RICHARD A. ARONOW: Always in the
Know
Richard
A. Aronow was always so eager to share the fact that his
lunch buddies at the Port Authority, where he worked for
more than 18 years, called him sensei, Japanese for
teacher. "Whatever they knew, or thought they knew, he
knew more," his wife, Laura Weinberg, recalled.
Among the things Mr. Aronow, 48, of Mahwah, N.J., knew
a lot about was markets, whether it was the stock market
or the intricacies of frequent-flier plans, and he was
forever switching long-distance companies to find the
best deal.
As a deputy chief of the agency's law department, Mr.
Aronow worked on some huge legal deals (most recently,
the lease for the new $1.4 billion International Arrivals
Terminal at Kennedy Airport) and he knew the details of
all the Port Authority's leases, documents so voluminous
that they are called telephone books.
Mr. Aronow was considered a fair adversary; about 20
lawyers who had been on the opposing side of his deals
attended his memorial service last month, his wife
said.
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