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Ever wonder what going online was like before the dawn of the World Wide Web? Sinha offers an intriguing look at his spiral into Net addiction during the 1980s as he gets sucked into intense role-playing games and meets eccentric computer-virus writers and fellow Net addicts. Along the way, he discovers that experience is equally "real," whether online or in the flesh. While the blurring of reality and illusion is not a new theme, Sinha's rich narrative and thoughtful observations propel this engaging memoir...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: Cybergypsies | 9/13/1999 | See Source »

Also, Prema Vora, a director of Sakhi for South Asian Women, spoke about South Asian domestic violence; and Tito Sinha, an attorney, talked about South Asian hate crimes...

Author: By -m. DOUGLAS Omalley, | Title: South Asian Panel Explores Identity | 2/8/1999 | See Source »

...this friendship, requested that Pakistan not carry out nuclear tests of its own, what did Pakistan do? It humiliated America in front of the whole world and went right ahead with its nukes. This proves that Pakistan is certainly no friend to the U.S. and no ally. BHARATI SINHA ROY Mumbai, India...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Letters: Jun. 22, 1998 | 6/22/1998 | See Source »

...recipients are Paul A. Foster '97 of Leverett House and Great Falls, Montana; Mary J. Hahn '97 of Winthrop House and West Nyack, N.Y.; Junne Kamihara '97 of Lowell House and Old Bethpage, N.Y.; Sidhartha R. Sinha '97 of Kirkland House and Tulsa, Ok.; and Emily A. Wang '97 of Leverett House and Houston...

Author: By Jessica H. Fong, | Title: Five Seniors Awarded Rockefeller Fellowship | 12/17/1996 | See Source »

...straight-on attitude of earlier segments have had impact. India's Suditya Sinha, 13, reports he resolved not to buy anything made of mahogany and to use cloth bags instead of plastic after seeing an MTV Asia feature on deforestation. "I was horrified. I never realized things were so bad," he says. In Brazil 20% more youth (ages 16-22) voted in April's constitutional referendum than in the previous presidential election; MTV Brasil believes the boost is partly related to its "Plebescito" campaign, urging kids to vote "because the world is upside down and God is really busy these...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Coming Now to a Kid Near You | 11/29/1993 | See Source »

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