
THE STORY OF
JACK TRAMIEL
Only 10 when the
Nazis marched into his city of Lodz, Poland,
in 1939, Jack Tramiel (then named Idek Tramielski)
initially had a kid's thrilled reaction to the
sheer spectacle of the scene: weapons glinting
in the sun, soldiers goose-stepping, planes
overhead. "It was a fantastic thing,"
he remembers.
Reality crashed
down after that. Lodz's Jews--one-third of the
city's 600,000 people--were ordered out of their
homes and into a crowded ghetto. For nearly
five years Jack (an only child) and his parents
lived there in one room, scavenged for food,
and worked--his father at shoemaking, Jack in
a pants factory. The faces that the Tramiels
saw in the ghetto changed constantly: Jews left,
new Jews came in, often from other countries.
Later Tramiel learned that the Jewish leader
of the ghetto was parcelling out its residents
to the Germans, believing that the community
would be left in relative peace as long as he
periodically delivered up a contingent of its
residents for deportation--and no doubt extermination.
In August 1944
the Tramiels themselves were herded into railroad
cars, told they were going to Germany to better
themselves, and instead shipped to Auschwitz.
Jack's most vivid memory of the three-day trip
is that each person received a whole loaf of
bread as a ration--a feast beyond his imagination.
At journey's end, the men were separated from
the women (at which point Jack lost track of
his mother) and then themselves split into two
groups, one permitted for the time being to
live, the other sent to Auschwitz's gas chambers.
Jack and his father were thumbed into the group
that survived.
A few weeks later,
Jack and his father were "examined"
by the notorious Dr. Josef Mengele and thumbed
again into a survivors line. "What do you
mean--examined?" Tramiel is asked. "He
touched my testicles. He judged whether we were
strong enough to work." Having passed,
Tramiel and his father were transported to a
spot just outside Hanover, Germany, and there
set to building a concentration camp into whose
barracks they themselves moved. In weather that
was often bitter cold, they worked in thin,
pyjama-like garments, and they grew increasingly
emaciated on a deprivation diet: watery "soup"
and bread in the morning, and a potato, bread,
and more "soup" at night.
By December 1944
the Tramiels were assigned to different work
crews and seeing each other only occasionally.
At one of their meetings the father told the
son that many young people in the camp were
managing to smuggle food to their elders--and
why hadn't Jack done that for his father? Stung,
Jack studied for days how to deal with an electric
fence that stood between him and an SS kitchen
and finally succeeded in burrowing his thin
frame under it to steal food--one potato and
some peels. But when he got the food to his
father, malnutrition had gripped the older man
and grossly swollen his body. He could not eat.
Soon after, he died in the camp's infirmary.
Later, Jack learned that the death was directly
caused by an injection of gasoline into his
father's veins.
As the winter
stretched into the spring of 1945, Jack Tramiel
himself grew increasingly fatalistic. But then
a strange end-of-the-war tableau unfolded. First,
the Germans vanished from the camp; second,
the Red Cross moved in briefly, overfed the
prisoners to the point that some died, and then
left; third, the Germans returned and then vanished
again. On their heels came two American soldiers--"20-foot-tall
black men, the first blacks I'd ever seen,"
says Tramiel--who loomed in a barracks door,
peered at the prisoners hiding beneath the straw
of their bunks, said something in English that
one Jew gleaned as "More Americans will
be coming," and left. Next a tank rolled
up. In it stood a Jewish chaplain in dress uniform,
who declared in Yiddish: "You are free,"
and told the tank to move on. These were troops
of the advancing American Army, the month was
April 1945, and Tramiel was 16.
Tramiel, today
69 and a fireplug in build, stayed in Europe
for more than two years after his liberation,
and many of his recollections of those days
concern food: how he tricked his way into a
sanatorium to a rich, and shamefully fattening,
diet; how he gorged happily while working in
an American Army kitchen; how he did other odd
jobs for "money or food." But he also
learned during this time that his mother was
alive and back again in Lodz. He saw her there
but then left, resolved by that time to marry
a concentration-camp survivor he'd met, Helen
Goldgrub, and go with her to the U.S.
The two wed in
Germany in July 1947. They got to the U.S. separately,
though--he first, in November of that year.
His confidence, strengthened by what he'd survived,
bordered on hubris: "I figured I could
handle just about anything," he says. He
started out living at a Jewish agency, HIAS,
in New York City; got a job as a handyman at
a Fifth Avenue lamp store; learned English from
American movies; and at their end pigged out
on chocolate instead of eating regular dinners.
Then, in early
1948, he did the improbable, joining the U.S.
Army. By the time he left it four years later,
he'd been reunited with his wife and fathered
a son (the first of three). The Army had also
pointed him to a career by putting him in charge
of repairing office equipment in the New York
City area.
When Tramiel checked
back into civilian life, he entered a long period
of close encounters with machines that typed
words and manipulated numbers. He first worked,
at $50 a week, for a struggling typewriter-repair
shop. Using his Army connections, Tramiel got
the owner a contract to service several thousand
machines. "The guy flipped," says
Tramiel, but did not give his enterprising employee
a raise. "I have no intention of working
for people who have no brains," said Tramiel
to the owner, and quit.
