Good Friday morning. In today's Daily Kickoff, we interview Judge Matthew Solomson, the first Orthodox Jew to be named chief judge of a U.S. federal court, and report from Operation Benjamin's ceremonies this week honoring Jewish soldiers killed in action in Italy during WWII. We also cover yesterday's confirmation hearing for Joel Rayburn, the Trump administration's nominee to be assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs, and report on Jason Greenblatt and Rahm Emanuel's debate last night over Trump administration policies. Also in today's Daily Kickoff: Yuval Raphael, Eileen Filler-Corn and UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan. Spread the word! Invite your friends to sign up.👇 |
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| For less-distracted reading over the weekend, browse this week's edition of The Weekly Print, a curated print-friendly PDF featuring a selection of recent Jewish Insider and eJewishPhilanthropy stories, including: Jews in Canada and Australia warily eye the future after liberal party electoral victories; Trump's Gulf tour underscores Israel's diplomatic disadvantage; and Leo Terrell: DOJ plans to use litigation to 'eliminate antisemitism. Print the latest edition here. |
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- President Donald Trump wraps up his three-country trip to the Middle East today in the United Arab Emirates. Earlier today, the president visited the Abrahamic Family House. More below.
- Former Israeli-American hostage Keith Siegel is in New York City today, where he is hosting a pancake pop-up at 12 Chairs Cafe's Soho location. All proceeds from the pop-up will go to the Hostages and Missing Families Forum.
- The two-day FII PRIORITY Europe 2025 begins today in Tirana, Albania. Speakers include French President Emmanuel Macron, Richard Attias and Goldman Sachs' Jared Cohen.
- Iran's deputy foreign minister is in Istanbul today for meetings with senior diplomats from France, the U.K. and Germany.
- The Eurovision finals are taking place tomorrow in Basel, Switzerland. Israeli singer Yuval Raphael advanced out of Thursday's semifinals and will perform her "New Day Will Rise" on Saturday night.
- On Sunday, the Center for Jewish History is hosting "The End of an Era? Jews and Elite Universities." The symposium will feature speakers including Rabbi David Wolpe, Jamie Kirchick, Eli Lake, Steven Pinker, Bill Ackman and Deborah Lipstadt.
- Also Sunday, the National Council of Jewish Women's two-day Washington Institute kicks off in the nation's capital.
- In New York, the Jewish Community Relations Council-NY is hosting its annual Israel Parade on Sunday.
- And in Paris, ELNET's International Policy Conference begins Sunday.
- The World Jewish Congress kicks off in Jerusalem on Sunday evening.
- Pope Leo XIV will be inaugurated on Sunday at the Vatican. Vice President JD Vance, Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Israeli President Isaac Herzog will be among the dignitaries and officials traveling to Italy for the inauguration.
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A QUICK WORD WITH JI'S JOSH KRAUSHAAR |
In our hyperpartisan times, it's often hard to appreciate how often the Trump administration — on issues ranging from health care to abortion to trade — is taking liberal-to-left positions, yet can still rely on support from nearly all of the GOP base, Jewish Insider Editor-in-Chief Josh Kraushaar writes. President Donald Trump can call for implementing price controls on pharmaceutical companies, without generating even a peep of opposition from rank-and-file conservatives. The White House can defend federal regulations allowing abortion pills to be available online and by mail without facing much backlash from pro-lifers. It can slap punitive tariffs on allies and rivals alike, raising the risk of economic chaos, only backing down after mayhem in the markets, and not because of public pushback from lawmakers. But perhaps the most consequential divergence of the Trump administration from conventional conservative views is on foreign policy, most recently its seemingly growing disconnect from Israel on issues ranging from Iran nuclear negotiations to the war against the Houthis in Yemen and the state of the war in Gaza. Trump's views are apparently at odds with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on all those issues, to the point where the president didn't even schedule a stop in Israel this week on his Middle East trip. We write a lot about the horseshoe theory, which has the far left and far right coming together to mainline views once considered beyond the