"Master Course in the Teachings of the Science of the Saviours" (1967)
Tri-Fold Pamphlet advertising Bhagat Singh Thind's "Master Course in the Teachings of the Science of the Saviours" to take place in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Includes a schedule of his lectures, held between June 18 to July 23, 1967. The back of the pamphlet also includes a list of Thind's publications.
Hari Trivedi For Governor
The official website of Hari Trivedi For Governor in the 2012 Wisconsin recall election. In 2011, newly elected Republican Governor Scott Walker and the Republican-led Wisconsin State Senate effectively ended collective bargaining rights for public employees in the state, sparking unprecedented protests in Madison and a successful effort to force a recall election.
Packed Houses Hear Hindu Poet
Newspaper announcement for lectures at the Milwaukee Auditorium by Bhagwan Singh Gyanee, on the "'inside' story of the imprisonment of all India's leading intellects, and the enforced exploitation of 356,000,000 suffering Hindus."
Taraknath Das -- A Cosmopolitan Leader
Essay titled "Taraknath Das -- A Cosmopolitan Leader" written by Stuart A. Rice and published in the December 1910 issue of Cosmopolitan Student. Rice profiles Das, describing his college activities and his publications. The essay contains a photograph of Das.
Letter from S. Chandrasekhar to A. Choudry
Handwritten letter dated April 1, 1944 from S. Chandrasekhar to A. Choudry. The letter contains biographical information about S. Chandrasekhar’s life and career and appears to be in response to a request from A. Choudry.
Women on Ormsby Hall Back Porch
Caption: "Leftovers for Thanksgiving. Frances Hogg second from left. From page titled Scenes from Ormsby."
Women on Ormsby Hall back porch
Caption: "Leftovers for Thanksgiving. Frances Hogg fourth from left in black. From page titled Scenes from Ormsby."
Oral History Interview with Neela Sheth Sukhatme
DESI WISCONSIN 1950-1979: Whether it was segregation in the 1950s or the cultural and political tumult of the 1960s and 1970s, South Asian immigrants to Wisconsin confronted a world fundamentally alien to that they had left behind. Neither black or white, these individuals managed to raise families and often succeeded in their careers.