Gwyer Hall
In 1962 the University of Delhi had two residence halls, the
Gwyer Hall and the Jubilee Hall. The Gwyer Hall was open to postgraduate
students. Its layout and functioning was on the model of similar institutions
of the universities in England. The Gwyer Hall was named after the first
vice-chancellor of the University of Delhi, Sir Maurice Gwyer. Its outer
court was enclosed by spacious rooms in two levels in a U-formation. Its
inner court had the dining room on one
side and an access to the Fellows Wing. The dining room was laid out in two levels.
The high table in the dining room was used by teachers who lived in the Fellows
Wing. The Gwyer Hall was at the
Northern end of the Ridge next to the
Flagstaff. It was enclosed by forests from three sides. Its frontage had an entrance
to the Hall lined symmetrically with pillars like the Roman columns. It was a privilege to be a resident of the
Gwyer Hall.
I was readily admitted in the Gwyer Hall
perhaps on the strength of my performance in the B. Sc.(Honours) course. In the
first year of residence in the Gwyer Hall the postgraduate student-residents
were allotted shared accommodation. Each double room was laid out in three
parts. There were separate studies with balconies opening toward the forest
area and a common sleeping area with a fireplace and a mantlepiece. The
fireplace was never used. I shared my room with Ashok Suri who like me had done
the B. Sc. (Physics Honours) and joined
the M. Sc. (Physics) course. The Provost of the Gwyer Hall lived in an
earmarked residence in the front court and the warden lived in rooms given to
him on the second floor of the wing separating the inner and the outer courts.
During my two years of stay in the Gwyer Hall I rarely saw the Provost or the
warden. Our dealings were with the clerk who managed the Hall. There was no 10
pm restriction for the residents.
The Department of Physics was adjacent to
the main administrative building of the University. Conveniently located between the two buildings was the frequently
visited India Coffee House. The
time not spent inside the
classroom was spent in the Coffee House. The cost of a cup of coffee was 20
paisa. When six persons had coffee together the privileged person was the one
who paid the bill. Keenness in making the payment by some persons was analysed and ultimately understood by the
group. As each person would contribute 25 paisa with 5 paisa intended for tip
the person who settled the bill left a tip of 10 paisa and had his coffee nearly for free. This
ingenious initiative was named Trehaning! It is embarrassing for me to
identify the person in whose honour this term was coined.
The two years of my M. Sc. course were the
happiest period of my student days at the University of Delhi. I was taught
Quantum Mechanics by Professor R. C. Majumdar.
Invariably he overshot his teaching hour deep into the lunch break. One
day when he finished his teaching at 2 pm
I pointed out to him that it was past the lunch hour of my hostel. He said to me, “Don’t
grumble. Come home with me. Mrs. Majumdar will give you khichdi.” He was a student of
Werner Heisenberg. His teaching was full of anecdotes which we all enjoyed. On
the dining table when we would start narrating our privileged information that
we thought was exclusively shared by
Professor Majumdar with us we felt crestfallen when a senior would complete the
anecdote. It came as a dampener to us to discover that our predecessors had heard the same anecdotes from Professor R. C.
Majumdar when they took the same course from him in earlier years. My other
teachers were Professor F. C. Auluck, Professor L. S. Kothari, Professor A. N.
Mitra, Professor N. N. Saha, Dr. Vishnu
Mathur, Dr. R. P. Saksena, Dr. V. P. Duggal, Dr. Setty, Dr. Gopalakrishna,
Professor Bhowmik, Dr. Kichlu, Mr.. Nandi and Mr. Jugal Kishore. I feel sorry
to have left out in the list some of my other teachers whose names I am unable to recollect after 52
years.
