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Word: sandhya (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...tandem won its first match 8-3 over a team from Liberty College. In the next round, the two fell to No. 3 seed Lenka Hojckova and Sandhya Nagaraj of NC State...

Author: By Jake I. Fisher, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Final-Bound Singles Fail To Bring Home Titles | 10/13/2009 | See Source »

...Comrade Sandhya's voice trembles as she speaks of her father. "He was a major in the Royal Nepalese Army," she begins, cupping her chin with one hand while rearranging a neat schoolgirl plait with the other. "When he found out I had gone underground, he said I was no longer his daughter - only his enemy. The next time he wanted to meet me was on the battlefield...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rebels with a Cause | 1/31/2008 | See Source »

...That encounter, to Sandhya's relief, never came to pass. In 1996, as a 14-year-old student from a town north of the capital Kathmandu, she joined Nepal's Maoist cadres at the moment when their armed insurgency had just begun to take hold of this rugged Himalayan nation, long a magnet for foreign backpackers and adventurers. Her father's military income meant Sandhya did not grow up among the country's many poor, but she chafed under the rigid caste laws and gender norms that blunted her parents' ambitions and stripped her of the same opportunities...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rebels with a Cause | 1/31/2008 | See Source »

...Today, Sandhya sits batting away mosquitoes in a sparse wood cabin, part of a sprawling Maoist cantonment in the southern district of Chitwan. She believes victory is at hand. A peace process triggered by mass protests in April 2006 against the autocratic rule of Nepal's King Gyanendra brought the Maoists into the political mainstream, paving the way for the extraordinary transformation of a country ruled for two and a half centuries by Hindu kings into a secular republic. Both the Royal Nepalese Army and the Maoist guerrillas - the civil war's bitter foes - returned to their barracks and camps...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rebels with a Cause | 1/31/2008 | See Source »

...Back in Sandhya's Chitwan camp, the commander, named Biwidh, clings to such hope. From a poor, indigenous-minority family, he speaks urgently of peace and of the need for a competitive, multiparty democracy. A slight man with a scarred, weathered face, Biwidh looks much older than his 34 years, and describes his time spent warring in the jungle with primitive rifles and stones in hushed, quick breaths, as if he would rather forget about it. As Nepal lurches from one crisis to another, Biwidh says the soldiers in his camp are in a permanent state of readiness...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Rebels with a Cause | 1/31/2008 | See Source »

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