political pale. On Middle East policy, it's increasingly looking like there's a different type of horseshoe, tying together Obama-era foreign policy advisors looking to attack the foreign policy establishment of their time as a "blob" along with isolationist-minded Trump advisors aiming to discredit mainstream conservative policymakers as part of an "interventionalist" cadre. Just look at the stunning quotes from Obama and Biden-era foreign policy officials responsible for what some saw as unpopular national security decisions now praising the new Trump playbook in the Middle East. Obama Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes told Axios, reprising his Blob dig for Trump critics: "One thing you will say is he's not tied to this constant fear of some bad faith right-wing attacks or stupid Blob-type, 'we don't do this, we must leverage the sanctions for blah blah blah.' No! Sometimes you just have to try something different." Rob Malley, Biden's Iran envoy whose security clearance was suspended over alleged misconduct, also backhandedly praised Trump's new approach in the Middle East. "It's hard not to be simultaneously terrified at the thought of the damage he can cause with such power, and awed by his willingness to brazenly shatter so many harmful taboos," Malley told Axios. The Axios story follows our own reporting last month, quoting numerous Obama and Biden-era officials finding common ground with Trump on trying to reach a diplomatic agreement with Iran, even if it requires major concessions. Phil Gordon, Vice President Kamala Harris' national security advisor, told JI the Trump negotiating team is "gonna have to accept some of the same imperfections that the Obama team did." The big potential question to come is if Trump's negotiators strike a nuclear deal with Iran that looks awfully similar to Obama's 2015 deal, short of a dismantlement of the Islamic regime's nuclear program, will Republicans fall in line or stand their ground on an issue many have spoken out against since the original JCPOA? Only time will tell what transpires, but given the trajectory of our politics, principles tend to bow to power. |
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Matthew Solomson blazes trail as first Orthodox Jewish chief judge |
When Judge Matthew Solomson's great-grandfather came to the United States from Russia in the early 1900s, seeking a haven from the state-sanctioned antisemitism that plagued Europe, he was so scarred by the way his government had treated Jews that he would cross the street whenever he saw a police officer. Now, just three generations later, Solomson, 51, is the chief judge of the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, making him the first Orthodox Jew to be named chief judge of any federal court in the United States. As he sits in his chambers, with a clear view of the White House and a piece of art depicting the Western Wall hanging behind his desk, he talked to Jewish Insider's Gabby Deutch about his family's quintessentially American story. American dream: "To go from that kind of attitude about a government, any government, to serving at a high level within the government in the space of 100 years, to go from a family of immigrants to having been appointed by the president the United States, is a tremendous honor, and I think, a tremendous testament to our government and the incredible nature of the American society," Solomson said in an interview this week. Read the full interview here. |
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Nominee for top Middle East post says admin insists on Iranian nuclear dismantlement |
KHALIL MAZRAAWI/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES |
Joel Rayburn, the Trump administration's nominee to be assistant secretary of state for Near Eastern Affairs, said at his confirmation hearing on Thursday that Iran should not be allowed to continue to enrich uranium in any capacity, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. Hearing highlights: Rayburn said that Iran "does not need and should not have" nuclear enrichment capabilities. He also said that Iran's terror proxy networks and ballistic missile capabilities should be addressed, but did not make clear whether those elements should be included in a nuclear deal. Raburn also suggested that he believes Saudi-Israeli normalization is only a matter of time. And he named Syrian-Israeli normalization as one of the conditions the administration expects from the new Syrian government as a condition of removing all sanctions on the country. Read the full story here. |
