Posts Tagged ‘Marxist’

Me and Jim Simons, the “Elvis” of Hedge Fund Managers(II)

Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009

Jim Simons had a droll sense of humor. During my last academic year at Stony Brook, ‘69-’70, I made arrangements to go to Cuba during the Winter Break to help with their math program. The chairman had to write a letter attesting to my fitness for the job. This way I could get my passport endorsed for one round trip to Cuba. When I spoke to Simons about this, he told me about being debriefed by the IDA after a trip to Latin America. He said he told his interrogator that on his way back he stopped for a few days in Havana. The man quizzing him stiffened up, until he realized that it was a joke! (I never made it to Cuba, but that is another story.)

Another time, we were discussing in a departmental meeting what role students should have in running the department. Ever the mathematician, Simons decided to start with the first grade and work his way up. He said, “Well we can all agree that first graders should not be running the first grade,” to which my good friend and fellow “warm body”, Hugo d’Alarcao, a true Marxist if there ever was one, responded, “Why Not?”

I became friends with another mathematician, Barney Glickfield, as we worked in the same field. He was a very humorous fellow. He had taught at the University of Washington, but was job-hunting. At some math meeting, I can’t remember which one, I arranged for him to have an interview with Simons. As Barney told it, the interview was very short.

Simons: Are you fantastic?
Barney: No, but neither are you.
Simons: That’s true, but I’m the Chairman

I didn’t take well to my non-renewal. I sent out an announcement to some friends and former teachers that I had “Published and Perished”. The mantra in academe, then as now, was “Publish or Perish.” I could have stayed for the academic year ‘70-’71, but I decided instead to accept a visiting position at Kansas State University, arranged by my former teacher and good friend, Karl Stromberg.

So, in the summer of 1970, Hugo d’Alarcao, I, and another friend drove to the Southwestern U.S. At the end of the trip, they flew back to New York, and I made my way to KSU. On our way through Kansas, we stopped at Dodge City. I got a postcard with a picture of “Boot Hill”, which Hugo and I signed and mailed to Simons with the inscription “Wish you were here!”

The last time I saw Simons was at an American Math Society meeting in San Antonio in 1980. He and Bill Thurston shared a prize, and they did an unintended comedy routine on stage. Simons made some funny remarks, one of which was just after he opened the envelope with the check for the prize money. He said something to the effect that, “Last night in New York before flying down here, I thought that it would be OK to tell some friends that I had won this prize, and I asked them, ‘How much is it for? How much money?’ And no one seemed to know.” “I guess we’ll leave that as an open question.” he intoned, as he put the check back in the envelope.

After the Awards ceremony, I went down to the front of the auditorium, shook Simons’ hand and and congratulated him. He seemed a bit taken aback, I guess because of the “Wish you were here” business. But hey, he deserved the Award. It was for joint work with S. S. Chern, one of the greatest. And what are “warm bodies” for anyway, if not to be dispatched when the time comes?

I knew that Simons had gone into the money-making business in the early ’80’s and had eventually left mathematics (as a vocation, but not as an object of philanthropy), taking several other mathematicians with him. But I had no idea of the extent of his success until I read a recent article($) in the New York Times, stating that he had made $1.7 billion last year. I tried to get his email address (Fat chance of that! I could try “snail mail”, but that’s so, oh, Twentieth Century.) If I could send him an email message, here is what it would say:

Dear Jim:
Congratulations on being a mega-billionaire. Have you ever considered paying “reparations” to all those “warm bodies” you dispatched while building up the department at Stony Brook? (Just kidding!) Best wishes for continued success, and in the meantime, don’t be a hedgehog.

It Turns Out that Barack Obama Is A Black Person After all. And All this Time I Thought He Was Hawaiian.

Friday, July 24th, 2009

Barack Obama branded himself as a black person when he moved to Chicago’s south side and started doing community organizing.  However, his experience while growing up in Hawaii, and while living in Indonesia, was not that of a typical black person growing up in the 48 states.  He experienced none of the racial profiling that he now appears to see in the arrest of Harvard Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., at his home near Harvard Square in Cambridge, Mass.

I think that, at heart, Obama doesn’t relate well to people in uniform.  Calling the Cambridge police actions “stupid” reminds me of his calling the Iraq War “dumb”.  So who is Barack Obama at heart?  Don’t look to Jeremiah Wright or Bill Ayres. No. Look to Saul Alinsky, the great Marxist Socialist Community Organizer.

