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Word: zara (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
Dates: during 1990-1999
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Usage:

Hasty Pudding president Zara Aga Khan '94 saidthe club has professional bouncers who check theidentification of all who enter the building andthat the club follows the University's alcoholpolicy, which prohibits serving alcohol to minors...

Author: By Olivia F. Gentile, | Title: Will Fly Make Itself Official? | 11/1/1993 | See Source »

...king, however, does not think that his kingdom is a wonderland of any kind. His model for perfection is Great Britain and his infatuation with the country and its customs has caused him to send his eldest daughter, the Princess Zara (Victoria Wei) to England so that she may return with the knowledge that has made the great country what...

Author: By Ganesh Ramakrishnan, | Title: Utopia: It's the Closest You'll Ever Get at Harvard | 4/9/1992 | See Source »

...king's love for Lady Sophy (Christine Kienzle), an English Gouvernante who instructs his princesses Nekaya (Zarya Rubin) and Kalyba (Katie McGovern) in the ways of proper English ladies, further complicates his life. Phantis, meanwhile, loves Princess Zara, who will return that night from her voyage to the distant epitome of perfection that the king believe Great Britain...

Author: By Ganesh Ramakrishnan, | Title: Utopia: It's the Closest You'll Ever Get at Harvard | 4/9/1992 | See Source »

...stage is already complex enough, with peripherals such as the hilarious public Exploder Tarara (Leo Clark) and the meek Vice-Chamberlain (Mark Hagar) adding to the confusion, without Scaphio falling in love with the Princess Zara. In one of the play's most humorous moments, Scaphio talks insensibly about his love for Zara, whom he calls "intoxicating, a veritable goddess," prompting Phantis, who has loved the princess all along, to reply with characteristic understatement, "Yes, the girl is perfectly okay...

Author: By Ganesh Ramakrishnan, | Title: Utopia: It's the Closest You'll Ever Get at Harvard | 4/9/1992 | See Source »

When she finally has a moment alone with her father, Zara criticizes him for letting the country lapse into such a state of affairs, and directs her anger primarily at the Palace Paper, which she calls "ungrammatical twaddle." The unhappy King, whose bruised ego has been dealt yet another blow, finally confesses the hold that Scaphio and Phantis have over...

Author: By Ganesh Ramakrishnan, | Title: Utopia: It's the Closest You'll Ever Get at Harvard | 4/9/1992 | See Source »

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