Norman E. Alexander Library for Jewish Studies
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I have been asked to disseminate this to interested Jewish news sources.

Michelle

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Columbia University Libraries/Information Services NEWS

-For Immediate Release-
Contact: Laura Kenna, 212-854-4692, [email protected]

Columbia Libraries Receive $4 Million for Norman E. Alexander Library 
for Jewish Studies

http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb/news/libraries/2010/20101027.alexander.html


NEW YORK, October 27, 2010 - The Columbia University Libraries have 
received a gift of $4 million to establish the Norman E. Alexander 
Library for Jewish Studies which will include three new endowments: a 
Jewish Studies Librarian, the General Jewish Studies Collection and 
the Special Collections in Judaica.

The new Norman E. Alexander Librarian for Jewish Studies is Michelle 
Chesner. She joined the Columbia Libraries in May 2010, coming from 
the University of Pennsylvania where she served as an archivist and 
as the Judaica Public Services Librarian at the Katz Center for 
Advanced Judaic Studies. Previously, Chesner was a research assistant 
at Kestenbaum, a cataloger at NYU, and a special collections 
assistant at the Jewish Theological Seminary. Her research interests 
include 15th century Jewish history and the early Hebrew book.

The new Norman E. Alexander Library for Jewish Studies in special 
collections builds on a strong tradition of rare book and archival 
resources, including 29 Hebrew incunabula, over 300 sixteenth-century 
printed books, and nearly 1,500 Hebrew manuscripts, plus extensive 
archival collections related to Jewish life and culture, and Jewish 
individuals in all fields of study and work. In 1947, the Libraries 
acquired the magnificent Oko-Gebhardt Spinoza Collection, consisting 
of almost 4,000 books by and about the Dutch Jewish philosopher and 
in 2009 acquired the papers of Yosef Yerushalmi, the Columbia faculty 
member and groundbreaking and wide ranging scholar of Jewish history. 
Funds from this endowment are initially being focused on a project to 
catalog the Hebrew manuscripts collection, the second largest in North America.

The Jewish Studies research collections at Columbia exceed 100,000 
monograph volumes and 1,000 current and historical periodical titles. 
The collection comprises about 60,000 Hebrew and Yiddish titles in 
addition to its large holdings of Jewish scholarly works in Western 
and Slavic languages. Columbia also subscribes to many electronic 
titles, both ebooks and databases, which pertain to Jewish Studies, 
and is the only repository in New York City for the Visual History 
Archive of the Shoah Foundation.

Norman E. Alexander graduated from Columbia University in 1934 and 
Columbia Law School in 1936, after which he set off on a business 
career that spanned seven decades. When he died in 2006, he was 
Executive Chairman of Sequa Corporation, a $2 billion conglomerate 
that he led for nearly 50 years. A lifelong supporter of academic, 
Jewish and other philanthropic causes, Mr. Alexander was a member of 
the Board of Visitors of Columbia Law School and of the Board of 
Columbia/Barnard Hillel, where he established the Alexander Program 
Center for Jewish Life. In 1985 he received the University's John Jay 
Award for outstanding service and in 2008 the Norman E. Alexander 
Scholarships were endowed at the Columbia Law School. His advocacy of 
Jewish culture and tradition took many forms. He was a patron and 
trustee of The Jewish Museum and a governor and Vice President of the 
American Jewish Committee. He was a longstanding member of the 
publication committee of Commentary Magazine, a founding member of 
the board of The Jewish Week, and a major supporter of UJA-Federation 
as well as Temple Kol Ami in White Plains, NY. In addition, he 
supported the Jewish Publication Society, was a founder and board 
member of the Albert Einstein Medical College and was a founding 
trustee of the Jewish Foundation for the Righteous. He also served on 
the boards of Bronx Lebanon Hospital and as chairman of New York 
Medical College.

"We're delighted that the generosity bestowed by Norman E. Alexander 
has enabled Columbia, which for many decades has been a leader in 
Jewish Studies, to build on those strengths in its world-class 
library system. We hope and look forward to working with Michelle 
Chesner, to strengthening the collection, and making it useful and 
available to undergraduates, graduates and the whole scholarly 
community," said Jeremy Dauber, director of The Institute for Israel 
and Jewish Studies. "The Norman Alexander Library for Jewish Studies 
is an investment in our students, our faculty, and in the many 
scholars whose learning and research will benefit from the 
outstanding collections and services at Columbia," stated James Neal, 
Vice President for Information Services and University Librarian.

Columbia University Libraries/Information Services is one of the top 
five academic research library systems in North America. The 
collections include over 10 million volumes, over 100,000 journals 
and serials, as well as extensive electronic resources, manuscripts, 
rare books, microforms, maps, graphic and audio-visual materials. The 
services and collections are organized into 22 libraries and various 
academic technology centers. The Libraries employs more than 470 
professional and support staff. The website of the Libraries at 
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/lweb is the gateway to its services and resources.



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