
Ariel
Sharon listens to Rupert Murdoch. |
AMERICA ISRAEL FRIENDSHIP LEAGUE
Israel’s Statesman Warrior
Really a Farmer at Heart
By TIM BOXER
RIEL
SHARON still can’t believe he is running the government. He
was born on a farm but earned a law degree at Hebrew University and
went on to become a war hero and statesman.
“The Happy Warrior” is how Mortimer
Zuckerman addressed the Israeli prime minister.
“The only
thing I really know is farming,” said Sharon, who still lives on a
ranch in the Negev. He was the keynote speaker at the America-Israel
Friendship League’s Partners for Democracy Awards at New York’s
Pierre Hotel.
AIFL chairman Kenneth Bialkin and
president Zuckerman presented awards to three American companies
that have high stakes in Israel’s high tech industry.
Stepping forward to accept on behalf of AOL
Time Warner, vice chairman Ken Novak tried to keep his
remarks brief.
He recalled a
dinner where Rabbi Harold Kushner defined the best speech as
one that can be reduced to a message of 10 words. The rabbi’s
oratory consisted of: “My daughter graduated from college and
needs a job.”
It was odd witnessing Zuckerman, who owns the
New York Daily News, handing an award to his zealous
competitor, Rupert Murdoch, who owns the New York Post.
“The New York Post is not for sale,
Mort!” declared Paula Zahn, anchor of
The Edge on Fox News, also a Murdoch property.
Unperturbed, Murdoch, head of News Corporation,
graciously accepted the award from his arch rival, and called
attention to his News Digital Systems which is based in Jerusalem
and is a global leader in the digital TV industry.
The third awardee, Lawrence Ricciardi,
senior vice president of IBM, proudly noted that “our largest
technology research laboratory outside the United States is in
Haifa.”
Paula Zahn, in charge of the dais, couldn’t
figure out what she was: master of ceremonies or mistress of
ceremonies?
She consulted The New York Times’ word
maven, William Safire, who told her: “Forget mistress,
forget master. You are the emcee.”
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