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Sen. Murphy to force votes on halting weapons sales to Qatar and UAE |
JEMAL COUNTESS/GETTY IMAGES FOR FAIR SHARE AMERICA |
Sen. Chris Murphy (D-CT) said on Thursday that he'll attempt to force a vote on his resolutions halting several sets of arms sales to Qatar and the United Arab Emirates in response to the Qataris offering President Donald Trump a $400 million Boeing jet to add to the Air Force One fleet and the Emiratis investing $2 billion in his family's cryptocurrency coin. The Connecticut senator's joint resolutions of disapproval target $1.9 billion in arms sales to Qatar and $1.6 billion in weapons sales to the UAE, all five of which were co-sponsored by Sens. Brian Schatz (D-HI), Tim Kaine (D-VA), Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) and Bernie Sanders (I-VT), Jewish Insider's Emily Jacobs and Marc Rod report. Details: The $1.9 billion sale to Qatar includes eight MQ-9B armed drones and related equipment, including 200 JDAM tail kits, 300 500-pound bombs and 110 Hellfire II missiles. The three Emirati sales include six CH-47F Block II Chinook helicopters and relevant equipment, valued at $1.32 billion; F-16 aircraft components, accessories and defense services, a $130 million value; and spare or repair parts for the UAE's AH-64 Apache, UH-60 Black Hawk and CH-47 Chinook aircraft, a $150 million value. Murphy's statement: "This isn't a gift out of the goodness of their hearts — it's an illegal bribe that the president of the United States is champing at the bit to accept. That's unconstitutional and not how we conduct foreign policy. Unless Qatar rescinds their offer of a 'palace in the sky' or Trump turns it down, I will move to block this arms sale," Murphy said in a statement on the Qatari resolution. Read the full story here. Also on the Hill: Warning that "the entire population of the Gaza Strip … is facing acute levels of hunger," a group of 30 Senate Democrats, led by Sen. Peter Welch (D-VT), introduced a resolution on Thursday condemning Israel's blockade of humanitarian aid moving into Gaza and calling on the Trump administration to work to end it, Jewish Insider's Marc Rod reports. |
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Eileen Filler-Corn endorses James Walkinshaw in Northern Virginia House race |
Eileen Filler-Corn, the first woman and Jewish speaker of Virginia's House of Delegates, is backing Fairfax County Supervisor James Walkinshaw in his bid to succeed outgoing Rep. Gerry Connolly (D-VA) in Northern Virginia, she said in an announcement shared exclusively with Jewish Insider's Matthew Kassel on Thursday. What she said: "From my early days as delegate to my time as speaker of the Virginia House, James was a critical legislative partner in the historic progress we delivered for Fairfax County families," Filler-Corn said of Walkinshaw, a former longtime chief of staff to Connolly. "He's steady, thoughtful and deeply experienced at every level of government — and that's the kind of leadership we need to take on Trump's dangerous agenda and deliver real results." The endorsement puts to rest ongoing speculation over Filler-Corn's own plans to run for the seat that is being vacated by Connolly — a veteran lawmaker who said in late April he would not seek reelection because of the return of his esophageal cancer. Read the full story here. |
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Jason Greenblatt, Rahm Emanuel face off over Trump's record on antisemitism, Israel |
Is President Donald Trump good for the Jews? The question has been asked since his first term, when he made several high-profile moves that were widely praised in the Jewish community — moving the U.S. Embassy to Jerusalem, recognizing Israeli sovereignty over the Golan Heights and bringing together the historic Abraham Accords, to name a few. Now in his second term, with Trump squaring off with universities and revoking the visas of some foreign students in the name of combating antisemitism, Jews continue to debate the question. Two prominent Jewish voices put forward their arguments on Thursday night — Jason Greenblatt, who served as Trump's special envoy to the Middle East during the first administration and, prior to that, had worked for him for 20 years, and Rahm Emanuel, former chief of staff to President Barack Obama. The charged debate, held at the 92nd Street Y in Manhattan, was moderated by SAPIR Editor-in-Chief Bret Stephens, Jewish Insider's Haley Cohen reports. Campus questions: Trump's crackdown on universities "is using antisemitism to deal with political retribution," Emanuel said. "Everytime we have been pitted against other people, Jews have come on the