UNICEF's Ann Veneman, reflected what we try to do in the magazine, which is to cover stories that are shaping our future but don't always attract big, blaring headlines. Some of the disease fighters we profiled in last week...
...blood of broken alliances, palace purges and strong people or nations beating up on weak ones--all in the service of someone's hunger for power or resources. "There's a point at which you find an interesting kind of nerve circuitry between optimism and hubris," says Warren Bennis, a professor of business administration at the University of Southern California and the author of three books on leadership. "It becomes an arrogance or conceit, an inability to live without power...