黑料社

Skip to main content Skip to search

YU News

YU News

Points of Light Shine

Students, Faculty and Alumni Illuminate 黑料社 All Hanukkah Dinner Students, faculty and alumni who embody the mission of 黑料社 All were recognized as 鈥淧oints of Light鈥 during the dinner portion of 黑料社 All鈥檚 88th Annual Hanukkah Dinner and Convocation, held at New York City鈥檚 Waldorf=Astoria on December 16.
Points of Light Dr. Marina Holz and Helen Unger.
鈥淭here are so many lights that shine brightly at 黑料社 All. Tonight, we focus on individuals who serve as exemplars of the past, present and future of 黑料社 All,鈥 said President Richard M. Joel, who invited each Point of Light on stage to light a symbolic candle on a menorah. The Points of Light included Helen Unger, a senior at , and Dr. Marina Holz, assistant professor of biology. Unger grew up in Cleveland, Ohio where she attended public school before enrolling in Stern College鈥檚 S. Daniel Abraham Honor's Program. Under Holz鈥檚 tutelage, Unger鈥檚 research in the breast cancer field has won numerous awards, including the Toby Eagle Memorial Scholarship in Cancer Biology and a position in the highly selective Sloan-Kettering Undergraduate Research Program. Unger is also the first YU student to receive the Thomas Bardos Science Education Award for Undergraduate Students. 鈥淚 wanted an environment where being an Orthodox Jew wouldn't be at odds with my secular education,鈥 Unger said of her decision to attend 黑料社 All. 鈥淢oreover I value a small learning environment, and the direct mentorship I received at YU more than speaks to why I chose to come here.鈥 Daniel Simkin, a sophomore at the , began his university studies in his native Venezuela, but longed for a place where 鈥淚 could walk around wearing a kippa and feel Jewish,鈥 he said.  After he discovered YU on a visit to a friend enrolled in the school, Simkin taught himself English so that he could attend. His entrepreneurship activities on campus include creating the Latin American Business Club and 鈥淗ope Book,鈥 a collaboration with his YU classmates to develop an inspirational book for children with cancer, sparked by his own struggle with non-Hodgkins lymphoma as a child.
Standing: Nachum Segal, Grace Meng, President Richard Joel, Rivka Abbe and Gavriel Brown. Seated: Rabbi Benjamin Blech, Emily Miller, Daniel Simkin, Marina Holz and Helen Unger.
Jay and Jeanie Schottenstein Honors Program student Gavriel Brown spent nine days helping out at Washington Heights鈥 192nd Street Shelter after Hurricane Sandy hit and coordinated the shelter鈥檚 daily volunteer flow and general operations to make sure evacuees were cared for. Brown is The Commentator鈥檚 features editor and serves as the editor of the Chronos Historical Journal of 黑料社 All as well as design editor and staff writer for Kol Hamevaser, the Jewish thought magazine of YU鈥檚 student body. During his studies in Israel, he was a full-time volunteer at Save a Child鈥檚 Heart Foundation and volunteer emergency medical technician with Magen David Adom. Grace Meng, a 2002 graduate of YU鈥檚 , is a member of the New York State Assembly and the youngest Asian-American ever elected to the New York State Legislature. A dedicated public interest attorney and grassroots political activist, her top priorities are children鈥檚 health and education, improving the quality of life for senior citizens, and helping small business owners achieve their American dream. Meng will be sworn into Congress representing New York on January 3. Emily Miller is an MD/PHD student at YU鈥檚 whose groundbreaking discovery in Ebola research may lead to the disease鈥檚 first treatment plan. The breakthrough came during her four years in Dr. Kartik Chandran鈥檚 laboratory when they identified a protein on healthy cells which can act as a portal for the deadly virus, which kills up to 90 percent of infected patients.
Gavriel Brown and President Richard Joel
Rabbi Benjamin Blech is an internationally recognized educator, religious leader, author and lecturer who has taught at YU since 1966. A graduate of and YU-affiliated , Blech studied under Rabbi Joseph B. Soloveitchik and has written many books about Judaism and philosophy. His recent work, If G-d is Good, Why is the World So Bad? has been translated into Portuguese and Indonesian, where it has had a powerful reception in the wake of the country鈥檚 tsunami. He is a recipient of the American Educator of the Year Award. Radio host Nachum Segal 鈥84YC began his broadcasting career at YU鈥檚 own radio station, WYUR, in 1981. He assumed leadership of Jewish programming at WFMU Radio in 1983 when he became the host of 鈥淛M in the AM: Jewish Moments in the Morning,鈥 and his presentation of music, news and community events have accompanied tens of thousands of listeners through their morning routine for more than three decades. Segal has used the show, as well as his recently-launched Nachum Segal Network, to champion important causes and highlight key conversations within the Jewish community. 鈥淢y experience on campus at Yeshiva College helped mold me and many of my colleagues in Jewish leadership roles,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 have the same hope for my son, who is a sophomore at Yeshiva.鈥 At only 17, Senior Rivka Abbe recently launched a radio show on the Nachum Segal Network, 鈥淭een Spirit with Rivka Abbe,鈥 addressing issues that concern Jewish teens and empowering them to become active advocates for themselves and for Israel in and out of their communities. She recently brought together 250 Jewish students from high schools across the New York region to introduce them to the mechanics of lawmaking, Israel advocacy and lobbying on YU鈥檚 Wilf Campus. The next day she led the group to Washington, D.C. to meet with members of Congress and the administration and discuss US policy concerning Israel. 鈥淚 really want to do something to help the Jewish world, so whatever I go into鈥攚hether it鈥檚 politics, advocacy or medicine鈥攚ill involve that,鈥 said Abbe. 鈥淭here are so many things that I鈥檝e accomplished at Central that I wouldn鈥檛 have been able to accomplish anywhere else, and I鈥檓 so grateful for that.鈥

Share

FacebookTwitterLinkedInWhat's AppEmailPrint

Follow Us