Invariably distinguished physicists during
their visit to India also came to the Department of Physics of the University
of Delhi. I remember the visits of Niels Bohr, Paul Dirac, Nikolay Bogolyubov
and Leonard Schiff to the Department of Physics. When Niels Bohr came even standing room could not be found inside the
lecture theatre and many of us had to listen to him from the open quadrangle
outside the lecture theatre. Because of his unfamiliar accent and more because
of the poor quality of sound from the speaker I could not make out a word of
what Niels Bohr spoke. As there were many visitor-seminars, research students
considered it a waste of their time in attending seminars in which they were
not interested. It was common for the Head Clerk of the Department of Physics
to arrange audience for visitor seminars by rounding up students from the
Department Library. Teachers had the excuse that they were
teaching and the research students could not be touched. Together with lab
attendants and chaprasis we made up the audience for many seminars. We
were also picked for other tasks such as receiving distinguished visitors from
the airport. Normally neither the Head of the Department nor senior teachers
would go to the airport for receiving their guests as it was not in their
protocol. Once I got a message that Professor R. C. Majumdar would like me to
accompany some senior research students to the airport to receive C. V. Raman.
As the university staff car was made available to us I accepted with alacrity
the opportunity of meeting the Nobel Laureate. It was winter and the flight
from Bangalore came in the evening. It was biting cold when I reached the
airport. The airport was not air-conditioned then. At Palam airport I met
another person waiting for C. V. Raman. I introduced myself to him and asked
him who he was. He said I am C. V. Ramaswamy, brother of C. V. Raman. In my
ignorance I remarked how you can be his brother because you do not have his
surname. He was annoyed with me and said, “Young
man, same father and same mother!”
Two Nobel Laureates Sir C. V. Raman and Sir Bragg were being conferred a D.Sc.
by the University of Delhi in a special convocation. Raman in his acceptance
speech pointed out that neither Bragg nor him had earned Ph.D. degree as
students.
Hemendra Kumar was my classmate and
friend. We did experiments together in the lab. He was good in electronics and
could easily assemble transistor radios
and other electronic circuits. He was an
active ham radio amateur. His father was a physicist. He worked in the Defence
Science Laboratory in Metcalfe House. His grandfather was also a physicist and
taught at the Benaras Hindu University. Unlike me and his father and
grandfather, Hemendra did not want to be a physicist. He wanted to join the
civil service. He retired as a secretary to the Government of India. One day
Hemendra and I decided to bunk our lab class for seeing the Hindi film Mere
Mehboob.
Before we had covered fifty meters from the Department we ran into
Mr.Jugal Kishore our lab teacher who was
on his way to the lab. We wished him. Mr
Jugal Kishore did not ask us where we
were going but asked us to turn back and
go to the laboratory. We smiled and continued walking in opposite direction to that
of Mr. Jugal Kishore. He reported our act of defiance to the Head of the Department.
The following morning I got a message to go and see Professor R. C. Majumdar. I
was worried that as punishment for my act of indiscipline he may recommend
discontinuation of my scholarship. I went to see Professor Majumdar. When I
entered his room and wished him. He looked at me and said, “
You don’t
have a class now. Why have you come to disturb me! Go to your class.”
We picked up physics gossip listening to our seniors in the
dining room of the Gwyer Hall.
From them we came to know of the famous physicists in prominent American
universities. The senior research students discussed with each other the areas
of current research interests of well known physicists. This informal education
played both good and not so good parts
in my life. The superficial information
I picked up from the dining room could have had a disastrous implications in my
career. I will return to that later.
My other friends in Gwyer Hall were Nand
Lal, Surendar Malik and Dr. M. L. Jasuja. Manohar Lal Jasuja was doing his M.D.
degree from the Maulana Azad Medical College. He had a scooter. I liked to go
with him on his scooter to Buddha Jayanti Park and other picnic places. One day
as I stepped out from the dining room after taking my lunch I met an elderly
person enquiring about Dr. Jasuja. I became suspicious of his visit and rightly
anticipated that he had come to meet Dr. Jasuja with a matrimonial proposal. I
told that person that Dr. Jasuja had gone to the tuck shop for his after lunch smoke and
paan with tobacco for
digesting his meal. I thought that what I had said was damaging enough to Dr.
Jasuja’s
reputation and would discourage the
visitor from pursuing further with his matrimonial proposal. Of course, Dr.
Jasuja neither smoked nor ate tobacco filled paan. He thanked me for my
act of friendship. On Tuesday mornings
for breakfast we were served upma. Surendar disliked upma.
Normally I would take Surendar along with me for breakfast but I had his
standing instructions that on upma mornings he would sleep for extra
half hour.
