Thursday, September 10, 2020

Zwischen Wissenschaft und Kunst by Dick Zukerman

A poem by George (Dick) Zukerman for his cousin Joe Auslander, on the occasion of his 90th birthday!

A limmerickian ode to a favoured cousin

Zwischen Wissenschaft und Kunst

 

A mathematician called Joe

Reached 90, with much more to go

I’m willing to bet

That his old clarinet

Still spouts music equations each blow.

 

Pythagarus,  Maxwell  reflected

As vast complex numbers inspected.

Joe figured them out

With gravity’s clout

While his clarinet’s never neglected.

 

In his 91st year of delight 

Relativity still in his sight

He’s sure to emerge

At Beethoven’s urge

On a clarinet playing  all night

 

Now, as  Cantor and Tartar explained

A new subset in space is contained.

Calculus, fractal and real-line 

Prove  clearly that she is a feline.

So we trust that by now, she’s well trained

 

The high school of music and art

 Was patently only a start

Where all cousins attended

Their young lives up-ended

While ambitions veered wildly apart

 

With Clarinet, paint brush, bassoon

We all tried to reach for the moon

While some of us  hurried

The others just worried

That real life would start far too soon.

 

When Auslander proved mathematic

No one dared to insist it was static

He found a safe part

Between science and art

A lifetime of mixture ecstatic.

 

Happy Birthday, Joe!

gz sept 2020

 

 

Alfred Auslander descendants: Gail Ginnity, Dean Auslander

Gail (Auslander) Ginnity writes:


Hello Joe,
I’m sending along joyous birthday wishes to you from the Alfred Auslander side of the family. Alfred, married to Rougea , was my grandfather whose son Stanley was my dad. And Dean Auslander is my brother.


We have enjoyed getting to know so much wonderful history about the Auslander’s because of your son’s excellent research and skill at telling the story. And of course your daughters collaboration.


Thank you for your part - your ongoing support to many family members and imparting great talents to your children.


My very best wishes,
Gail Auslander Ginnetty 

Joe and Barbara

Joe and Barbara Meeker married in 1988, in Barbara's then home in Hyattsville, MD. They have traveled the world together:

 

Joe and Barbara. Spice Garden in Kerala, India. 2018

Joe in Jamaican Rastafari Community,  Jan.2020

 

 

Joe at his 80th birthday, Sept. 2010

 


Joe and Barbara in Venice


Joe in front of Ashley's Sack, National Museum of African American History and Culture
       


Jonathan and Erin King

Mathematician Jonathan King (University of Florida) writes:


 The attached photo shows our [Erin and Jonathan]'s infant
son Isaac on Joe's lap.  Isaac was then about 4 months old,
23 years ago.

  Erin overheard [when Jonathan was out of earshot] Joe saying
something like:

   "Now, Isaac, [while I have great affection and respect for your father]
    do NOT be led astray into the abyss of Measureable
    dynamics, into which your father, sadly, has fallen.

    Topological Dynamics! is the subject... "






Cheers,  -Jonathan

Alicia Miller


Dr. Alicia Miller, Professor of Mathematics at the University of Louisville, writes:

Dear Joe,

You were the first and the most important person that has replied to my letter twenty years ago, which included my first paper, asking for some input and advice. Your letter and message then meant so much to me and it sealed my fate: I definitely decided to work in Topological Dynamics. Thank you from the bottom of my heart for adding such a beautiful meaning to my life and for all the support and encouragement through the years!
Happy 90th birthday!!!
Love,
Alica (Miller)

Joann Moser and Nick Berkoff

 
Joe is a force of nature! I see him running on the Mountainside Loop at Coolfont, hardly breaking a sweat. We see him regularly swimming in the CMA pool.  It is a good chance for a conversation, since it is easy to keep a 6 foot distance standing in the pool. His mind is sharp, his memory is good, and his personality is intact. He reads and loves to discuss world events and politics. Of course Barbara’s love and attention play an important part in his positive attitude. Nick and I aspire to be like him as we get older. We are truly fortunate to have Joe Auslander as a friend.

