Skip to main content Skip to search

YU News

YU News

Parents and New Students Welcomed to Both Undergraduate Campuses

Aug 22, 2006 -- For those attending Orientation 2006, August 20-22, summer may be over, but the excitement of a new adventure has just begun as hundreds of new undergraduate students arrived at the Wilf and Beren campuses. Click here to view photo gallery. http://spider.mc.yu.edu/news/photogallery/photogallery_show.cfm?categoryID=8121 This year’s cohort hails from across the United States and as far away as Israel and Brazil. At both campuses, teams of student Orientation staffers and administrators greeted students and assisted them as they moved in and became acclimated. “I’m a little nervous but also excited,” said Yonina Teitelbaum of Denver, CO. “I’m looking forward to the experience,” said Shena Falic, a transfer student from the University of Miami. For many, their excitement stems in part from feeling that they’ve “come home.” According to Tzvi Twersky, of Philadelphia, “there is no other place in the world like YU.” Yaakov Samberg, of Memphis, asked: “Where else would I pick to go? I never seriously considered other schools.” Binyamin Mor, of Haifa, arrived at YU on his 22nd birthday. A former IDF soldier, he made the decision to attend YU late last spring and completed the entire application process — including SAT and TOEFL exams — within a month. “I found that YU is the best place for me, even more than in Israel. There is nowhere else that combines Torah and Madda [general studies] the way YU does.” For many, the first day of Orientation was a time to reconnect with old friends, meet new ones, and enjoy the day’s activities. Among them were separate gatherings for students and parents at each campus with President Richard M. Joel. “You are now taking your place in that chain of human destiny,” President Joel told students at the Beren Campus. “Forward is where you have to look and upward is where you have to aspire.” To their parents he said,” Encourage your children to take full advantage of the life that is here,” so that they can continue to develop as “aspiring builders of our world.” At the Wilf Campus, he thanked parents for entrusting “your greatest wealth -- your children -- to us.”