As there were no late hour restrictions on
residents in Gwyer Hall we preferred to see night show of films. We would go to
the Connaught Place by bus after taking early dinner and share a taxi for our
return journey. There was an understanding in the group that by rotation each
one of us would take turns in sharing the taxi charges, which were about Rs
10. One of the persons in our group would
always come up with the excuse that he had a hundred rupee note and did
not have change to pay. To teach him a lesson one day I went to the bank and
got change for one hundred rupees. In the evening we went to see a night show
and returned by taxi. The same person once again waved his hundred rupee note
and expressed his inability to pay the taxi fare. I pulled out the change for
one hundred rupees from my pocket and made him pay the taxi fare on this
occasion. Life was normal and fun.
We had some unwritten rules of conduct for
the residents of the Gwyer Hall. A rule was that lady visitors will not be
entertained in the dining room. Sadr-e-RiyasatYuvraj
Karan Singh had registered for his Ph.D. degree in philosophy from the Gwyer
Hall. We came to know that he was coming to the University for getting his
degree in the convocation. It was decided to host a lunch in his honour. The
problem came when we found out that his wife would accompany him. It was
decided in the general body meeting of the residents to make an exception for
Mrs Karan Singh to take her meal in our dining room. But we will ask Karan
Singh to give a freezer to the kitchen of the Gwyer Hall as gesture of his good
will. A proposal for the freezer was
made in the welcome address. In his thanks speech Karan Singh offered to give a
radiogram instead for use in the common room.
One of the residents was from Kerala. He
knew V. K. Menon, the Defence Minister. At lunch he announced in the dinning
room that at 2 pm Shri Krishna Menon will come to the Gwyer Hall and those
interested in meeting him should assemble immediately in the common room. Shri
Menon came punctually at 2 pm. He first
checked with us whether anyone
from the press was present in the gathering. As we had no time to inform the
press of his visit he continued with his
address to us. He said that he had come to us directly after submitting his
resignation to the Prime Minister. He explained to us the reasons behind the
debacle faced by the Indian army in its face-off with China. I did not understand his
arguments and am unable to recall now what he said in 1962.
In the part-I of the M.Sc. (Physics)
examinations I obtained the highest marks and was awarded the science
exhibition by the Faculty of Science. I had moved up from the bottom to the top
of my class. My teachers had a good opinion of me. I now could hope to get from
them good letters of recommendation to support my application for admission in
the American universities.
I and my three siblings were living in
hostels in Delhi. Shachindra and Narendra were in the boarding of the Modern
School, Radha Jiji lived in the hostel of the Indraprastha college. At the end
of the academic year all four of us went to Port Blair for the summer. Spending
summers in the Government House in Port Blair were similar each year. There was
one unusual experience which I am inclined to share. During one of my sea
journeys to the main land from Port Blair I met someone who worked as an
overseer in the Public Works Department. He asked me whether I believed in
spirits. He mentioned that he knew a person called the Jinn-Baba who had a
spirit under his control. Jinn-Baba could call the spirit under his command. He
offered to arrange a demonstration at his home in Port Blair in our future
visit. We had all read about spirits and jinns (genies) in the stories of the Arabian
Nights. Any child who has read the story of Aladdin and the Magic Lamp would
dream to have a spirit under control to do impossible tasks at his or her
bidding. In my next visit to Port Blair I mentioned the conversation I had on
my boat journey about spirits and their visits. Pitaji asked me not to believe
in superstitions and did not encourage me further. I was keen to see for myself
whether spirits existed and could be kept under control by a person, even if he
is Jinn-Baba. Pitaji relented but he would have nothing do with it himself.
I contacted that overseer. He readily
agreed to arrange a demonstration of the spirit at his home. Jiji came with me
and so did my two brothers. We were seated behind a curtain in the hall of the
flat which was on the first floor. I think there was one window opening
outside. Other than the host, the Jinn-Baba, there was one other person in the
audience. The Jinn-Baba was seated in the front side of a curtain partitioning
the room in two parts. We were seated on
the other side of the curtain. The Jinn-Baba had placed a stool for seating the
spirit and did some puja
with flowers and an offering of sweets. He had a metal plate containing some
grain. He was constantly churning the
grain with his hands and simultaneously reciting some magical words. Lights
were switched off. The only sound we heard was that of movement of grain by
hands by the Jinn-Baba. Then we heard sound of stones falling on the floor.