---Nick Berkoff and Joann Moser (CAM, Berkeley Springs) 



Cesar Silva

Dear Joe,

 This is indeed a special occasion to celebrate your 90th birthday. We met at Maryland around 1987 and since that time I have enjoyed your company and learned much from you. You have introduced me to actors (your cousin), mathematical philosophers, and others. There are many conferences we have organized together that I don’t think would have happened if not for your kind suggestions. Best Wishes,
Cesar Silva


 


 

Wednesday, September 9, 2020

The Conductor (by Bonnie Auslander)

The Conductor
By Bonnie Auslander

The hot water in the little sink in the bathroom in Dad’s study trickles out. 

Yet somehow it’s enough to divide into two even smaller streams. 

There are stain marks on the porcelain where the streams have etched themselves. 

But why would water stain? Two streams, two stains, two nostrils. It makes no sense

yet it does.


Dad is in front of the sink, humming along with a Mozart symphony as he sways and shaves. 

Da-dum, he hums. 

His face is covered in white shaving cream, right hand on the shaving brush, 

left hand on the razor, 

but somehow he is still able to conduct. Da-dum!

The desk in the study is massive dark wood but every bit of the surface is still piled high with books, 

math journals, papers, and paper napkins. 

Somewhere in the middle of the mess, Dad has created a small space for his scratchings. 

He always writes in pencil, and the mathematical notations are light and tentative. 

They trail off. Like bird tracks.


I am fascinated by the small blackboard that hangs opposite the desk,

 the powdery sticks of white chalk that snap so easily, the chalk eraser that has always fallen down. 


Bird tracks on the blackboard as well.


“Can I erase this? I want to draw.”


Sometimes he says yes right away. 

Sometimes he asks me to wait while he copies something down. The answer is never no.


*


Dad has a crew cut. I draw it by stabbing quick stubbly marks, but it never looks quite right.

 Sometimes the pencil point makes a hole in the paper.

I’m relieved when he starts letting his hair grow.

He used to be fat. I drew him that way. 

Then, in Berkeley he takes up jogging, a hanky tucked in the waistband of his shorts. 

Sweat everywhere. Now he’s shrunk to normal size. Easier to draw.


*

“Tell me a joke.”


A pause. “It doesn’t work that way.”

*

Dad is slumped on the sofa at the far end of his study watching baseball. 

The TV sound is off so he can listen to Beethoven, 

which streams out from the old beige-colored radio.

 I wander in. I can barely follow the game even with the sound on.

Dad is conducting.

*

Back from Berkeley at 5807 Chevy Chase Parkway, Dad has started referring 

to orange juice as “Jewish juice.” My brother and I giggle. It sounds awkward. 

Then we adopt it ourselves. We don’t even think about it. “Are we out of Jewish juice?”


Later, we are appalled. The phrase is absurd at best, vaguely anti-Semitic at worst. 

We appeal to Cousin David, whom we are visiting.

But David remarks in his resonant voice, 

“I’m more partial to it as a noun, as in ‘Let us Jews go for a walk.’ 

But Joe likes it as an adjective.”


*

Dad’s latest neologism is “puss.” A person is a puss. “I met a nice puss in line at Safeway.” 

The plural? Pusses, as in “You should really tell those pusses to hire you.” 

My brother and I point out that puss sounds too much like pussy and could easily be misunderstood.

 

“It doesn’t matter that you don’t mean it to be offensive,” we say. “You could still upset someone.”

We pusses have no luck.

*


Our parents split. Our mother gets the kids, Dad gets Dory the dachshund.

 Her full name: Dorabella, from Cosi Fan Tutte. 

It seems he never paid her much attention when our parents were still married, but now he dotes on her. 

Takes her to his office at the University of Maryland where she has her own dog bed to nap in. 

Walks her around the neighborhood dutifully scooping the poop decades

 before proactive scooping was a thing. 

“Your dog can go on my lawn any time!” calls an old lady out the window. Joe straightens up, waves.


As Dory ages her long spine starts to curve with arthritis.

 White speckles her muzzle. 

She doesn’t really walk any more; the motion is more like the lurchings of a land-bound toboggan. 

To me she looks miserable.

But Joe says she still has lots of life in her.

*


In my 20s I date. Jerry the Irish Catholic. John, who hikes all the time so he won’t relapse. 

Chris who lives in a house without a bathroom he built himself in the North Carolina woods. 

