OVERVIEW
Mission
History
Facilities
Libraries
Technology
Special Collections
Affiliations
Yeshiva University Museum
Computer Facilities
Facilities Improvement
Programs
Yeshiva University, in
its second century, is an independent institution under Jewish
auspices chartered by the State of New York. It is accredited
by the Commission on Higher Education Middle States
Association of Colleges and Schools and by specialized
professional agencies. It offers programs leading to
associate's, bachelor's, master's, doctoral, and professional
degrees.
In addition to its
extensive teaching programs, the University maintains a
network of affiliates, conducts widespread programs of
research and community outreach, and issues publications. It
is also the original home of the Yeshiva University Museum,
now located in the Greenwich Village section of Manhattan.
The University's
thousands of graduates are found throughout the United States
and overseas, in every profession. Among its alumni are
judges, university professors and presidents, religious
leaders, business executives, government officials, artists,
writers, doctors, and scientists. The University's roster of
honorary degree recipients includes Nobel laureates, world
political leaders, philanthropists, and other individuals
committed to the betterment of society.
Mission
The University's guiding vision is the confidence that the
best of the heritage of contemporary civilization—the liberal
arts and sciences—is compatible with the ancient traditions of
Jewish law and life. On the undergraduate level, this belief
is embodied in the dual curriculum under which students pursue
a full program of Jewish studies while taking college programs
in the liberal arts and sciences and business and receiving
specialized preparation for advanced work in a discipline or
profession. On the graduate level, this special mission is
embodied in emphasis on the moral dimensions of the search for
knowledge and the ethical principles that govern professional
practitioners.
Yeshiva
University also is committed to the love of learning for its
own sake (known in Jewish tradition as Torah Lishmah) and to
teaching and research that stress a striving for excellence.
A third goal of the
University is to serve the general and Jewish communities of
the city, the nation, and the world by preparing well-trained
professionals in many fields and providing pioneering
resources for community service.
History
Yeshiva University traces
its origins to Yeshiva Eitz Chaim, founded in 1886 on New
York's Lower East Side. In 1896, the Rabbi Isaac Elchanan
Theological Seminary (RIETS) was founded there; the New York
State Board of Regents chartered it in 1897. In 1915, the two
schools merged.
Under the leadership of
Dr. Bernard Revel, who served as president from 1915 until his
death in 1940, the institution embarked on a plan of
educational development and growth. In 1929, the institution
moved to its Wilf Campus in Manhattan's Washington Heights.
Liberal arts programs began with the establishment of Yeshiva
College in 1928, and the first graduate curriculum (in Jewish
studies) was introduced in 1935.
The election of Dr.
Samuel Belkin as president in 1943 inaugurated a new era of
expansion. University status was granted in 1945 by the New
York State Board of Regents. The institution initiated
programs of general and professional studies, research, and
special projects to benefit many constituencies. These
included a college of liberal arts and sciences for women and
graduate schools of medicine, law, social work and psychology.
Dr. Norman Lamm was
elected president in 1976, following Dr. Belkin's death. He
undertook a complete review of the University's structure and
operations, and significantly expanded undergraduate study
opportunities to include, among other things, a new
undergraduate school of business. He also has enriched
graduate and professional school resources and has established
a carefully monitored fiscal system and development program to
further the University's goals.
Facilities
The University's undergraduate, graduate, and professional
schools are located in Manhattan (Wilf Campus, 500 West 185th
Street; Midtown Campus, 245 and 215 Lexington Avenue;
Brookdale Center, 55 Fifth Avenue) and the Bronx (Jack and
Pearl Resnick Campus, Eastchester Road and Morris Park
Avenue). All campuses have residence facilities; the Wilf,
Midtown, and Resnick campuses have dining and athletic
facilities as well. While part of a multifaceted University
community, each school retains the intimate character of a
smaller institution.
Yeshiva University's
frequent van service provides Wilf and Midtown Campus students
ready access to transit connections and other YU campuses.
Libraries
The University's
four-campus library system houses some 1.1 million volumes,
1.2 million microforms, and 10,350 journals and serial
publications in the arts and sciences and Judaica. It is a
selective depository for U.S. Government publications.
At the Wilf Campus, the
Mendel Gottesman Library—a six-story, block-long central
library building—houses the Pollack Library, Landowne-Bloom
Library, and Mendel Gottesman Library of Hebraica-Judaica.
At the Midtown Campus,
the Hedi Steinberg Library serves undergraduates, the Azrieli
Graduate School of Jewish Education and Administration, and
some programs of the Wurzweiler School of Social Work.
The
Dr. Lillian and Dr. Rebecca Chutick Law Library of Benjamin N.
Cardozo School of Law is at the Brookdale Center, and the D.
Samuel Gottesman Library of Albert Einstein College of
Medicine and Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology at the
Resnick Campus.
Special collections,
including Rare Books and Manuscripts, the University Archives
and the Sephardic Reference Room, are located in the Gottesman
Library.
All Yeshiva University
students may take advantage of these resources in person or
through interlibrary loan arrangement by making requests at
the libraries serving their respective schools.
Technology
YULIS, the Yeshiva University Library Information System,
serves the Wilf and Midtown Campus libraries. The YULIS
catalog contains information about 278,000 titles held by the
Pollack Library, Hedi Steinberg Library, Mendel Gottesman
Library of Hebraica-Judaica, Landowne-Bloom Library, and
University Archives. Data about newly acquired items is added
continually, and information from catalog cards for older
materials is being converted.
