Alumni Dossier for Kamala Cornelius
Alumni dossier on Kamala Cornelius, graduate of the Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham University) Class of 1918, listing teaching positions held in India and programs implemented which relate to practices at PCW.
Reprint of Letter from Kamala Cornelius Bearing Illustrations
Recto of folded, reprinted letter from Kamala Cornelius to President of the Pennsylvania College for Women (now Chatham University) Cora Helen Coolidge sent from Ellore, S. India. The letter bears an illustration of a dessert scene, individuals wearing turbans, a tent, palm trees, a camel, pottery, and an ocean liner.
Reprint of Letter from Kamala Cornelius to Cora Helen Coolidge of PCW
Reprint of letter from Kamala Cornelius (PCW Class of 1918) to Cora Helen Coolidge describing donation of bracelets to support fundraising efforts. The letter bears a printed heading "Letter received from a native Indian girl who graduated from P.C.W."
India Association members present books to A. Leo Weil School Library
Members of the India Association (pictured at left) present Dwayne Moore seventeen books for the library. From left to right are K.V. Raman, graduate student at the University of Pittsburgh; Avi Chakrabarty, five-year old student at Frick School; Mrs. Chakrabarty; Mr. Nagarajan, student at Carnegie-Mellon University; D. Moore; Mrs. R. Alvin, librarian at A. Leo Weil School; Dr.
A Family Portrait--Fifteen years after graduation.
Kamala Cornelius, Class of 1918, (Mrs. Eddy Asirvatham), sent this photograph dated July, 1933 to Dean Mary Helen Marks. The children are Vasanthi, 5 1/2 years and Orema, 11 months.
Notes on the accused, ca. 1918
This document contains synopses of the activities of members of the Ghadr Party, an Indian independence party based in San Francisco. The document was prepared by the U. S. Attorney in San Francisco for the trial of these individuals. The document illustrates the global nature of the operations and the interactions of Indian nationals, German officials, and U. S. citizens.
"A Voice for the 400 Million"
Newspaper clipping of an article by Mary Braggiotti in the August 9, 1943 edition of The New York Post titled "A Voice for the 400 Million." The article features Sardar J.J.