negative side of that," he warned. "The president isn't responsible for antisemitism," Emanuel continued. "But he is responsible for the moral tone in that office to condemn it when he sees it and he's always walked away from that, and he's given a permission slip publicly for that antisemitism." Emanuel called it "revealing" that in a three-page letter the Trump administration sent to Harvard University earlier this month, stating that federal agencies will no longer provide the institution with grant funding, the word antisemitism "was never mentioned." Greenblatt fired back, calling it "ironic" that "Harvard is fighting to stop the Jews from protecting their civil rights and Trump is fighting for their civil rights." Greenblatt said, "Trump is being very aggressive" in his battle with higher education. "But I think appropriately … Trump said there is a serious problem and [he is] going to fight it with a heavy hand." Read the full report on the debate here. |
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Decades after his death, a Jewish WWII hero is honored in Italy, with family of comrade present |
Privates First Class Del Riley and Frank Kurzinger were fast friends. They met in 1943, training for the U.S. Army's 10th Mountain Division at Camp Hale, Colo. In 1945, they took part in a mission to seize Monte Belvedere, in northern Italy, from the Germans. Riley hit a tripwire and was critically wounded on the way up the mountain. Kurzinger, a combat medic, rushed to Riley's aid. He stepped on a land mine and was immediately killed. He was 22 years old. Del Riley died seven years ago, but on his 100th birthday this week, 15 of his descendants were reunited with Frank Kurzinger's relatives in Italy, following the efforts of Operation Benjamin, Jewish Insider's Lahav Harkov reports from Italy. Life mission: "Frank Kurzinger laid down his life for my father," Del's son, Marc Riley, said on Wednesday. "Since Feb. 20, 1945, my father spent his life trying to find the Kurzinger family to tell them … the kind of man Frank Kurzinger was. My father spent his life looking for Frank." Operation Benjamin honored Kurzinger at a ceremony on Wednesday in the Florence American Cemetery, surrounded by sycamore and cypress trees on a Tuscan hillside. Read the full story here. |
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Plane Wrong: The Atlantic's Jonathan Lemire and Russell Berman look at how Republicans are responding — or not addressing — President Donald Trump's intentions to accept a luxury plane from Qatar. "But in a rare moment of defiance, some of the loudest cries of protest about the possible gift are coming from some of Trump's staunchest allies. 'I think if we switched the names to Hunter Biden and Joe Biden, we'd all be freaking out on the right,"' Ben Shapiro, a Daily Wire co-founder, said on his podcast. 'President Trump promised to drain the swamp. This is not, in fact, draining the swamp.' Even in Washington, a capital now numbed to scandals that were once unthinkable, the idea of accepting the jet is jaw-dropping. Trump's second administration is yet again displaying a disregard for norms and for traditional legal and political guardrails around elected office — this time at a truly gargantuan scale. Trump's team has said it believes that the gift would be legal because it would be donated to the Department of Defense (and then to the presidential library). But federal law prohibits government workers from accepting a gift larger than $20 at any one time from any person. Retired General Stanley McChrystal, who once commanded U.S. forces in Afghanistan, told us that he couldn't 'accept a lunch at the Capital Grille.'" [TheAtlantic] Acceptance Rates: In The Wall Street Journal, Alison Leigh Cowan proposes that universities ask questions of their applicants similar to the questions that green card applicants are required to answer on issues regarding violence and behavior. "Foreigners seeking green cards or nonresident visas must answer dozens of yes-or-no questions from the U.S. government. False statements can be grounds for deportation. They are also asked if they have any affiliation to communist or other totalitarian parties, and, in some instances, whether they intend to give financial or other support to terrorists or engage in activity intended to oppose, control or overthrow the U.S. government. American-born university applicants shouldn't get a free pass. Plenty of them have been on the front lines of the rankest campus spectacles. This extra layer of diligence won't solve the separate problem posed by tenured faculty who radicalize students once they arrive. But it's a good place to start: University presidents have more sway over their admissions offices than they do over entrenched faculty members." [WSJ] |
