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NAMED. Indra Nooyi, 50, chief financial officer of soft-drink giant PepsiCo; as the company's chief executive, making her one of just 11 women to head FORTUNE 500 companies; in New York. The Indian-born, straight-talking Nooyi will succeed Steven Reinemund in October. With Nooyi at the helm, PepsiCo will be the largest U.S. company, by market value, to be led by a woman. "Being a woman, being foreign-born, you've got to be smarter than anyone else," Nooyi said last week...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Milestones | 8/21/2006 | See Source »

Dollé, 63, is chief executive of Luxembourg-based Arcelor, Europe's biggest steel company, measured by revenue, which was formed in 2002 out of what was left of the French, Belgian, Luxembourgian and Spanish steel industries. Mittal, 55, is the Indian-born chairman of the world's biggest producer of steel, Mittal Steel, which he built up over the past decade with a slew of acquisitions, in the process making a fortune for himself estimated at $25 billion. The two men have known each other for years and, as board members of the steelmakers' international trade group, meet regularly...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Nerves Of Steel | 2/5/2006 | See Source »

...Truth Is as Beautiful as Fiction Most writers are happy to achieve success in a single format, but such a career would bore gifted polymath Vikram Seth. The Indian-born author has already delighted readers with poetry, translations of Chinese verse, a book of travels through Tibet, a libretto and the monumental novel A Suitable Boy. This fall, Seth releases his latest foray into a new genre: a memoir titled Two Lives, which tells the true story of how his Indian granduncle Shanti fell in love with and married a Jewish-German woman after World War II. The book will...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Fall Preview: Books | 9/12/2005 | See Source »

...almost no one was prepared to stand up for Fury (2001), which tells the story of a middle-aged thinker who makes a fortune as a TV doll-maker, then flees a bad marriage and goes to New York. There, while falling in love with a young, Indian-born beauty, he expresses in very long paragraphs his rage at the shallowness and money-mindedness of modern Western civilization. Fury wasn't just over-written, poorly plotted and ludicrous. It emitted the creaking, splitting-wood sound that comes when a great literary reputation is about to topple over and crash into...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Fable of Fury | 8/29/2005 | See Source »

...Ginsberg hummed a mantra, and a wall-to-wall reception in the vast Egyptian wing of the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Milling around the reconstructed Temple of Dendur, star watchers could search for the Santa Claus figure of Canadian Novelist Robertson Davies and eavesdrop on the exquisite ironies of Indian-born Novelist Salman Rushdie. Beside the reflecting pool, the gifted throng could contemplate the imaginations of two great states: a perfect theocracy that maintained its inflexible slave system even in the afterlife, and a permanently unfinished republic whose contentious factions offer possibilities still to be imagined. --By R.Z. Sheppard. Reported...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Independent States of Mind | 6/21/2005 | See Source »

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