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Word: kamala (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1980-1989
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Usage:

...think the outcome will be similar to 1983, and that a majority of students will support divestment," said Kamala S. Lakhdhir '85-'86 of Adams House, a Lane supporter...

Author: By Stacie A. Lipp, | Title: Referendum Voting Starts Today | 2/5/1986 | See Source »

...Kamala Lakhdhir, Adams House...

Author: NO WRITER ATTRIBUTED | Title: Open Letter Sent to Undergraduate Council | 2/3/1986 | See Source »

...mother Kamala was a demure and subservient woman who had been found for Nehru by his father; it was an arranged marriage, and the acquired bride was greatly scorned by Nehru's Westernized female relatives. While the men were in prison, Kamala developed tuberculosis, so she was sent to Switzerland to convalesce. Indira went with her, to two bleak years at a school near Geneva; then, after Kamala's death, she went on to Somerville, a women's college at Oxford. One relief from her loneliness was a penniless but galvanizing Indian student in London, Feroze Gandhi...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sad, Lonely, but Never Afraid | 11/12/1984 | See Source »

Feroze had been studying in Allahabad some years earlier when the sickly Kamala collapsed while marching in an anti-British demonstration outside his college. He took her home, became slightly infatuated with her and lingered around the house as a friend of the family's. He hardly noticed Indira, who was five years younger than he. But after the two had returned home to India from blitzed and threatened London, Indira announced in 1941 that they wanted to get married. Nehru was dismayed; he needed Indira to run his household. Feroze had no money, no job. "Nobody wanted that...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Sad, Lonely, but Never Afraid | 11/12/1984 | See Source »

...cameo roles, such as Yente the match-maker (Kamala Soparker) and the Rabbi (Peter Reale) are also noteworthy, While both characters are traditional stereotypes, Soparker and Reale put in enough energy to keep them from going state. In fact, the only minor character that does not transcend his stereotype is the Fiddler himself, whose obviously fake board emphasizes his obviously fake fiddling. But since the fiddler mainly appears on the rooftop, or peaks around the corner of the set, he does not direct from the overall effect...

Author: By Catherine L. Schmidt, | Title: Ah, Tradition | 4/24/1984 | See Source »

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