This Week Insight t It 4 &COS Ideas SRO S ifiro a eS Remember When • • The Front Man From the pages of the Jewish News for this week 10, 20, 30, 40 and 50 years ago. Ari Ple2scher sees his task as Bush press secretary rooted in Jewish ethics. 199111/11111111111111011111 MATTHEW E. BERGER Jewish Telegraphic Agency Washington is rare that the spokesman for a presidential cam- paign defends one of his opponents, but Ari Fleischer did just that this summer. I Days after being named vice presidential nominee for the Democratic Party, Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D- Conn.) was maligned with an anti-Semitic comment by a local leader of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Republican candidate George W. Bush's camp could have said nothing or sufficed with a brief statement. But Fleischer, as a fellow Jew, felt he needed to speak out. And he did, condemning the words of the presi- dent of the Dallas chapter of the NAACP, Lee Alcorn, as "foolish utterances." But don't misunderstand Fleischer. He is a very political person, and his religion rarely gets the best of his partisanship. "I believe deeply in my religion and I believe in the principles of my parry," said Fleischer, 40. "I don't commingle the two."- Al Gore. "My mother called me to concede only after Al Gore called George W. Bush to concede," Fleischer said. Although they were in opposing camps, Fleischer was happy when Lieberman became the first Jew picked for a national ticket. "It really gave me great joy when Lieberman was announced," he said. "As a Jew, it gave me a sense of great pride. It reflected on the strength of the country." Fleischer's rebellion against his political upbringing began at Middlebury College in Vermont in the late 1970s, when he realized that he agreed more with the poli- cies of Ronald Reagan than of Jimmy Carter. After gradu- ating, he took a job as spokesman for a New York Republican running for Congress, and then moved to Washington with a new party identity. Two Masters Fleischer claims to respect the White House press corps, the aggressive pack of reporters he'll face each day. He already knows their business from his time as a spokesman for former Sen. Pete Domenici (R- N.M.) and the House Ways and A GOP Veteran Means Committee. He says he relishes his job because :,e son of NL w York Democrats, Fleischer has he plays a role, albeit minor, in spent two decades on Capitol Hill as a Republican Ari Fleischer implementing policy, he said, party spokesman, and will reach the pinnacle of his adding that he clearly understands profession later this month when he stands in front that he has to serve two masters — the president and the of the lectern as White Howe press secretary. media. "You can't do this job if you don't believe in the A "relatively observant, basically Reform" Jew, Fleischer's conception of his role in government is shaped by the ethics mission of the press," he said. Fleischer's current schedule includes a morning news con- of Judaism. ference call, an early afternoon news conference and a late "The Jewish religion teaches people to be responsible, to afternoon "pen-and-pad" session. Then there are the dozens be open-minded and to care about others," he said in a of individual requests he responds to each day, from phone interview. "And I hope that people see that in me as reporters at small newspapers to Mike Wallace of 60 I do my job." Minutes. Jews were heavily represented in the Clinton Cabinet and Even in his serious conversations with the media, White House, but Fleischer will be one of the few Jewish Fleischer manages to keep things jovial. At a news confer- faces in a Bush administration that received little support ence last week, he offered one female reporter the chance to from Jews at the polls. Less than 20 percent of the Jewish vote went to Bush. go head to head with Minnesota Gov. Jesse Ventura, a for- mer Navy Seal and professional wrestler. Many in the Jewish community also have been critical of In a conference call, he allows a reporter who graduated some of Bush's policies, especially on school vouchers and from his alma mater to get two questions. charitable choice. Some are opposing Cabinet appoint- And then there is his trademark, ear-to-ear smile. ments, especially the attorney general-designate, former "I would like to thank whoever sent me The Idiot's Guide Missouri Sen. John Ashcroft. to Verbal Self-Defense," Fleischer, smiling broadly, said in But Fleischer isn't ruffled by his minority status, having front of reporters. grown accustomed to fending off the Jewish Democratic Fleischer already has picked the chapter that will give him majority in his own home. the edge with the press: "Using Your Facial Muscles to Gain Though their son was in the upper echelons of the Bush the Advantage." C campaign, Fleischer's parents still voted for Vice President Figure skater Dan Hollander of Huntington Woods competed in the Midwestern Championships in Omaha, Neb. Agudath Israel of America created a Halachic Living Will/He a lth Care Proxy. Zayde's Place, a kosher restaurant, opened in Toledo, just off U.S. 23. A new wing of the Israel Diamond Exchange opened in Ramat Gan, Israel. Rabbi Raphael Groner, spiritual leader of Beth David Synagogue in Binghampton, N.Y. and nephew of Southfield Rabbi Irwin Groner, was named chairman of the Torah con- vocation of the Rabbinical Council of America. The Bank of Israel made plans to replace the one-shekel bills with coins. Twenty young Israelis were killed when a rockslide crushed a dining hall in a paramilitary settlement in the Jordan River valley. Three new appointees at the Wayne State University radio station are Robert Wunderlich, Steve Lawrence and David Robinson, all of Southfield. For the first time in eight years, not one Arab-Israel dispute came before the United Nations Security Council in 1960. "- Billy Davis of Detroit led the Jewish Center Teen Varsity to its 11th straight basketball win, beat- ing Franklin Settlement 42-31. Sixteen members of the Israel AZA chapter walked off with trophies in basketball in individual and team bowling at the Michigan region convention. Al Ring of Detroit was a member of the Wayne University Ping-Pong team, which won the Intercollegiate Table Tennis Championship. —Compiled by Sy Manello, editorial assistant JN 1 /1 2 2001 29