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Be featured: Email us to inform the JI readership of your upcoming event, job opening or other communication. |
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President Donald Trump said on Thursday in the United Arab Emirates that American negotiators are "getting close to maybe doing a deal" with Iran over its nuclear program… In a wide-ranging interview with Fox News, UAE Foreign Minister Abdullah bin Zayed Al Nahyan spoke about the UAE-U.S. relationship, the Israel-Hamas war and nuclear talks with Iran; regarding Gaza, he called for "an authority that's not Hamas that controls Gaza"... During the president's trip to the UAE, the countries inked an agreement to boost Abu Dhabi's chip-making capabilities, the first such AI-related deal the U.S. has made since Trump entered office; the deal includes the creation of a 10-mile AI campus in Abu Dhabi supplied by U.S.-made chips… Secretary of State Marco Rubio met on Thursday with his Syrian counterpart, Foreign Minister Asaad al-Shaibani, in Turkey as the U.S. moves toward removing sanctions on Damascus following a directive from Trump… Trump reportedly shared polling with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA) that showed lagging numbers ahead of her decision not to move forward with a Senate bid challenging Sen. Jon Ossoff (D-GA)… Rep. Yassamin Ansari (D-AZ) introduced the Persian Gulf Act, to prohibit the administration from changing the name of the Persian Gulf to the Arabian Gulf, as some in the Trump administration have reportedly considered… A bipartisan group of 13 House members led by Rep. Jack Bergman (D-MI) introduced a resolution expressing support for continued and expanded U.S. defense cooperation, particularly in advanced research areas... A group of nine Democratic legislators, including Reps. Rashida Tlaib (D-MI), Summer Lee (D-PA), Ilhan Omar (D-MN), Lateefah Simon (D-CA), Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-NY), Bonnie Watson Coleman (D-NJ), Ayanna Pressley (D-MA), Delia Ramirez (D-IL) and Andre Carson (D-IN) introduced a resolution accusing Israel of genocide and calling for the U.S. to "ensure the United States ends its complicity in Israel's ongoing Nakba against the Palestinian people"... The Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations voted unanimously to admit the Iranian American Jewish Federation, eJewishPhilanthropy's Judah Ari Gross reports… NYU is denying a diploma to a student speaker who railed against American "complicity in this genocide" in Gaza during a commencement ceremony at NYU's Gallatin School… Writer Salman Rushdie withdrew as the commencement speaker for Claremont McKenna College ahead of this weekend's ceremonies… Former Harvard Divinity School student Shabbos Kestenbaum settled his ongoing lawsuit against Harvard; the settlement comes days before a deadline for Kestenbaum to produce a range of documents that included his communications with President Donald Trump's 2024 campaign and messages from WhatsApp groups… The Justice Department told Harvard it is looking into whether the school is complying with a Supreme Court ruling ending affirmative action in college admissions processes… A Pittsburgh woman pleaded guilty for her role in the vandalism of two Jewish institutions in the Pennsylvania city; Talya Lubit, who is Jewish, was ordered to pay nearly $11,000 in restitution to Chabad of Squirrel Hill, the Jewish Federation of Greater Pittsburgh and the City of Pittsburgh and will face a parole board's recommendation at her June sentencing… Officials in southern Nevada are investigating a string of threatening letters sent to Jewish organizations in the Las Vegas area… The BBC is investigating whether a frequent guest on BBC Arabic who has been billed as both a "journalist" and "foreign policy analyst" served as editor-in-chief of the Hamas-owned Al-Aqsa TV until last September… Vanity Fair profiles Axios reporter Barak Ravid, whose coverage since moving from Israel to Washington in mid-2023 has focused on the 2024 presidential election, U.S.