Jeffrey Loria is the owner of the Miami Marlins baseball team who won the 2003 World Series, and his wife, Julie Loria, is the author of Diamond Dishes: From the Kitchens of Baseball’s Biggest Stars – a book about baseball players’ favorite recipes. Jeffrey Loria graduated from Yale in 1962 and Columbia Business School in 1968. He is an avid art dealer and collector and even has a building in his name, the Jeffrey Loria Center for the History of Art at Yale. Loria also owns Jeffrey H. Loria & Co., Inc. – a private art dealing business based in New York.
Read Moreart
- Accounting
- Actress
- Aerospace
- Apparel
- Architecture
- Art
- Athletics
- Automobile
- Automotive
- Banking
- Basketball
- Beverage
- Boxing
- Business
- Communications
- Construction
- Consumer Goods
- Cosmetics
- Cruise
- Cuisine
- Dance
- Design
- Development
- Direct Marketing
- E-Commerce
- Education
- Engineering
- Entertainment
- Environmental
- Eyewear
- Fashion
- Film
- Finance
- Food
- Football
- Formula 1 Racing
- Fundraising
- Government
- Healthcare
- Hospitality
- Insurance
- Internet Shopping
- Investment
- Jewelry
- Law
- Lifestyle
- Liquor & Wine Distribution
- Lumber
- Luxury
- Manufacturing
- Marketing
- Media
- Medical
- Medicine
- Mining
- Modeling
- Music
- Natural Gas
- NBA & Reality Television
- NFL
- Nightlife
- Novels
- Oil
- Performing Arts
- Personal Genetics
- Pharmaceuticals
- Philanthropy
- Politics
- Private Equity
- Private Investment
- Public Relations
- Publishing
- Radio
- Real Estate
- Restaurants
- Retail
- Sales
- Sports
- Supermarkets
- Talent
- Technology
- Television
- Tennis
- Timepieces
- Venture Capitalism
- Wall Street
- Watches
- Wine
Along with her late-husband Donald, Doris opened up the first Gap store in 1969 in San Francisco. She later went on to expand her brand to include Old Navy, Baby Gap, and Banana Republic. She and Donald amassed quite the modern and contemporary art collection, and she is working with the San Francisco Museum of …
Read MoreThe Adrienne Arsht Center’s first year and a half out of the gate were marred by budget shortfalls, empty seats, and negative public perception. Now, only two years later, the Center’s early stumbles seem like a distant memory as patrons pack the seats in record numbers, budget deficits become surpluses, and its programs earn critical …
Read More