There was a gust of wind, the curtain flew away and we heard sound of a hard
slap on a face. The Jinn-Baba was lying on the floor as apparently he was
knocked down by the strong blow of a slap given to him by the spirit. Lights
were switched on. The Jinn-Baba said that the spirit is annoyed today. The
other person in the audience claimed that as he was reciting the Hanuman
Chalisa the spirit could not stay in that room at the bidding of the Jinn-Baba.
This explanation apart a suggestion was made to the Jinn-Baba to try to call
the spirit again. This time we heard from the curtain a sound as though someone
has seated itself with a bang on the stool. We felt intimidated by what was
transpiring in that room at that time. Jinn-Baba hinted that we could ask
questions to the spirit. We asked some insipid questions. We heard a voice
responding to our questions in a mixture of nasal and guttural sounds. The
spirit left soon after. I am not convinced whether I was in the presence of
some spirit or not. The demonstration has remained inconclusive about the claim
that a spirit came at the behest of the Jinn-Baba.
At the end of our summer vacations we
returned to our hostels in Delhi. I now had a single room in the Gwyer Hall. I
used the front portion of the room as my study cum visitor area. I had brought
a couple of wooden folding chairs from Port Blair for use by my visitors. I
used the back portion for sleeping. There was a balcony in the rear portion
facing the ridge forest.
Among my teachers there was excitement
about the recent progress in elementary particle physics. Murray Gell-Mann had
discovered a symmetry of the strong nuclear forces which could explain why
elementary particles of a given spin occurred in multiplets. I decided to write
my M. Sc. dissertation on the recent work of Gell-Mann which after Buddha’s
sayings was named the eight-fold way. Dr. V. S. Mathur who had recently
returned after his post-doctoral work taught us elementary particle physics. I
made up my mind to do research in elementary particle physics which is also
alternatively called high energy physics.
One day I was in the Department Library.
Professor A. N. Mitra entered the library with a foreign visitor. He came to me
and introduced the foreign visitor to me. He said, “I
want you to meet Professor Feinberg from Columbia University, New York. Will you like to study at Columbia
University?”
I was surprised by this unexpected development. I said yes.
Professor Mitra said that Professor Feinberg would like to interact with me.
Professor Feinberg asked me what I would like to study at Columbia University.
I had heard from my seniors in a lunch time gossip that an exciting area of
research was the S-matrix theory developed by Chew and Mandelstam. I thought
that my response based on high brow gossip picked by me from my seniors would
create a favourable impression on Professor Feinberg. On the contrary it would
have had a disastrous implication but for my presence of mind. I noticed that
Professor Feinberg was surprised by my reply. He said, “We
don’t do that type of
work in Columbia University.”
I realised that the opportunity was slipping away from me.
I took a corrective step. I told Professor Feinberg, “I
am not keen to work on that problem. I want to learn good physics at Columbia
University.”
The situation came under control. Professor Mitra was also
shocked by my earlier response and came to my rescue. He diverted the
discussion to the work I was doing for my dissertation. Professor Feinberg
noted my particulars and said, “Soon
you will hear from Columbia University.”
In four weeks time I received the offer of admission and
financial assistance from Columbia University. I now had one offer of admission
in hand. I decided to apply to four other Universities; the University of
Chicago, the University of Rochester, the University of Maryland and UCLA.
Pitaji was still not happy with my
decision to take up a career of teaching and research in physics. He contacted
Dr. P. S. Gill whom he knew when he was the Collector of Aligarh district and
Dr. Gill was in Aligarh University. Dr. Gill had to take the permission of the
Collector to visit interior areas of Kashmir for his work on cosmic rays. Dr.
Gill was now the Director of the Central Scientific Instrument Organisation,
Chandigarh. I went with Pitaji to meet Dr. Gill. Dr. Gill convinced Pitaji that
research in physics would open for me career opportunities abroad and also in
world class institutions such as the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research
that had come up in the country. Dr. Gill offered to write letters of
recommendations to support my admission application in the four universities of
my selection.