-Israel relations and the Israel-Hamas war… Israel carried out overnight strikes across the Gaza Strip, targeting what the IDF said was Hamas infrastructure, amid a broader escalation targeting the terror group in the enclave... Trump addressed food shortages in Gaza on Friday, saying that "a lot of people are starving" but the U.S. is "going to get that taken care of"... The New York Times reports on Hamas' celebrations over the killing earlier this week of a pregnant Israeli woman in the West Bank… Members of the Israeli branch of the Masorti/Conservative movement's Mercaz Olami paid to publish and distribute posters in Haredi neighborhoods in Israel that equated Zionism with idolatry and heresy as part of an influence campaign aimed at driving a wedge between the Israeli Haredi public and the Haredi officials involved in the World Zionist Organization, eJewishPhilanthropy's Nira Dayanim reports... Several dozen people participated in an annual pilgrimage to the Ghriba synagogue in Djerba, Tunisia, amid security concerns; two years ago, five people were killed in a terror attack targeting pilgrims, who previously numbered in the thousands… |
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President Donald Trump toured the Moses Ben Maimon Synagogue during his visit to the Abrahamic Family House in Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates, this morning, the first American presidential visit to the interfaith institution since its inauguration in February 2023, Jewish Insider's Danielle Cohen reports. |
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MICHAEL KOVAC/GETTY IMAGES |
Managing partner at Accretive LLC, a private equity firm, he is also executive chairman of Fubo TV, Edgar Bronfman Jr. turns 70... FRIDAY: Scholar, author and rabbi, he is the founding president of CLAL: The National Jewish Center for Learning and Leadership, Irving "Yitz" Greenberg turns 92... Retired judge of the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, she has served as president and chair of The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee, Ellen Moses Heller turns 84... Senior official in the Carter, Bush 41, Clinton and Obama administrations Bernard W. Aronson turns 79... Member of the New York State Assembly for 52 years (longest tenure ever), his term ended in 2022, Richard N. Gottfried turns 78... Chairman of NBC News and MSNBC from 2015 until 2020, Andrew Lack turns 78... Member of the House of Representatives since 2013 (D-FL), she was previously the mayor of West Palm Beach, Lois Frankel turns 77... Harvard history professor, a member of the Rothschild banking family of England, Emma Georgina Rothschild turns 77... Proto-punk singer, songwriter and guitarist, Jonathan Richman turns 74... Radio voice of the Texas Rangers baseball organization since 1979, Eric Nadel turns 74... Rochester, N.Y., resident and advisor to NYC-based Ezras Nashim volunteer ambulance service, Michael E. Pollock... Real estate developer and mechutan of President Trump, his nomination to be U.S. ambassador to France is pending in the Senate, Charles Kushner turns 71... Film and stage actress, noted for "An Officer and a Gentleman" and "Terms of Endearment," Debra Winger turns 70... President of Tribe Media and editor-in-chief of the Jewish Journal, David Suissa... Real estate mogul and collector of modern and contemporary art, Aby J. Rosen turns 65... Executive assistant at Los Angeles-based FaceCake Marketing Technologies, Esther Bushey... U.S. ambassador to the European Union in the Obama administration, he had a bar mitzvah-like ceremony in Venice in 2017, Anthony Luzzatto Gardner turns 62... Social entrepreneur and co-founder of nonprofit Jumpstart, Jonathan Shawn Landres turns 53... Actress, television personality and author, Victoria Davey (Tori) Spelling turns 52... Host of programs on the Travel Channel and the History Channel, Adam Richman turns 51... VP and associate general counsel at CNN, Drew Shenkman... Managing director at FTI Consulting, Jeff Bechdel... Chef and food blogger, Jamie Neistat Lavarnway... Composer, conductor and music producer known for his film and television scores, Daniel Alexander Slatkin turns 31... SATURDAY: President of the Philadelphia-based Honickman Foundation, Lynne Korman Honickman turns 89... Annapolis, Md., attorney, Robert M. Pollock... News anchor for 45 years at WPVI-TV (ABC Channel 6) in Philadelphia until he retired in 2022, known professionally as Jim Gardner, James Goldman turns 77... Canadian philanthropist and the first woman to serve as lieutenant governor of Nova Scotia, Myra Ava Freeman turns 76... Corporate and securities attorney at NYC's Eilenberg & Krause, he serves as counsel for Israeli technology companies doing business in the U.S., Sheldon Krause turns 70... Comedian, puppeteer and actor, Marc Weiner turns 70... Founder and president of ENS Resources, a D.C.