Tramiel then bought
a typewriter shop in the Bronx. He did repair
work for Fordham University and, when he once
got a chance to buy scads of used typewriters,
rebuilt and resold them. He next prepared to
import machines from Italy but found he could
get the import exclusivity he wanted only by
moving to Canada. It was in Toronto, in 1955,
that he founded a company he called Commodore,
an importer and eventually a manufacturer of
both typewriters and adding machines. Why Commodore?
Because Tramiel wanted a name with a military
ring and because higher ranks, such as General
and Admiral, were already taken.
Commodore went
public in 1962 at a Canadian bargain-basement
price of $2.50 a share--a deal that raised funds
Tramiel needed to pay off big loans he'd gotten
from a Canadian financier named C. Powell Morgan,
head of Atlantic Acceptance. Deep trouble erupted
in the mid-1960s when Atlantic, to which Commodore
was almost joined at the hip, went bankrupt,
amid charges of fraudulent financial statements,
dummy companies, and propped stock prices. Tramiel
was never charged with illegalities, but an
investigative commission concluded that he was
probably not blameless. In any case, the Canadian
financial establishment ostracized him. Struggling
to keep Commodore itself out of bankruptcy,
he was forced in 1966 to give partial control
of the company to Canadian investor Irving Gould.
Commodore's line
then was still typewriters and adding machines,
but the electronics revolution was under way
and setting up shop in Silicon Valley. Tramiel
himself moved there in the late 1960s and soon,
displaying a speed-to-market talent that has
characterized his whole life, had Commodore
pumping out electronic calculators. In time,
one product, a hand-held calculator, grew so
popular that it was self-destructive: The company
that supplied Commodore with semiconductor chips,
Texas instruments, decided to produce calculators
itself--selling them at prices that Commodore
couldn't match.
With Commodore
again reeling, Tramiel vowed never again to
be at the mercy of a vital supplier. In 1976
he made a momentous acquisition: MOS Technology,
a Pennsylvania chip manufacturer that also turned
out to be extravagantly nurturing about 200
different R&D projects. Tramiel, a slash-and-burn,
early-day Al Dunlap in management style, killed
most of the projects immediately. But he listened
hard when an engineer named Chuck Peddle told
him the company had a chip that was effectively
a microcomputer. And small computers, said Peddle,
"are going to be the future of the world."
Willing to take
a limited gamble, Tramiel told Peddle that he
and Tramiel's second son, Leonard, then getting
a Columbia University astrophysics degree, had
six months to come up with a computer Commodore
could display at an upcoming Comdex electronics
show. They made the deadline. "And everyone
loved the product," says Tramiel, relishingly
rolling out its name, PET, for Personal Electronic
Transactor. Unfortunately, this was potentially
an expensive pet, carrying a lot of risk--and
demanding, says Tramiel, "a lot of money
I still did not have." So he determined
to gauge demand by running newspaper ads that
offered six-week delivery on a computer priced
at $599, a seductive figure on which Tramiel
thought he could still make a profit. The ads
appeared, and a hugely encouraging $3 million
in checks came back.
Commodore got
to the market with its computer in 1977, the
same year that Apple and Tandy put their micros
on sale. In the next few years, Tramiel drove
those competitors and others wild by combatively
pushing prices down and down, to levels like
$200. He also became famous for rough treatment
of suppliers, customers, and executives--and
about it all was fiercely unrepentant. "Business
is war," he said. "I don't believe
in compromising. I believe in winning."
Which is what
he did in those early years for computers, leading
Commodore to $700 million in sales in fiscal
1983 and $88 million in profits. At its peak
price in those days, the stock that Tramiel
had sold in 1962 at a price of $2.50 a share
was up to $1,200, and his 6.5% slice of the
company was worth $120 million.
But then, in early
1984, just as annual sales were climbing above
$1 billion, Tramiel clashed with a Commodore
stockholder mightier than he, Irving Gould--and
when the smoke had cleared, Tramiel was out.
The nature of their quarrel was never publicly
disclosed. Today, however, Tramiel says he wanted
to "grow" the company, and Gould didn't.
Commodore was
really Tramiel's last hurrah. True, he surfaced
again quickly in the computer industry, agreeing
later in 1984 to take over--for a pittance--Warner
Communications' floundering Atari operation.
But in a business changing convulsively as IBM
brought out its PC and the clones marched in,
Atari was a loser and ultimately a venture into
which Tramiel was unwilling to sink big money.
Eventually he folded Atari into a Silicon Valley
disk-drive manufacturer, JTS, in which he has
a major interest but plays no operational role.
Today Tramiel
is basically retired and managing his money.
From four residences, he's cut down to one,
a palatial house atop a foothill in Monte Sereno,
California. In its garage are two Rolls-Royces,
a type of luxury to which Tramiel has long been
addicted.
Naturally,
charity fundraisers look Tramiel up. When those
for the Holocaust Memorial Museum appeared,
he at first thought of it as just one more philanthropic
cause to be supported. But his wife, Helen,
69, who spent her concentration camp days at
Bergen-Belsen, is intensely aware that both
she and her husband survived what millions of
other Jews did not. "No," she said
adamantly, "for this one we have to go
all out."
|