Eulogy for R.C. Bose
Eulogy for Raj Chandra Bose delivered by unknown speaker. The majority of the eulogy is composed of verses from the Vedas and the Bhagavad Gita.
Eulogy for R.C. Bose
Eulogy for Raj Chandra Bose delivered by Pranab Kumar Sen from the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill-Raleigh statistics complex. It mentions Bose’s achievements in the field of mathematics as well as his appreciation for classical Indian literature and love of world travel.
Eulogy for R.C. Bose
Eulogy for Raj Chandra Bose delivered by Norman L. Johnson from the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill-Raleigh statistics complex. It mentions Bose’s achievements in the field of mathematics and his specific contributions to the statistics department at UNC.
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh; the image is a political cartoon depicting a multiple-choice question asking “What do Chile, Kosovo, Rwanda, and Punjab all have in common?” The circled answer is “Witness to war crimes within the last 30 years.” This refers to the mass killing of Sikhs in Delhi in 1984. This image is a duplicate.
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh; the image is a political cartoon depicting a multiple-choice question asking “What do Chile, Kosovo, Rwanda, and Punjab all have in common?” The circled answer is “Witness to war crimes within the last 30 years.” This refers to the mass killing of Sikhs in Delhi in 1984. This image is a duplicate.
Award of the Degree of Doctor of Science to R.C. Bose
Award of the Degree of Doctor of Science, honoris causa, to Raj Chandra Bose from the Indian Statistical Institute in Calcutta [modern-day Kolkata], dated December 18, 1974.
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh; the image depicts a Sikh man writing a message: “in memory of thousands of innocent Sikh children, women, [and] men [...] killed by the Indian army attack on Darbar Sahib in June 1984.”
"Mapping Justice: An Indian Roadmap"
Illustration by Vishavjit Singh; the image is a political cartoon entitled “Mapping Justice: An Indian Roadtrip.” The “map” starts in 1984 with “Kill, burn alive and rape thousands of innocent Sikhs” and ends in 2003 with “19 years is not enough to convict a single guilty person.” The “rest areas” are captioned as “Government appointed commissions to make recommendations with no judicial powers.”
Letter from War Department to K.C. Kerwell
Letter from War Department to Karm Chandra Kerwell, dated November 20, 1917, in relation to Kerwell’s draft into the US Army. The letter says he will be discharged from the National Army and enlisted in the Medical Section of the Enlisted Reserve Corps.
Letter of Recommendation for K.C. Kerwell from Michigan National Guard
Letter of recommendation for Karm Chandra Kerwell from the Michigan National Guard, dated July 30, 1917. The letter confirms Kerwell’s service, describes him as an expert rifleman, and recommends him for any position where “his training as a doctor or a soldier can be used to advantage.”