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Word: bombay (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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PISDURA, India: Villagers in Pisdura, a small town located 440 miles northeast of Bombay, had no idea the oval rocks they kept digging up in their fields might just hold an answer to what killed off the dinosaurs. But now scientists are flocking to the village to examine the rocks, which turn out to be a rare collection of more than 300 dinosaur eggs. Because the eggs, which date from the Cretaceous period, the time 65 million years ago when dinosaurs began dying off, scientists hope that they will help provide clues to what caused the extinction. Because many...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Eggs Over Easy | 2/11/1997 | See Source »

Meanwhile, AIDS is tightening its grip outside the U.S. and Western Europe. In India, researchers estimate that by the year 2000, anywhere from 15 million to 50 million people could be HIV positive. Half the prostitutes in Bombay are already infected, and doctors report that the disease is spreading along major truck routes and into rural areas, as migrant workers bring the virus home. In Central and Eastern Europe, countries that had largely escaped the epidemic are seeing an explosion in the number of cases, mainly among IV drug users and their heterosexual contacts...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: AIDS: THE GLOBAL EPIDEMIC | 12/30/1996 | See Source »

This is the world's busiest movie industry. In Bombay they call it Bollywood, and it puts Hollywood to shame: more than 700 films a year (roughly three times the number produced by the major Hollywood studios) in the nation's 16 official languages. Such actresses as Sridevi, Twinkle Khanna, Dimple Kapadia, Karisma Kapoor and Chunky Pandey have their careers and private lives monitored by adoring fans with an intensity that Lana Turner would have envied. Bachchan, the God Is My Witness star who looks like a more dashing Jon Lovitz and puts a fierce majesty into his basso declarations...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: HOORAY FOR BOLLYWOOD! | 9/16/1996 | See Source »

Mistry, a Bombay-born Zoroastrian, or Parsi, who moved to Toronto in 1975, has long distinguished himself as a rigorous humanitarian who can re-create from afar every last rending detail of his clamorous hometown. His books are living rooms that open up onto whole worlds. And with characteristic deliberation, he has steadily moved from a first collection of stories (Swimming Lessons) to a prizewinning mid-length novel (Such a Long Journey) to this new epic, which is worthy of the 19th century masters of tragic realism, from Hardy to Balzac. In response, perhaps, to a world that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: DOWN AND REALLY OUT | 4/22/1996 | See Source »

...testament to patience, A Fine Balance (Knopf; 603 pages; $26) is also a test of it: its first 250 pages merely introduce the four main characters and the sorrows of their pasts. Dina is a Parsi widow in her early 40s who runs a small apartment in Bombay; Maneck is a student from the mountains who takes a room with her; and Ishvar and Om are two village tailors, uncle and nephew, who long to pull themselves up from their Untouchable status. All four, with their habits of impatience and loss, hopefulness and resignation, find their lives intertwined when Indira...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: BOOKS: DOWN AND REALLY OUT | 4/22/1996 | See Source »

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