|
|
|
| Membership Career Services Meetings Surveys & Outreach Government Relations Public Awareness Customer Services | |
About the AMSAMS MembershipGovernanceGiving to the AMSPrizes & AwardsContact Us
201 Charles Street
Phone: 401-455-4000
Or email us at |
AMS Dedicates Radha G. Laha Gardens
to honor his gift and commitment to Mathematical Research November 2001 Remarks by John Ewing, AMS Executive Director, at the Dedication Ceremony: Radha Govinda Laha died in July of 1999 after a long illness. After his death, I was informed that he had provided a major bequest to the American Mathematical Society for the general support of mathematical research. I was surprised to learn of that bequest ... in retrospect I should not have been. I have come to understand from his friends, colleagues, and students that his gift was a perfectly natural act at the end of a life devoted to mathematics. I want to tell you something of that life so you can understand as well. Radha Laha was born the eldest child of a large family in Calcutta, India on October 1, 1930. His father, Narayan Chandra Laha, was a teacher of mathematics, which may partly account for his early love of the subject. He went to school in Calcutta and then to the Presidency College of Calcutta University, where he took both Science and Honors exams, earning Gold and Silver medals. Even at that early stage in his life, one of his classmates described him as "totally dedicated to his studies, particularly mathematics".This was an especially difficult time in India—the Famine of Bengal (1943), the Japanese bombing of Calcutta (1942-44), the riots (1945), and finally Independence (1947). Radha Laha grew up in those troubled times. With no electricity he stood in line for hours each day to obtain kerosene for his family, and watched over his younger siblings with little time for himself. His family instilled in him a deep love for scholarship. He graduated with a bachelor's degree in statistics in 1949 (first in rank), a master's degree in 1951, and a doctoral degree in 1957. C.R. Rao was his advisor; Joe Doob of the University of Illinois was one of the external examiners. Radha Laha joined the staff of the famous Indian Statistical Institute in 1952, working on pure and applied statistics. He left in 1958 to be a Research Associate at Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., and after a brief return to the Indian Statistical Institute for two years, went to Catholic University as a faculty member in 1962. During the 1960s, his mathematical reputation spread as he visited the University of Paris and the ETH in Zurich. He moved to Bowling Green University in 1972, along with other colleagues, in order to start a new Ph.D. program. He stayed at Bowling Green, retiring in 1996. He did research in many areas—statistics, both pure and applied, functional and harmonic analysis, even infinite dimensional representation theory. He visited MIT, the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, Yale University, and the Australian National University for periods of time. He was an invited speaker at several national meetings of the AMS, MAA, and IMS. He was a Fellow of the Institute of Mathematical Statistics as well as an elected member of the International Statistical Institute. Those are the facts of his professional life, but they only tell part of the story. The rest is told by his friends and his students. Here is a glimpse of Radha Laha from one of his students, Bernie McCabe. I think you will immediately recognize the description.
Joe Diestel, a student in his graduate classes at Catholic University, confirms the breathtaking pace of lectures. He writes:
Diestel also relates a story about one evening class, taught for graduate students who were also full-time employees in the Washington area. An older student often nodded off to sleep in class, and one evening his snoring drew attention. Diestel writes:
Radha Laha was fluent in Bengali, Hindi, French, Russian, and English, often reviewing and translating mathematical papers in all these languages. He had a keen interest in photography, Western classical music, and theater. He traveled to New York, London, and Paris to attend productions. He loved foreign films, especially French. He was an avid reader of the Village Voice, the New York Times, and the Wall Street Journal. Professor Laha was a private person, rarely attending departmental social functions. He never drove and did not have a driver's license. He never carried a credit card. He never watched nor owned a television. He was known for his long walks, even in rain or snow or blizzard. One of his close friends from school days writes: "His simple way of life charmed me; he believed in plain living and high thinking". Radha Govinda Laha gave his life to scholarship, and in his passing continued to give by providing an endowment to the American Mathematical Society. That endowment will grow in future years to support bright young students who follow in his footsteps, to enhance research tools for future mathematicians, and to explain to the public the value of the research to which Laha dedicated his life. The Radha Laha Fund will help generations of mathematicians. To show our gratitude for his gift as well as his life devoted to mathematics, we are here today to dedicate the Radha G. Laha Gardens. This plaque marks a portion of the gardens outside the Society's headquarters, with the inscription "to honor his gift and commitment to mathematical research".
In his autobiography, the mathematician Paul Halmos began his final chapter with some advice about being a mathematician:
|
|
Comments: webmaster@ams.org |
|