Israel Nathan Herstein was a mathematician, appointed as professor at the University of Chicago in 1951.
Background
Herstein was born in Lublin, Poland, in 1923. His family emigrated to Canada in 1926, and he grew up in a harsh and underprivileged environment where, according to him, "you either became a gangster or a college professor" During his school years he played football, ice hockey, golf, tennis, and pool.
Career
He worked on a variety of areas of algebra, including ring theory, with over 100 research papers and over a dozen books He also worked as a steeplejack and as a barker at a fair. He received his Bachelor of Surgery degree from the University of Manitoba and his Master of Arts from the University of Toronto.
He received his Doctor of Philosophy from Indiana University in 1948.
His advisor was Max Zorn. He held positions at the University of Kansas, Ohio State University, University of Pennsylvania, and Cornell University before permanently settling at the University of Chicago in 1962.
He was a Guggenheim Fellow for the academic year 1960–1961. He is known for his lucid style of writing, as exemplified by the classic and widely influential Topics in Algebra, an undergraduate introduction to abstract algebra that was published in 1964, which dominated the field for 20 years.
A more advanced classic text is his Noncommutative Rings in the Carus Mathematical Monographs series.
His primary interest was in noncommutative ring theory, but he also wrote papers on finite groups, linear algebra, and mathematical economics. He had 30 Doctor of Philosophy students, traveled and lectured widely, and spoke Italian, Hebrew, Polish, and Portuguese. He died from cancer in Chicago, Illinois, in 1988.
His doctoral students include Miriam Cohen, Susan Montgomery, Karen Parshall, Claudio Procesi, Lance Small, and Murray Schacher.