BRACERS Notes

Record no. Notes, topics or text
40002
40003
40004
Two copies.
40005
40006
40007
40008
40009
40010
40011

From The Hindu at https://www.thehindu.com/news/national/telangana/i-met-bertrand-russell-over-tea-corrected-him/article6973311.ece

March 9, 2015 Updated: March 9, 2015 05:38 IST   ‘I met Bertrand Russell over tea, corrected him’ He is a man who occupied as many positions of honour as the epochs of change he witnessed in his lifetime.

He rubbed shoulders with the likes of Nobel laureate Amartya Sen and philosopher Bertrand Russell. At 72, Siripurapu Kesava Rao, who retired from his post as Director-General of the Administrative Staff College of India (ASCI), is disarmingly unpretentious in a chat with SWATHI V .

Your academic and career-graph is quite impressive. When and where was the foundation laid?

I owe it to my teachers. I studied up to elementary school in my village, Gogulampadu of Krishna district. For admission to higher classes, a teacher named Raja Rao coached us. He was an amazing teacher. For high school, we would walk two to three kilometres every day, and there too the teachers were excellent. During exams, we would go and study at our teachers’ homes.

Now, the education is horrible. Government schools are ghettoised, and those with a little money to spare are sending kids to private schools, which are no better. Being able to speak a few words in English is being seen as sign of education. External façade of school buses collecting children in uniforms from villages and heading for towns has somehow become the symbol of schooling.

How did Cambridge University happen?

After an MA in Economics from Andhra University, I went to Delhi School of Economics for research, but was denied admission because I was under-aged. Meanwhile, I taught at Hindu College, Delhi, from where I went to Cambridge University’s Trinity College. Incidentally, Nobel Laureate Amartya Sen was the chairman of the research committee, and wrote a recommendation letter for me. We even communicated when I taught at Cambridge. After a few years, I moved to Jawaharlal Nehru University with the first batch of professors.

Tell us about your time at the Commonwealth Secretariat

I entered it as an Economist and grew to the position of Director, Strategic Planning and Evaluation. I was active during the liberation of South Africa from Apartheid. Those days, British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher was adamantly against sanctions being imposed on South Africa, due to political expediencies. I remember that our then Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi played a significant role in bringing her around. My job was to lead on and facilitate the discussions about the kind of sanctions to be imposed.

And about your meeting with Bertrand Russell..?

Russell greatly influenced me through his philosophical works. During Cambridge, I wrote to him asking to meet him. To my surprise, his secretary called my dormitory and fixed up appointment. Along with two more friends, I met him over tea. The meeting was memorable. Mr. Russell was very concerned about atomic weapons. Already very old, he struggled for the world ‘mutual annihilation’. With a mischievous smile, the mathematician quipped that India’s contribution to mathematics was ‘zero’, and I corrected that it was ‘the zero’. He was an enlightening person. They were sane, secular and intelligent people those days.

Plans after ASCII?

I wish to go back to my village and spend some time there. I will cherish my association with ASCII which I was chosen to head after a search committee proposed my name 11 years ago.

With a mischievous smile, the mathematician quipped that India’s contribution to mathematics was ‘zero’, and I corrected that it was ‘the zero’

Siripurapu Kesava Rao

Former D-G, Administrative Staff College of India

40012

Two copies.

It's all right for two Trinity students to visit BR.

40013
40014
40015
40016
40017
40018

Thanks for book Corruption in Pakistan.

40019
40020
40021
40022
Two copies.
40023
40024
40025
40026
40027

"You are very popular in Estonia. In our newspapers are publishing many articles of your life, work and fight for peace."

40028
40029
40030
40031
40032

A psycho-sexual analysis of BR from his Autobiography.

Comment at the top in C. Farley's hand: "Incredible! (but I'd love to meet her ex-husband....)"

40033

Ts. is titled "Education to Solve the Problem".

40034

A draft reply (see record 40035) in Schoenman's hand is at the top.

40035
40036
40037
40038

Ts. is in the form of a letter and concerns her disillusionment among German students.

40039
40040
40041
40042
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40046
40047
40048

"He has asked me to say that he does not feel academic philosophy is worth doing at the moment."

40049
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40052
40053

Letter is to the editor of Look Magazine, 22 March 1967.

40054
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40058
40059
Two copies.
40060

List is of articles by reader; periodical is The Freethinker, 8 Feb. 1969.

40061
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40064
40065
40066
40067
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40069
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40074

Rees is making a study of BR's work in international relations at University College of Wales, Aberystwyth.

40075
40076
40077
40078
40079
40080

Re Es Geht ums Leben!

40081
40082
Two copies.
40083
40084

This Fort Erie, Ontario, resident is delighted that Russell's archives are coming to McMaster.

"My warmest regards to your wife, Patricia!!!"

40085
40086
40087
40088
40089
40090
40091
40092
40093
40094
40095
40096
40097

On the verso of Reiner's letter.

40098

Letter contains a poem titled "Limbo".

40099
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40101