-based consulting and lobbying firm focused on natural resources and sustainable energy, Eric Sapirstein turns 69... Host of "Marketplace Morning Report" on public radio, David Brancaccio turns 65... Author of the 2005 book Stars of David: Prominent Jews Talk About Being Jewish and a 2017 book about Jewish holidays, she is an honorary president of NYC's Central Synagogue, Abigail Pogrebin... and her identical twin sister, Robin Pogrebin, reporter on the culture desk for The New York Times, both turn 60... Former general manager for corporate strategy at Microsoft, she was also an EVP at Hillel, Kinney Zalesne turns 59... CPA and founder of the Baltimore Hunger Project, it provides food packs for the weekend that are discretely slipped into over 2,200 poverty-stricken public-school children's backpacks each Friday, Lynne Berkowitz Kahn... Israeli author and playwright, Sarah Blau turns 52... Reporter for The New York Times covering politics, campaigns and elections, Reid J. Epstein... Former member of Knesset, when elected in 2013 she became the youngest female Knesset member in Israel's history, Stav Shaffir turns 40... Executive director of Informing Democracy and digital strategy adviser to Democratic organizations and candidates, Jenna Ruth Lowenstein... Digital and social media strategist at AARP, Sarah Sonies... Senior writer at Microsoft's Future of Work group, Rebecca Rose Nelson Kay... Israeli judoka, he was the 2019 World Champion and won a team bronze medal at the 2020 Olympics, Sagi Aharon Muki turns 33... Director of congregational engagement at Mount Zion Hebrew Congregation in St. Paul, Minn., Heather Renetzky... Senior media relations manager at Rystad Energy, Katherine (Katie) Keenan... SUNDAY: Leader and rebbe of the Hasidic dynasty of Ger since 1996, Rabbi Yaakov Aryeh Alter turns 86... Chairman and co-founder of K2 Intelligence and Kroll Bond Rating Agency, Jules B. Kroll turns 84... Best-selling author of nine spy thriller novels, Andrew Gary Kaplan turns 84... Ruth Madoff turns 84... Retired New York Times columnist and editorial writer, he was the NYT's Jerusalem correspondent for four years in the early 1990s, Clyde Haberman turns 80... President of Everest Management and trustee of the Cheetah Conservation Fund, Gary Kopff turns 80... Los Angeles-based attorney and board member of American Friends of Nishmat, Linda Goldenberg Mayman... Longtime Washington correspondent for Newsweek, now writing for SpyTalk, Jonathan Broder turns 77... Longest-serving member of the Maryland House of Delegates, starting in 1983, Samuel I. "Sandy" Rosenberg turns 75... Chair of the executive of the Jewish Agency for Israel, a former IDF major general and leading activist for the disability community, Doron Almog turns 74... Senior advisor at Moelis & Company, a former IDF major general, then CEO of Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Shlomo Yanai turns 73... Director of nutrition and hospitality at Philadelphia's Temple University Hospital, Nancy Baumann... Attorney in Atlanta, he was the director of congregational engagement at the Union for Reform Judaism for nine years, Alan Kitey... Film producer, he is the CEO of Miramax since one year ago, Jonathan Glickman turns 56... Venture capitalist and author of a book on business principles derived from the Book of Genesis, Michael A. Eisenberg turns 54... CEO at Waze from 2013 to 2021, Noam Bardin... VP for communications strategy at Strategic Marketing Innovations (SMI), Bryan Bender turns 53... Head of development until earlier this year at NYC charter school system, Uncommon Schools, Sarah Danzig... Author of Substack-based newsletter and blog, "Slow Boring," he was a co-founder of Vox, Matthew Yglesias turns 44... Founder of London-based Tech With Intention, Eliza Krigman... Senior director for the Middle East and North Africa on the White House's National Security Council, Eric Trager... Founder of Satori Global Media, Joshua Lederman... Former acting under secretary of defense for intelligence and security, then a member of the National Archives Public Interest Declassification Board, Ezra Asa Cohen turns 39... Tech entrepreneur in the AI and gaming space, Dan Garon... Co-founder of Rebel (formerly known as Rebelmail) then acquired by Salesforce, Joe Teplow... Managing associate in the D.C. office of Orrick Herrington & Sutcliffe, Lauren DePinto Bomberger... Executive producer of the Net Zero Life Podcast, Netanel (Tani) Levitt... Director of communications at Anduril Industries, Sofia Rose Gross Haft... Five-time member of the U.S. Women's National Gymnastics Team, now a business manager in the office of the CIO at Citadel, Samantha "Sami" Shapiro turns 32... Chief development officer at TAMID Group, Rachel Philipson Marsh... |
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