A bearded man just back from Peace Corps in Niger. 


My mother dislikes them all. But Dad’s assessments are just like that of my dog, Sukie: 

all the boyfriends are wonderful. 


And they are.


*


I marry Jon. Nina is a year old. 

“Want to ride on Sukie’s back?” says Dad, who, along with Barbara, is visiting us in Ithaca.

Nina isn’t interested. The dog is old and not interested either. 

But Dad holds Nina under the armpits and they go for a brief, faux ride anyway. Dad laughs and laughs. 


Later we have friends over. Rich is funny, Lynne is clever and loves to laugh. 

Joe opines on Jewish humor.

“Of course, in some Jewish jokes the set-up is even better than the punchline. 

For example, Yeshiva playing football against Notre Dame.”

His eyes water and he wipes at them with a hanky. How is it I’ve never heard this joke before? 

We all start laughing and practically drown out the end.


“Gornisht helfn!” Nothing can help you. The Notre Dame QB knows Yiddish.

We collapse on the floor, roaring with laughter. The dog just looks at us. Nina laughs too.


*
During the patter between kids at the violin recital Mitch the Irish fiddler teacher

 tells terrible, awful music jokes. A string of awful puns. 

Joe laughs more loudly than anyone else. I love Mitch, and I’m proud of Joe’s booming guffaws.

I’m relieved when it’s over. “I guess they didn’t do too badly?”

 I’m thinking of the one passage that Milo should have practiced more and had fumbled. 

And Nina had forgotten the retard.


Dad has found the dessert table. His mouth bulges with cookies. 

“I thought they were both terrific,” he says.

And they were.



The Un Family

 Deb Un, daughter of  Vera (Zeltzer) and George Un, writes: "My parents, Vera and George Un always spoke warmly about cousin Joe's wit and humor. They loved taking trips to DC to visit the museums and of course, to see see the Auslanders and spend time exchanging stories around the dinner table. My mom always wished they lived closer to New York!" 

 

George and Vera (Zeltzer) Un

George and Vera (Zeltzer) Un

George and Vera. George's portrait of Vera's father Simmel, on right

 

 



Sunday, September 6, 2020

Saks Family Memories

Joe's sister Judy (Auslander) Saks writes: 

Joe was very much my mentor, influencing me in matterspolitical musical and baseballical... A very good and just older brother: the incident when he bought himself an ice cream (saying that hs had lost MY dime!) struck me a uncharacteristically unjust, quite out of character...  Joe's politics were always to the left of mine, but at the same time, his tolerances were always broader-- he had and has friends very different from himself--- indeed Barbara's outlook differs greatly from Joe's--.   Good for him ! (and her!)  

We both went  to Music & Art High School , but Joe learned so much music, and still plays the clarinet.. He is very much a student.  Baseball is the sole area in which  I retained more interest than he; he taught me well.  Interesting to me, as perhaps to all siblings, is how different we all are.   Life, life,life, as our dear cousin David would say.  Wonderful that he will be 90, and a healthy 90 at that!  

Many more years, dear brother!  

Love, Judy

 

Joe's Family History: Zeltzers and Auslanders

 Joe Auslander's Family History Background

by Mark Auslander (September 2020)

Preface

I would say that my father, who really does regard himself as a citizen of the world, has never been fascinated by family genealogy. This is not to say that Dad is uninterested in his family relations; his mathematical mind is certainly skilled at recollecting and reconstructing kinship relationships and he has maintained close connections with many relatives around the world  But he lacks the obsessive curiosity I would say about family history that my sister Bonnie and I have developed over the years, along with a number of our cousins: he is I suspect just too interested in people of all sorts to wear the narrow blinders required for parochial family history research.

Nonetheless, I thought it would be fun on the occasion of Dad’s 90th birthday to summarize briefly his family history, with a few observations along the way on people and events that may have shaped his distinctive personality and outlook upon the world, including his commitment to social justice, his love of all the arts, and perhaps even his quest, in mathematics, to chart the elegant contours of the music of the spheres.

I begin with the Zeltzer half of the equation and then turn to the Auslander manifold.  (Please send along corrections and clarifications.)

