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Word: sethi (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...Mumbai Diamond Exchange, the somewhat glorified name for three office towers that have seen better days, is much more orderly than anything in Jaipur. On the ninth floor of the Panchratna tower, dealer Sunil Sethi of SK Exports flicks princess-cut and round-cut diamonds with tweezers without looking up. Every day he sees samples from about 35 brokers, who carry the stones in flat plastic boxes tucked into special cotton undervests...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Passage to India | 3/8/2006 | See Source »

...just can't take away these girls' right to work and earn a living." MANJIT SINGH SETHI, president of the Fight For Rights of Bar Owners' Association, after India's Maharashtra state said last week that it would revoke the licenses of bars featuring dancing women...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Verbatim | 4/4/2005 | See Source »

...team of Lonne A. Jaffe '98-'99, Dylan M. Morris '99, Daniel J. Benjamin '99 and Puneet B. Sethi '99, who is a Crimson editor, read the cases and brainstormed ideas while playing poker...

Author: By M. DOUGLAS Omalley, CONTRIBUTING WRITER | Title: Consulting Contest Tests Professional Skills | 3/9/1998 | See Source »

Much of the credit and many of the awards for the Jaipur foot have gone to Sethi; the two inventors have not seen each other since the surgeon retired from active medicine in 1981. Chandra works with a Jaipur-based charity, the Bhagwan Mahaveer Viklang Sahayata Samiti, which provides free artificial legs for the poor not only in India but in other countries too. He says he feels no bitterness over Sethi's greater fame. At his Delhi workshop, where he has been developing above-the-knee artificial limbs, Chandra points out a little girl whose leg was severed...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE $28 FOOT | 10/1/1997 | See Source »

Since then, countless land-mine victims in many countries have been fitted with the Jaipur foot. "Western aid agencies have helped millions of amputees, and they've found that they can't do it as cheaply as with the Jaipur foot," says Sethi. In India most of the 72,000 amputees wearing the prosthesis were migrant laborers injured while trying to hitch free rides by clinging to train roofs and windows. During their long journeys to the harvests, many of these workers slipped off the trains and were run over...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: THE $28 FOOT | 10/1/1997 | See Source »

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