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Yeshiva University Pays Tribute to Chancellor Norman Lamm With Lamm Heritage

Sep 8, 2008 -- Yeshiva University (YU) has established the Lamm Heritage in celebration of the 80th birthday of its chancellor, Dr. Norman Lamm. The Heritage will honor Chancellor Lamm’s almost 60 years of exceptional scholarly, spiritual, and leadership contributions to the university and world Jewish community. The Lamm Heritage consists of four initiatives; the Lamm Heritage Web site, the Norman Lamm Prize, Yad Lamm, and an endowment to the Rabbi Norman Lamm Kollel L'Hora'ah (Yadin Yadin). Visitors to the Lamm Heritage Web site - the first component to launch - will be able to access Chancellor Lamm’s numerous scholarly works through the Lamm Archives, which include over 800 digitized sermons and will eventually contain audio and video of his lectures. “With their exquisite language, brilliant homiletic insights, and powerful messages, Dr. Lamm's sermons excite, inspire, and edify—no less today than when they were delivered,” said Dr. David Shatz, professor of philosophy at YU's Stern College for Women and editor of The Torah u-Madda Journal, who heard many of the sermons as a teenager growing up on Manhattan's West Side. “They also provide a fascinating glimpse into the evolution of a great spokesman, thinker and leader who always speaks with relevance and timeliness.” The Lamm Heritage will also present the Lamm Prize, a substantial financial award, to select leading scholars who embody the values of the chancellor. As visiting scholars at YU, Lamm Prize winners will give lectures, teach courses, and lead discussions within the YU community. In addition, Yad Lamm, a permanent visible tribute, will be established to tell the story of Dr. Lamm’s 27 years as president of YU through pictures, memorabilia, and other displays. As part of the Lamm Heritage, YU will endow and enhance the Norman Lamm Kollel L'Hora'ah (Yadin Yadin), an advanced juridical rabbinic ordination program at Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary (RIETS). “Norman Lamm is a visionary of Torah Umadda who continues to guide and invigorate us,” said YU President Richard Joel. “Those of us who are inspired by his leadership and seek to build on his achievements need to be surrounded by his ongoing contributions to Jewish thought and learning.” Born in Brooklyn, NY in 1927, Chancellor Lamm graduated YU’s Yeshiva College in 1949 summa cum laude and was class valedictorian. In 1951 he was ordained at RIETS and followed that with a PhD in Jewish philosophy at the university’s Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies in 1966. In 1976 he was elected as the third president of YU, the nation’s oldest and most comprehensive Jewish institution of higher learning, and served in that capacity until 2003, when he was installed as Chancellor. Dr. Lamm has gained worldwide recognition for his writings and discourses on interpretation of Jewish philosophy and law, especially in the fields of science, technology, and philosophy in the modern world. He has authored ten books, including The Religious Thought of Hasidism: Text and Commentary, which won the coveted Jewish Book Award in Jewish Thought from the Jewish Book Council. “The Jewish world is indebted to Dr. Norman Lamm for his outstanding contributions and the phenomenal accomplishments and success during his 27 years as president of YU,” said Morry J. Weiss, chairman of the YU Board of Trustees. To share a personal memory, view the archives, or to help support the Lamm Heritage, visit www.yu.edu/lammheritage. Founded in 1886, Yeshiva University brings together the heritage of Western civilization and the ancient traditions of Jewish law and life. More than 7,000 undergraduate and graduate students study at YU's four New York City campuses: the Wilf Campus, Israel Henry Beren Campus, Brookdale Center, and Jack and Pearl Resnick Campus. YU’s three undergraduate schools –– Yeshiva College, Stern College for Women, and Sy Syms School of Business ––– offer a unique dual program comprised of Jewish studies and liberal arts courses. Its graduate and affiliate schools include Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Wurzweiler School of Social Work, Ferkauf Graduate School of Psychology, Azrieli Graduate School of Jewish Education and Administration, Bernard Revel Graduate School of Jewish Studies, and Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. YU is ranked among the nation’s leading academic research institutions. # # # Visit the YU Web site at www.yu.edu.