Undergraduate and
graduate programs, in general as well as Judaic studies, are
supported by a wide range of electronic resources accessed via
YULIS computers in the libraries and from home by authorized
library patrons. More than 250 databases are included among
these electronic resources as well as over 7,000 journals and
newspapers available in full text. Among these are the MLA
Bibliography, Social Work Abstracts, databases of First
Search, UMI Proquest, Lexis-Nexis Academic Universe, Stat-USA,
Judaic Classics, Responsa, and Talmudic Encyclopedia, to name
a few. Media collections, microfilm, microfiche,
audiocassettes, compact discs, and videocassettes supplement
the libraries’ print and on-line resources.
Special
Collections
The University's Rare Books and Manuscripts Division contains
several thousand rare Judaica and Hebraica volumes, 39 Hebrew
incunabula (books printed before 1500), and over 1,000
literary and historical manuscripts. The University has
acquired an illuminated Bible manuscript completed in Prague
in 1489.
Through the beneficence
of the Jesselson Family Trusts, the University has acquired a
number of rare materials (including Jewish Americana),
published a catalog of its incunabula and, in general, made
its Judaica collections more accessible to students and
scholars.
In addition to Yeshiva
University records, the University Archives contain private
and organizational papers relating to modern Jewish history
and culture. The archives focus on records of Jewish
institutions and individuals, and include files, letters,
memoirs, clippings, posters, and photographs. Some important
collections: Central Relief Committee, Vaad Hatzalah, Student
Struggle for Soviet Jewry, Jewish Defense League and National
Council of Jewish Women.
Affiliations
Since 1974, the University's libraries have participated in
OCLC, a global library cooperative of more than 40,000
libraries in 76 countries. Members of this shared on-line
system have access to 46 million catalog records and can
borrow materials from OCLC libraries by generating on-line
requests.
The library system is a
member of METRO, the Metropolitan Reference and Research
Library Agency. Students with legitimate research needs may
gain entry to all METRO member libraries by requesting a METRO
card.
Through special
membership in the Research Libraries Group, the libraries
participate in RLIN, the Research Libraries Information
Network; in the RLG Shares program for interlibrary loan; and
in programs for preservation of library materials. Each
University library maintains affiliations with agencies
devoted to its particular specialty, such as Jewish studies,
social work, law, or medicine.
Yeshiva
University Museum
The Yeshiva University
Museum, in its new Greenwich Village location, presents
innovative exhibits reflecting Jewish life through the
humanities—art, architecture, music, literature, science,
history, and anthropology. It fulfills its mission as a
teaching museum through community outreach programs, satellite
galleries, and cultural events, including crafts festivals,
concerts, and children's workshops.
Computer Facilities
Recognizing the increasing role of high technology, Yeshiva
University continually enhances its computer facilities and
services. Through IBM and IBM-compatible computer workstations
located in the Hirsch/Polackoff Computer Centers,
undergraduate students have access to software applications in
business, computer science, humanities, mathematics, and the
natural, physical, and social sciences on a local area network
(LAN), and a number of CD-ROM–based databases on workstations
in the Gottesman Library building and the Hedi Steinberg
Library. A wide area network (WAN) links computer resources on
all YU campuses, yielding access to such resources as the
on-line catalog and mini-MEDLINE systems at Albert Einstein
College of Medicine as well as all Internet-based resources
worldwide, with library computers offering menu-driven search
capabilities.
A University-wide
computer network infrastructure supports all academic and
administrative computing services and is designed to meet the
institution’s computer technology needs well into the 21st
century. A network of fiber-optic cables and high-speed
telephone lines connects buildings on each campus and bridges
the campuses themselves.
The cabling will make
possible the operation of a new automated, networked
information system—with Internet access—at the Mendel
Gottesman and Hedi Steinberg libraries, and the BANNER system
for registration, financial aid, and other administrative
departments. It also will support systems providing access to
e-mail, the World Wide Web, and the University’s academic
applications and internal general-purpose servers.
Facilities
Improvement Programs
Through ongoing
renovations, the University offers state-of-the-art facilities
and technologies—providing a supportive environment for each
student’s academic and personal growth. Many recent renovation
projects have added, upgraded, and redecorated buildings;
refurbished common areas; and expanded security services. One
project entailed the cabling of offices and computer rooms in
Furst and Belfer Halls for Internet and University-systems
access, and Belfer Hall boasts a new computer classroom
accommodating 35 students.
The Wilf Campus’s Max
Stern Athletic Center, constructed through major gifts by
Leonard N. Stern and the Max Stern Foundation, is a fully
equipped facility for the University's sports programs. It
houses the regulation-size Melvin J. Furst Gymnasium, a fully
equipped weight training/fitness studio, a track, locker
rooms, an athletic treatment center, a game/TV lounge, and
bleacher seating for 1,100 spectators.
The Benjamin Gottesman
Pool, which adjoins the Max Stern Athletic Center, was made
possible by a major gift from David S. Gottesman in memory of
his father. In addition to a six-lane pool, the building
houses a whirlpool, sauna, steamroom, and shower-locker room.
With the aid of a major
gift by the late Jerome Schottenstein of Columbus, Ohio, and
other members of the Schottenstein family, the University
acquired a building for renovation and renamed it the
Schottenstein Center. The Center houses the Philip and Sarah
Belz School of Jewish Music; the Mr. and Mrs. Harry A. Gampel
Communications Center, with offices for student publications,
radio station WYUR, and student government; offices for other
student activities; the Schottenstein Theater; the Florence
and Sol Shenk Facility; and galleries housing innovative art
from North America and Israel.
In a welcome contrast to
New York’s usual bustle, two blocks of Amsterdam Avenue and an
adjoining block of 185th Street have become “limited-use”
streets, with colorful banners, a pedestrian mall, widened
sidewalks, and attractive plantings and street furniture.
The Herbert and Florence
Tenzer Garden provides the campus community with an elegant,
open-air setting for study and quiet relaxation. Its
Benefactors Wall of Jerusalem stone honors YU's outstanding
supporters.