Getting back to the arrest of Gates, Michael Kinsley sums up the situation very well in his column in today’s Washington Post.  My favorite passage:

“After calming down a bit, Gates responded to being arrested the way any self-respecting Harvard professor would: He informed Charles Ogletree, director of the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race and Justice at Harvard Law School (“Call Tree,” he told his secretary as he was driven off, cuffed)[.]”

It seems to me that the lesson to be learned from this incident is that police everywhere need to be schooled in “Professor Profiling”

On the Arab-Israeli Conflict (II)

Tuesday, January 6th, 2009

I have published an improved version of my two posts on Associated Content.

On the Arab-Israeli Conflict

On the Arab-Israeli Conflict

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

 I want to add to my previous post, “When Herb Bisno Cleaned My Clock”.

First, some personal history. I am a non-observant Jew. My only year in Hebrew School coincided with the founding of the State of Israel in 1948. As I was precocious when it came to politics, my entire political life has coincided with the existence of Israel. I have lived through the whole thing. The initial war of independence. The attacks by Syria on Israeli villages from the Golan Heights. The 1956 Anglo-French-Israeli invasion of Egypt. The rise of Arafat’s Fatah. The Six Day War. The Yom Kippur war, and so forth.
Don’t forget that the Israel of today is a very different entity than the one of sixty years ago. That one was Socialist, anti-colonialist, supported by the Soviet bloc more strongly than by the U.S. (The arms they used in 1948 came from Czechoslovakia.)

I am not in favor of ethnic cleansing, as someone implied on Democratic Underground, although of late it has been the Israelis who have been doing most of it. You want a “one-state” solution. Fine, but that would mean the end of the Jewish state, thanks to the Arab womb. And would the Arabs really buy into it, or would it just be another step in their plan to reclaim the entire land of Israel, from the River Jordan to the Sea. And how many Israelis would buy into it? Certainly not those like the settlers who live in Hebron. They are just as crazy as the Hamas leaders are.

There could have been a peaceful solution years ago, but Yasir Arafat saw to it that it never really happened. Don’t forget, he founded Fatah before the Six Day War, when Israel was still within its 1948 borders. Now I don’t think a peaceful solution is possible. What worries me now is the possibility of “reprisals” against “soft” Jewish targets outside of the Middle East.

Here are some interesting articles on the subject, published in recent years.

Unforgiven    , Jeffrey Goldberg, The Atlantic, May 2008.

The Apostate  , David Remnick, The New Yorker,  July 30, 2007

 

In A Ruined Country  , David Samuels, The Atlantic, September 2005

 

Among the Settlers   , Jeffrey Goldberg, The New Yorker, May 31, 2004

 

When Herb Bisno Cleaned My clock

Sunday, January 4th, 2009

Almost exactly 41 years ago, I visited my friends, Jill and Fred Heilpern, in Eugene, Oregon, where I had been a graduate student, getting my Ph.D. in Mathematics in 1966. This was January, 1968, six months after Israel’s six day war in June, 1967. I was an Assistant Professor at SUNY Stony Brook. One of my closest friends was Hugo d”Alarcao, an unabashed Marxist, who had filled my head with all sorts of arguments supporting the poor Palestinians who had been vanquished by the Israelis.

The Heilperns had a party for me, and Bisno, a social work professor whose wife, Ziona, was an Israeli, decided to come to the party to do a number on me, having heard about my anti-Zionist position. He did indeed “clean my clock”, ending with the statement, “At least I admit I don’t know anything about mathematics.”

The funny part of this was that my arguments were in fact correct, although I didn’t supply much depth without Hugo there to help me. There was in fact a Palestinian people who had lived in the land of Israel and had been pushed out by the Israelis. Israeli President Shimon Peres, among others, has bought into this argument.

Bisno’s attack has rankled me all these years, and I hope he goes to Hell. (If alive, he would be in is mid-eighties.) And the Israeli-Palestinian dilemma is still with us, given Israel’s recent invasion of Gaza. My position?

Israel will never be able to live in peace with its neighbors. The Israelis should all emigrate to somewhere. Most likely the United States. The Arabs didn’t do the Holocaust, and in any case the Israelis should quit bringing it up. The fact the there was a state of Israel 2000 years ago is irrelevant.

Otherwise, Israel will become more and more a garrison state. They have been enabled in their militancy by the Bush administration. Hopefully, Obama will be more even-handed. But there is no “two-state” solution. The best solution is for the Israelis to go elsewhere, where they will continue to thrive. This is hard for me to say, and in my opinion most Jews in the United States tend to view Israel as a glorified “summer camp”. Well, the summer is over.