A Birthday Fable: Frank Dux

 Frank Dux, Joe's friend across nine decades, has composed this ftantasy on the occasion of Joe's 90th:

Joe’s Birthday

A fable, a fanciful trifle

Birthdays are commonplace; they’re nothing special.
So what’s to celebrate?  Joe would be special
If he got here and reached this ninetieth year
Without a day of birth.  That would be queer.
And yet, there is something about you, Joe,
That could lend credence to what seems bizarre.
Your friends and family have come to know
The rare and fascinating Joe you are:
Professor Emeritus in academe,
At home collecting birthdays your set theme.
Who among us has not had from Joe
Each year that birthday greeting on the day?
His copious mind a stockroom of birthdays,
This eminent figure we have come to know.
Or do we?  Could it be, not having any,
He compensated by collecting many?
And then among them did himself install,
Became this benefactor to us all.

But why the date September tenth? Why not?
Just probabilities: days drawn by lot.



Frank Dux
August 2020

Saturday, September 5, 2020

Alice Swersey Memories

Alice Swersey remembers stories from across the decades:


1930s: A story that I heard many times from my parents was that Joe was adored by my father when he was a baby.  Harry recounted that whenever he sang Brahms Lullaby to Joe, the baby cried.
It was thought that this baby was particularly musically astute.  Just to prove his theory Harry sang to Joe numerous times and the baby cried each time he heard the music. Subsequent commentary (by my mother) recalled that perhaps Harry was torturing the infant!

1940 s   “Flooden Ooden”  Those were Joe’s funny words which I thought were somewhat endearing when I was a little girl. 

1950s  My image is of Joe pacing through  the living room at 120 Riverside Drive, singing a passage of a Beethoven String Quartet…..”pom pom pom pom pom pom”.

1960s  A visit with Joe and Ruth in Baltimore when Burt was in the army at Aberdeen Proving Grounds in Maryland.  Ruth served delicious pork chops (which Burt did not exactly eat) . This….just before Mark appeared on the scene.

1970s A visit to Washington DC when our children were little.  We slept in a room on the second floor.  Way into the night we heard the click click of chalk on the chalkboard upstairs as Joe was crunching numbers. 

1980s  Fourth Lake in the Adirondacks.  We spent a (rainy) week with Joe, Ruth, Mark, Bonnie, Celia, Harry, Burt, and me, Bill, Sarah, Rachel….oops Rachel was a baby….this is still the 1970s.  Only one day on the beach. 

1990s   A visit to Shadowbrook Farm in Stephentown, NY.  Who would-a thought….. Joe’s second wife, Harriet, has an aunt and uncle who spend summers in Stephentown, NY!  My parents become friendly with these folks.

2000’s  ……if you live long enough…….Joe and Barbara attend High Holiday services at the little country shul in Chatham, NY which Alice & Burt founded.  They liked it. 

and much more……..A delightful evening in Washington DC a few years ago.  Sarah and I were in DC to attend the Lemelson Foundation gala at the Smithsonian.  A memorial tribute to Burt Swersey was part of the celebration.  As Joe, Barbara, Sarah and I waited for a table at a rather tony outdoor restaurant…..Sarah was SO impressed with how much Joe knew about the flute repertoire. 

Yes…..Music, Baseball, Chocolate Cake, an infectious giggle, a warm loving cousin…..

All my love    Alice
 

Louis Uchitele, Joe Auslander, Paul Resika. Rooftop of the Wales Hotel  May 9, 2009 on the occasion of Alice & Burt's 50th Anniversary Party




 

Friday, September 4, 2020

Historical Family Photos

 Here are some historical family photographs, from both the Zeltzer and Auslander sides of Joe Auslander's family


1. Frieda Zeltzer, her mother's sister Sema, and Sema's brother Nison (Presumably in a photographic studio in Bobrusk, c. 1906?)   Frieda was Joe's mother Rebekah's eldest sister. Sema was the sister of Chava Weinstein Zeltzer,  the mother of Frieda and Rebekah (and thus the maternal grandmother of Joe).