By the end of March 1964 I had offers of
admission and financial assistance from five US universities. I met Dr. Pramod Srivastava who had recently
returned after doing his Ph.D. from the University of Chicago. I mentioned to Pramod my meeting with Professor Feinberg and the
offer of Columbia University. His
response was that by now Professor Feinberg would have forgotten me and I would
merely be a number in the Columbia University. He also mentioned that the part
of New York City near the Columbia
University was not a good place to live. He convinced me that I should go to
the University of Chicago as some of the leading physicists of the 20th century
were associated with it. He mentioned the name of Enrico Fermi and I knew that
the famous astrophysicist Professor S. Chandrasekhar was in the University of
Chicago. My choice was made. I decided to accept the offer of the University of
Chicago and closed the other options.
I wrote my M.Sc. final examinations. It
did not come as a surprise that I had topped the list of the successful
candidates who wrote the M.Sc. examinations of the University of Delhi in 1964.
I was awarded the prestigious Dr. K. S. Krishnan gold medal and many other
recognition. My performance pleased Pitaji. The other person who would have
been proud of my performance was my grandfather. He had died six months ago and
I lost an opportunity to make him happy.
Jiji and Pitaji had come from Port Blair
for performing the marriage of Radha Jiji. The wedding ceremony was scheduled
to be held in New Delhi on 1st July 1964. They were to return to Port Blair
soon after performing the marriage. Port Blair at that time of the year was
accessible only by sea route. I was to reach Chicago around 25th September. My
problem now was to find a place to stay in Delhi for three and half months. I
came across announcements for admission to Ph.D. course from the University of
Delhi and IIT Kanpur. I applied to both institutions. A few days later I got a
message to see Professor R. C. Majumdar. When I entered his office he was
unhappy. His words to me were, “Hair
on my head did not turn grey in the sun.
I have aged because I had to deal with boys like you.”
He asked whether it was correct that I was going to the
University of Chicago. I replied, “Yes
Sir.”
He then asked me, “Why
have I applied to the University of Delhi for joining the Ph.D. course?”
I replied that I had no place to stay in Delhi and I wanted
to stay in the Gwyer Hall for three months. He said, “If
that is the problem there is a simpler solution. You come with your luggage to
my house and move in with Robie.”
Robie was his son two years senior to me. I felt
embarrassed to stay at Professor Majumdar’s
home with his son. I now wanted to leave
for Chicago as early as possible.
I decided to go by sea to the US. It provided me a respectable alternative to
spending three weeks in purposeless moving around in
Delhi. I used that time in enjoying sea journey and in
sight seeing en route. Pitaji asked me to spend one month in Pondicherry before
sailing from Bombay. Before I left Delhi
for Pondicherry, Tauji, as he now was a Joint Secretary in the Ministry of Home
Affairs, arranged a radio telephone talk with Jiji and Pitaji. They wished me
farewell and bon voyage one month before I left the country. Shri Ganpatram Ji
arranged my accommodation in Pondicherry and took care of me. He
introduced me to Shri Sethna and Shri Madhav Pandit, senior sadhaks in the Sri
Aurobindo Ashram. Shri Madhav Pandit gave me a set of books he had written
explaining the yoga of Sri Aurobindo and the Mother. Shri Sethna showed me his
correspondence with Albert Einstein. He was interested in finding out the
preference of the leading scientists between the big-bang cosmology and the
Hoyle-Narlikar steady state cosmology. I did not know the answer then. In a few
years times the steady state cosmology died with the discovery of the cosmic
microwave radiation.
Shri Ganpatramji sought an audience for me
from the Mother. It was granted. I entered her room in the Ashram. She looked
at me and smiled. I prostrated myself before her for her blessings. She gave me
a blessings flower which had a picture of a pair of swans. No words were
exchanged. She withdrew her looks away from me
and that was the signal to me that my audience with her was over. Respectfully
I withdrew from her presence. This
brought my Pondicherry visit to a close. I took a train from Madras for Bombay.
From Bombay I was scheduled to board S.S. Cilicia for a three-week journey by
sea to Liverpool.
I will write next about my journey by sea
from Bombay to Liverpool and the onward journey by air from London to Chicago.