"$60,000 bond set here for scholar"
Newspaper clipping of an article in the January 1, 1971 edition of Chicago Sun-Times by Max Sonderby. The article reports that bond was posted at $60,000 for the recently indicted Eqbal Ahmad, scholar and anti-war activist accused of conspiring to kidnap Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger, and quotes two witnesses at Ahmad’s trial who testified that Ahmad was a nonviolent man.
"War Foe Accuses Kissinger"
Newspaper clipping of an article in The New York Post by Richard Schwartz in which Eqbal Ahmad describes the recent meeting called by Secretary of State Henry Kissinger to talk with Ahmad and two others named as co-conspirators in an alleged plot to kidnap him as the Administration’s attempt to throw a “cloak of darkness” over its war policies in Vietnam.
"Pakistani's arrest here shocks friends"
Newspaper clipping from the January 13, 1971 edition of The Chicago News of an article regarding the arrest and indictment of Eqbal Ahmad, scholar and anti-war activist accused of conspiring to kidnap Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and blow up heating systems in federal buildings.
"Friends rally to suspect here"
Newspaper clipping from the January 14, 1971 edition of The Chicago News of an article about the testimonies given on behalf of Eqbal Ahmad, scholar and anti-war activist indicted for conspiring to kidnap Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger and blow up heating systems in federal buildings.
From Dr. Alsop's Article "The Art of Healing"
Excerpt from an article title “The Art of Healing” mentioning Dr. Maya Das, one of the first women from India to earn her degree in medicine in the United States. “Miss Maya Das was a Hindoo girl, very slim, with clear-cut, aristocratic features, who went through her medical training side by side with us, never missing an answer, never absent, never slighting a piece of work, always perfect.”
"First Hindu Woman Here Studying Medicine Is a Brilliant Student"
Photograph in a newspaper of Premala Shahane of Maharashtra, student at the Woman’s Medical College of Pennsylvania, circa 1928-29. The caption indicates that Shahane's first name is 'Pamela', though elsewhere she is identified as 'Premala'. The caption also incorrectly states that Shahane was the first "Hindu Woman" at the Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania.
"Cite 2 phone calls, meeting in U.S. indictment of Ahmed"
Newspaper clipping from the January 19, 1971 edition of The Chicago Sun-Times stating that two phone calls and a meeting with a co-defendant were cited by a grand jury in its indictment of Eqbal Ahmad, an eminent scholar and anti-war activist accused of plotting to kidnap Secretary of State Henry Kissinger along with five other co-conspirators.
"Vietnam and the Truth"
In a letter to the editor published in the January 17, 1971 edition of The New York Times, Republican National Committee Publications Director John D. Lofton, Jr.
"Alleged conspirator to speak"
Newspaper clipping from the April 22, 1971 edition of the Seattle University Spectator advertising a talk by Eqbal Ahmad, scholar and anti-war activist indicted for conspiring to kidnap Presidential adviser Henry Kissinger, in Pigott Auditorium at Seattle University.