Source: Lucy Kerman

 


 

 

 

 





















2. Morris Canick, aged about two years, with his father, Rabbi Jacob Canick, his mother, Peshe Zeltzer Canick (Perla, Pauline,Pearl), sister of Joseph Zeltzer, and his grandmother, Rochel Zeltzer.   The Canicks lived across the street from the Zeltzers.  Perhaps in a Bobrusk studio,  c. 1904

Source: Pearl Solomon (daughter of Morris).  "Bubba Rochel" (1842-1918) was the mother of Joseph Zeltzer, the grandmother  of Rebekah (Zeltzer) Auslander, and thus the maternal grandmother of Joe Auslander





Memories from Vicki Margulies

 Vicki Margulies, Joe's first cousin, writes:

 Although I’m obviously inching in the same general direction, I was and remain Joe’s younger cousin, so alas my memories are usually secondhand or at best limited. Mostly I remember Joe when I'd seem him 'en passant' in Shrub Oak;  he’d often stop by our house on his way to the ball field, for example.   As I recall, brother David revered Joe’s encyclopedic knowledge of Mozart's catalogue as well as his comprehensive knowledge of baseball scores and batting averages.  Frankly, I had no idea what they were talking about then, and am not sure even now that I know what I’m saying.  In those days, Joe was known to walk through our kitchen to see if perchance any of Runya's baked goodies happened to be lying about.  If memory serves, Joe was a particular fan - as I was too - of my mother's chocolate cake, so admittedly I had some trepidation about his brief, but usually productive, visits.

It was always clear that Joe was an esteemed relative, beloved nephew of Runya and Harry, and adored cousin of David's, who had a wealth of information on many fronts.  Since I was ignorant of them all, there were few points of communication for us in the old days.    

 Later, of course I relished Joe's terrific sense of humor, his love for, real interest in, and wide-ranging knowledge of music and all else.  And, of course I consider Joe, one of my very special Zeltzer birthday buddies!  I raise a glass to Joe on this great occasion and send happy birthday wishes to Joe, along with love to Joe, Barbara, Mark, Bonnie, and their families!

xoxoxoxo
Vicki
 

Thursday, September 3, 2020

Photos from Joseph Klein

Joe Auslander's cousin Joseph Klein (son of Pauline Zeltzer and Sol Klein) has kindly shared some family photographs in anticipation of the upcoming birthday:

Pauline and Celia with their mother Chava (Weinstein) Zeltzer.   New York City, 1920s:


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Three Zeltzer sisters; Frieda,  Celia, Pauline.  In Danzig, c. 1920 -21. Note:  Frieda lived in Danzig, from  November 1920-December 1921,  Several of her younger sisters evidently passed through Danzig and saw her en route to the US. (Judy recalls that Rebekah remembered that the best butter she ever tasted was in Danzig, when she was staying with Frieda, during that time).  It should be noted that be this point was a Free City under a League of Nations Mandate: William was imprisoned for a time in Danzig or Poland and Frieda appears to have visited him frequently.





 

 

 











Rebekah (Zeltzer) Auslander, W. 84th and Broadway, New York City. (c.1968?)


















Cilli Auslander (Bi's sister) with Pauline (Zeltzer) Klein, and Runya (Zeltzer) Margulies, in Vienna, 1970s












Pauline and Runya,  Vienna, 1970s?)













Paul Resika and Joe Auslander in foreground. Ellen Schattschneider (wife of Mark Auslander) in background.  Family gathering, Upper East Side  New York City. c. 2000?












Barbara Meeker, Joe Auslander, Joseph Klein, August 1988 in the Cairo Building, Washington DC.  Pastel by Paul Resika on wall.











Joe Auslander, Joseph Klein, Vicky Klein. August 1988 in the Cairo Building, Washington DC.















Wednesday, September 2, 2020

From Tom Ward

 See the lovely video recorded by Tom Ward for Joe's 90th:  https://www.dropbox.com/s/cmqp9v7u1ppifpp/WIN_20200902_09_20_20_Pro.mp4?dl=0

Transcript below:

Dear Joe – a very happy 90th birthday to you! 


I arrived at Washington National Airport (as it was then known – I won’t speculate on such a happy day on the wisdom and appropriateness of naming airports after Republican presidents) late in August 1989. A letter home a few weeks later read “Stepping out of Washington National Airport, I was met with stunning heat and humidity, rather like Manzini at its most oppressive. Fortunately, I had been met by two people from the Department, Ken Berg and Joe Auslander. We walked across a grill pan of a car park to Joe’s little car, and then proceeded through the hair-raising roads of Washington to Hyattsville. After locating the house where I was to stay and leaving my luggage there, we three went to collect Joe’s wife and go to a restaurant.”


