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...disposable income has risen by $1,500 a person and nearly 7 million new jobs have opened up. (By contrast, Western Europe, which has a comparable working-age population, lost 3 million jobs in the past decade.) "To be honest with you, everything depends on the economy," says Mo Ansari, part owner of Mr. Mike's Breakfast Restaurant in Keego Harbor. "They like to work," he says, gesturing toward his patrons, "and there's a big smile on their face when they do. I'm happy to see it, because I don't like being around...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: America's Upbeat Mood | 9/24/1984 | See Source »

Within hours, stones and bottles began to fly, and the rioting quickly escalated into burning and killing. In Bhiwandi, some 50 Muslim workers and their families sought refuge at the textile factory and home of Ibrahim Ansari, 50, a prosperous Muslim industrialist. A Hindu mob brandishing knives, fire bombs and cans of kerosene descended on the compound. From their barricaded living room, Ansari and his son managed to hold off the attackers with a revolver and a shotgun until police finally arrived. But by that time 20 people had been massacred...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: This Is All So Painful | 6/4/1984 | See Source »

...Here is where they killed one man," said Ansari afterward, pointing to a pile of ashes, a charred shirt, a sandal and a puddle of blood. "They stabbed him in the stomach with a sword and poured kerosene on him and set him on fire while he was still alive." The violence quickly spread to Bhiwandi's slum areas, where Hindus and Muslims live uncomfortably side by side: an estimated 15,000 huts were put to the torch. Soon the rioting spilled over to other industrial towns in the region and to Bombay itself...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: India: This Is All So Painful | 6/4/1984 | See Source »

...Indian and Pakistani accounts differed in a number of details. Initially, Pakistani spokesmen in Islamabad told of 100,000 and then of 200,000 Indian troops pouring across the border at half a dozen points. Those figures were considerably exaggerated. Major General M.H. Ansari, Pakistan commander in the Jessore sector, told newsmen that the Indian guerrilla forces had lost 200 to 300 dead and twice as many wounded, but that they had managed to recover all the bodies; that would be quite a feat under any circumstances. Ansari showed journalists a letter stamped "14th Punjab Regiment" and an Indian soldier...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The World: India and Pakistan: Poised for War | 12/6/1971 | See Source »

...survivor, Abdul Qaiyum Ansari, Minister of Rehabilitation of Bihar State, inspected the track where the accident had occurred. He found that the iron fishplates used to join sections of rail had been removed in two places and that the disconnected end of one rail had been pushed slightly inward...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Foreign News: Part Way Home | 5/15/1950 | See Source »

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