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Thursday, November 13, 2008 - 12:42 PM
What led to the project: Joel Kugelmass had some
interesting reading tastes as a child growing up in the 1950s. He read
Euclid's writings on geometry as a 11-year-old seventh grader. (He had
skipped grades.) He soon turned his attention to number theory,
reading everything he could about this "elegant" branch of mathematics
that is concerned with the properties of numbers. This interest was
surprising to his more literary family—his father was a reporter at the
San Jose Mercury News—but he kept at it. http://louissheehan.bravejournal.com/
In high school he did a math project for the Westinghouse Science
Talent Search in which he attempted to show that every even number can
be expressed as the sum of two prime numbers.
(Prime numbers are those including 2, 3, 5, 7, 11,13 and so on that can
only be divided without a remainder by 1 and themselves.) For instance,
10 is the sum of primes 7 and 3.
He came up with a fairly imaginative proof of the idea—with one
problem: He'd made a mistake, a reality that was pointed out "in the
first five minutes of my interview when I got to Washington," D.C., as
a finalist in 1963, he says. "It was a difficult way to start, I must
admit." But the judges were still impressed with his ability to think
on his feet and answer other questions. "I guess I wasn't the first
mathematician to have a faulty proof," he says. http://louissheehan.bravejournal.com/
The effect on his career: The Westinghouse
contest did shape Kugelmass's life, though probably not in the way its
founders intended. Like many finalists, before going to college,
Kugelmass did a summer math internship at what was then called the
National Bureau of Standards, now called the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
The year 1963 was a heady time to be in the nation's capital. Kugelmass
went to the march on Washington on August 28, and found listening to
Martin Luther King, Jr.'s "I Have a Dream" speech to be an "unbelievable experience."
But the next day when he went to the usual lunch spot where the
mathematicians he worked with gathered, "there was no discussion about
it," he says. "It's like it didn't happen. I think at that point I
began to wonder a little bit if these were my kind of people." He
started at Stanford University as a math major, but an existential
literature class he took sophomore year—in which the professor would
weep with emotion over the texts—pushed him over the edge. No one was
weeping in math class. He decided to change fields, graduating in 1967
with a degree in English.
This was the height of the Vietnam War era, so, partly to keep his
student deferment, and partly to study literature more intensely,
Kugelmass started graduate school at Brandeis University in Waltham,
Mass. But he became increasingly involved in the antiwar movement,
setting up rallies and such. At one point, Kugelmass ripped up his
draft card and mailed it in. He was ordered immediately to report for
induction, but he wound up being medically ineligible for service.
He drifted away from graduate school, but kept working as a
community organizer, working with various groups in Boston on projects
including getting African-Americans elected to the local school board,
working with street gangs, and serving as an alternate delegate to the
1972 Democratic convention for Shirley Chisholm. But
eventually, having a girlfriend he wanted to marry, "I looked around
and realized I needed to get some gainful employment," he says. He
spent three years working for the Massachusetts Department of Public
Health, and then his wife, a labor organizer, was transferred to
California to work for the United Electrical Workers. Because of his
political work, Kugelmass wound up being tapped then, in 1975, to be
the executive director of the Pacifica Radio Foundation,
a listener-supported network with a history of activism. That lasted
until 1979: "Internecine warfare eventually claimed my position," says
Kugelmass.
But he'd "done a really good job getting Pacifica running sanely," says Barbara O'Connor,
the former chair of the California Public Broadcasting Commission,
which hired Kugelmass as its executive director after his Pacifica
tenure. O'Connor, now a professor of communications at California State
University, Sacramento, recalls Kugelmass's tenure as being "a really
good time for public broadcasting," in part because of his
"entrepreneurial skill set and curiosity." The commission added
stations, started regular coverage of California state politics on its
public radio stations, found funds for independent producer
programming, and demonstrated new technologies. For example, they held
the first videoconference run by the state.
The California government eventually disbanded the commission,
though. Kugelmass became a telecommunications consultant, and in 1989,
landed a job in the University of California, Davis's
telecommunications department. There, he was asked to write a policy
paper on telecommuting, which was a very "trendy concept" in the early
1990s. He spent so much time researching how it should be done, and how
U.C. Davis could implement a broad telecommuting policy, that in 1995
his report eventually became a book: Jossey-Bass published Telecommuting: A Manager's Guide to Flexible Work Arrangements. http://louissheehan.bravejournal.com/
What he's doing now: As Kugelmass notes, he's had
a "disparate" career. In 1992 he took a job at U.C. Davis's medical
center, helping to build their cancer research program. These days, he
writes grant proposals, edits manuscripts, and has set up a video
conferencing program that community physicians can use to discuss
patients with U.C. Davis's cancer specialists.
It's a different path than he might have predicted taking as a young
mathematician. "I can't say what would have ensued had I stayed in the
field," he says. "My suspicion is that I was tremendously competent
intellectually in mathematics, but maybe not necessarily all that
creative." http://louissheehan.bravejournal.com/
And as it was, the politics of the times meant that he wouldn't have
been happy studying math instead of leading marches. "The social
changes that were underway then weren't just events people attended,"
he says. "It was a daily dose of 'What's the latest from Vietnam?' to
'What is the meaning of a relationship between two people?' These were
items that were discussed from breakfast to two o'clock in the morning
every single day." Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire
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