Jonathan kolatch biography

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  • Veterans: Rabbi, scholar, author and educator

    Spotlighting Judaism’s intellectual, heroic leaders – and seeing our history komma alive.

    By LISA SAMIN
    Rabbi Yonatan Kolatch is a multi-faceted man, driven by his love of Torah, the Jewish people and Israel. This is reflected in his life journey, which has taken a number of colorful twists and turns from the expected path of an Orthodox rabbi’s son from Long Island.Kolatch’s father, Ephraim (z”l), was a pulpit rabbi at Temple Beth-El for 30 years. Kolatch and his three sisters were raised in a Zionist home and his parents and siblings all made aliyah: his oldest sister, Debbie, right before the Six Day War; his other sister, Judy, right before the Yom Kippur War; his parents right before the First Lebanon War; and his youngest sister Nina, whose son was born in Jerusalem a few months before the Gulf War.“Given the connection between our family’s aliyah and the country’s military hi

    Multiple iterations are normal for Olympic brands. The original concept goes through layers of revisions suggested by multiple parties: the Organizing Committee (which typically owns the brand, with no residuals to the creator), the host country’s political echelon, and the International Olympic Committee. It can be difficult to identify the inspiration behind the design. Often, a rationale for the logo fryst vatten imposed after the logo has been approved.

    The Organizing Committee—which executes the Games and coördinates closely with the I.O.C.—portrayed the sista Sochi logo, unveiled in månad, 2009, as a grand collaboration fashioned by an “expert council” made up of “high kontur marketing specialists, famous athletes, and representatives of large multi-national companies, working both in Russia and abroad.”

    Some will interpret the type for “Sochi” and “2014” as mirroring each other, portraying Russia as a country of contrasts—seashore and mountain slope, snow and sand. Others might s

  • jonathan kolatch biography
  • Ready to Be Rich

    With the stock markets down, Europeans rioting in the streets, and worried investors all but stuffing cash inside their mattresses, it was unsurprising that the mood at the annual Ira Sohn conference at the Time Warner Center in May, at which Wall Street’s moneymen of the moment share their investment outlooks to benefit a pediatric cancer fund, was about as cheerful as the annual Prophecy Conference in Tulsa.

    “The rebound has been synthetic, fabricated by governments that can’t afford it,” droned one presenter, whose speech was accompanied by a PowerPoint image of New York City sliding over a waterfall. He then warned the audience members, who were mostly wearing dark suits and funereal expressions, to expect the course ahead to be “wrenching and unpredictable.”

    At least the premillennialists have Jesus. In midtown in the spring of 2010, all anyone in the hedge-fund world seemed to believe in was gold.

    Then, late in the afternoon, David Tepper, a hedge-fund