The great kindness Joe (and Ken Berg and Nelson Markley, and others from the group that Delores, one of the administrative staff in the mathematics department, referred to as “the guys” – Mike Boyle, Dan Rudolph, Misha Brin) showed to a nervous new post-doc who hadn’t yet defended his thesis made a huge impact. My family background involved multiple countries, but one of us working in the United States was a real departure, and my mother announced that for the first time it felt like one of her children had gone somewhere truly foreign. She also gave me the best advice to anyone taking the first wobbly steps as an academic: “don’t try to be clever, everyone here is clever. Try to be kind.”
That was reinforced by how Joe treated everyone. Practically of course, but Joe would also find opportunities to boost younger mathematicians and students in seminars. Celebrating the success of others.


My next vivid memory of Joe and Barbara was a flying visit Tania and I made to Washington just a few weeks after our marriage in 1990, an enjoyable dinner with them and a lovely Joe incident – he decided he should have given us a wedding present, so rushed into his own kitchen and assembled a set of beautiful hand-made mugs for us, which stayed with us for many years – a reminder of his instinctive generosity.
Mathematics, life, the minutiae of the distinction between “ergodic theory” and “topological dynamics” meant that over the next thirty years we only met at certain broad conferences. Always a pleasure to catch up with Joe, to share pain or joy about political developments, a random collage of lunches in Bonn and teas in Warwick and so on.


So – a very happy birthday Joe from both of us, very best wishes for the future, and thank you for your many kindnesses all those years ago.

Memories from the Feldmans


In honor of the long-standing, multi-generational friendship between the Auslanders and the Feldmans and in appreciation of the great friendship you had, Joe, with our dad Jack, Ben and David Feldman wish you a VERY happy 90th birthday!! Ben’s wife Andrea and daughter Ella also send you our very best.
 
It was wonderful for us (David and Ben) to meet your family back in 1975, (Jack had a sabbatical, at Warwick and the Auslanders, who were living in London for the summer, would visit Warwick on day trips). . We were living in the “boondocks”, more specifically, a semi-circle of visiting faculty homes on the University of Warwick campus.  These homes won awards for their architectural vision -  a vision that soared above such petty details as ensuring semi-recessed ceiling lights not be in the paths of swinging doors.
 
But you and your family were in London, and we were very impressed with the Auslanders’ familiarity with that swinging city. Bonnie and Mark also introduced us to Monty Python’s Flying Circus, an arguably Pandoran gift that subjected your friend Jack to years of his children giggling and loudly speaking in bad English accents.
 
Pieces of our families have overlapped on other occasions and eras, in Berkeley and in DC, and that familiarity and continuity has always been heartwarming and comforting.  We have witnessed the pleasure and dedication with which our Dad would attend your annual Dynamical Systems conferences, and it was obvious that much of it was a pretext for socializing with you and Barbara.
 
The forced separation of this pandemic has strangely brought about new kinds of intimacy, such as this blog. Writing a personal note on the occasion of your 90th birthday, Joe, has inspired us to get just a little bit “corny” and tell you from our hearts how much we have appreciated your role in our lives writ large, including the hospitality and kindness you and Barbara have shown to us and our father over recent years during his visits to DC, and your consistent inquiries and support when those visits could no longer be managed.  Please remember that one piece of the Feldman family, Ben and Andrea and Ella, are still living a few blocks away (or 90-ish minutes from West Virginia, whose charms we are only now discovering) and we would be delighted to visit you for fun or to help you with any challenges you may encounter.
 
Love, Ben, David, Andrea and Ella (Feldman)

Tuesday, September 1, 2020

Memories from Marian Smith

 Dear Joe:
It was barely daybreak on a cold, snowy morning in upstate New York as we set out for Washington, DC.   There was no doubt that we were meant to be doing this.  My cousin, Barbara, had introduced you to our family a while back.  Now my daughter, Barbara, and I were on our way to your wedding!  I don’t remember a lot about the ceremony itself, except for meeting Judy, Alan, and many other wonderful people.  It was what happened after the party that turned a delightful, warm-in-spite-of-the-wintry-weather family occasion into a memorable event that is seared into my memory.  Much to your consternation, the key to your apartment at the Cairo, the assigned accommodation for out us of-town relatives, didn’t work!  In spite of all your efforts the lock wouldn’t budge, and eventually you and Barbara took us home to her house in Silver Spring.  Being houseguests on your wedding night was a unique way to launch our new relationship as cousins!  


Since then you have become an integral part of the clan.  Spending time together in DC, Endwell, or Boston has always been a highlight.  When my children were small you expanded all our horizons as you taught them about the world outside our sphere.  The quest for DNA, check!  The works of Orhan Pamuk, check!  Middle Eastern carpets from the McMullen Collection at a DC museum, check!  (This last was made even more special when I realized that this was the same Joe McMullen who, the summer I was 16 and attending a Clan MacMillan gathering in Scotland, spearheaded the expedition to get me a kilt!)  
Your definition of civilization as living where you can receive home delivery of the Washington Post has become part of Smith family lore; my children were awed by your tenacity when a photographer at one of their weddings attempted to separate you from your newspaper.   My life has been enriched by Bonnie, Jon, Nina and Milo, and by Mark and Ellen.  I treasure having been your guest during President Obama’s inauguration week, including Mark’s presentation at the Museum of African American History and Culture and joining the crowds on the Mall with Mark and Ellen.  What a privilege it was to participate in that historic day!


My only regret is that we have not seen enough of each other.  All my life, an in-person visit with Barbara has been special.  Then she met you.  You, Joe, are frosting on the cake!


Happy Birthday!  


Love from us all,


Marian
Barbara & Adam, Ian, Adelaide and Lillian
Audrey & James, Eloise and Atticus
Nancy & Ryan, Vivian and Liam   

Memories from Santiago Molina-Velasco

Santiago Molina-Velasco, the contractor who has lovingly worked on Joe and Barbara's house on "R" street for two decades, kindly shares the following memories, starting with their successful combat against the rats ("varmints" as Santiago puts it) that plague so many DC dwellings.

I met Joe in the year 2000 and I must say that I feel proud and bless to have known him and his wife Barbara, whom I have learned to care and respect and, why not, to love them both. The first time I came to their home, I remember they had a varmint problem because of the restaurants dumping their waste by the parking space fence. Joe walked me to the back of the house that day and picked up what I remember now was a pitchfork, to which I was a little surprised, but soon enough I knew why he had done that. The Varmints that were running around the backyard, were  big and wild: Joe would jump up high with the pitchfork when they got closer and scare them off at the same time. I thought that getting out of that job soon, wasn’t going to be soon enough!


I gave them an estimate and hoped for the best, (You can only imagine what was on my mind.) Well, they gave me the job! And told me to start right away. We conquered and got their backyard back to them and have now made it a great space to entertain and relax. I’m glad now, that I didn’t run away!

 I also remember when part of their home caught on fire in 2005, when they called me that morning to tell me that their beautiful home had been in a fire,  I ran to their home. I remember finding Joe walking around the ashes holding something that seemed dear to him and wondering what would happen now. We had a small conversation and all 3 of us agreed, that together we were going to make that dirty looking diamond of a home shine again. Which we did!

It has been my pleasure to work in many different projects with them both, they are honest and kind, a contractor couldn’t ask for better customers. I feel that God blessed me when he put them in my life, I have learned to care and respect them very much, because in my book, Joe and Barbara are great human beings. I have many wonderful stories and memories about them both and I could probably spend 30 pages trying to write them all down.

  I can tell you one thing, we have spent 20 years shining and polishing their wonderful home, for which they care very much, as I know. It has been a life experience and journey for me, to share as their contractor for the last 2 decades. One can only hope for 2 more decades! Thank you for giving me the opportunity to share these few stories. 

Enjoy your father while you have him: ask him questions about his youth and get to know him, because life waits for no one. Long live Joe Auslander!

Zwischen Wissenschaft und Kunst by Dick Zukerman

A poem by George (Dick) Zukerman for his cousin Joe Auslander, on the occasion of his 90th birthday! A limmerickian ode to...