Rutgers University
- For other meanings of Rutgers, see Rutgers (disambiguation)
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Motto |
Sol iustitiae et occidentem illustra |
---|---|
Established | 10 November 1766 |
School type | Public, Research University |
President | Richard L. McCormick |
Location | Three campuses: New Brunswick / Piscataway, Camden and Newark, New Jersey USA |
Enrollment | 51,480 undergraduate, 12,904 graduate |
Faculty | 2,552 |
Endowment | US$398.2 million |
Athletics | 27 Sports Teams |
Website | www.rutgers.edu |
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey is the largest institution for higher education in the U.S. state of New Jersey. The university's primary campus is located in the cities of New Brunswick and Piscataway, with two branch campuses in Newark and Camden. Rutgers offers more than 100 distinct bachelor, 100 master, and 80 doctoral and professional degree programs across 29 degree-granting schools and colleges, 16 of which offer graduate programs of study. Rutgers has been named one of the "Public Ivies" - a public university that provides an "Ivy League" collegiate experience - according to THE PUBLIC IVIES: America's Flagship Public Universities (2001, ISBN 0060953624).
Rutgers is the eighth-oldest institution of higher learning established in the United States, originally chartered as Queen's College in 1766. While originally a Dutch Reformed institution, the university is now non-sectarian and makes no religious demands on its students.
Rutgers was designated the State University of New Jersey by legislative acts in 1945 and 1956. The University of Newark merged with Rutgers in 1946, expanding the school to include the current campus in Newark. The College of South Jersey, which became the Camden campus, merged in 1950.
About Rutgers University
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is a leading national research university and is unique as the only university in the nation that is a colonial chartered college (1766), a land-grant institution (1864), and a state university (1945/1956). There are seventeen degree granting divisions at Rutgers. Rutgers College became the land-grant college of New Jersey in 1864, resulting in the establishment of the Rutgers Scientific School, featuring departments of agriculture, engineering, and chemistry. Further expansion in the sciences came with the founding of the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station in 1880 and the division of the Rutgers Scientific School into the College of Engineering (now the School of Engineering) in 1914 and the College of Agriculture (now Cook College) in 1921. The precursors to several other Rutgers divisions were also established during this period: the College of Pharmacy (now the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy) in 1892, the New Jersey College for Women (now Douglass College) in 1918, and the School of Education in 1924.
The first Summer Session began in 1913 with one six-week session. That summer program offered 47 courses and had an enrollment of 314 students. Currently, Summer Session offers over 1,000 courses to more than 15,000 students on the Camden, Newark, and New Brunswick/Piscataway campuses, off-campus, and abroad.
Rutgers was sometimes considered a part of the Ivy League along with the current 8 members and Army and Navy. However, the University dropped out prior to formal organization of that league. Rutgers maintains rivalries with Princeton and Columbia in sports other than football.
Rutgers was designated the State University of New Jersey by legislatives acts in 1945 and 1956. Since the 1950s, Rutgers has continued to expand, especially in the area of graduate education. The Graduate School—New Brunswick, and professional schools have been established in such areas as business, management, public policy, social work, applied and professional psychology, the fine arts, and communication, information and library studies. (A number of these schools offer undergraduate programs as well.) Also at the undergraduate level, Livingston College was founded in 1969, emphasizing the urban environment.
On September 10, 1970, after several years of debate and planning, the Board of Governors voted to admit women into the previously all-male Rutgers College. The transformation from single-sex to coeducational institutions became a trend in many colleges across the United States that had—up to the late 1960's and early 1970's—remained all-male. Today, Douglass College (originally the New Jersey College for Women) remains all-female, while the rest of the institution is coeducational.
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is accredited by the Commission on Higher Education of the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools (since 1921). In 1989, Rutgers University became a member of the Association of American Universities, an organization comprised of the 62 leading research universities in North America.
Richard Levis McCormick (b. 1947) is the current president of Rutgers University.
Divisions of the New Brunswick/Piscataway Campus
- Cook College
- Douglass College
- Livingston College
- Rutgers College (The original college from which the University evolved.)
- University College–New Brunswick (School for non-traditional students)
- College of Nursing
- Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy
- Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy (Only Pharmacy School in New Jersey)
- Graduate School of Applied and Professional Psychology
- Graduate School of Education
- Mason Gross School of the Arts
- Rutgers Business School–New Brunswick
- School of Communication, Information and Library Studies
- School of Engineering
- School of Management and Labor Relations
- School of Social Work
To view divisions at other campuses go to Rutgers-Newark or Rutgers-Camden.
As of July 2005, the Task Force on Undergraduate Education has proposed the merger of Douglass, Livingston, University, and Rutgers Colleges into the Rutgers College of Arts and Sciences as well as other major reforms to various aspects of Undergraduate Education. It is also suspected that the University would use this to systematically raise admissions standards for all undergraduates. The proposal of the task force has likely approval from the Board of Trustees, the Board of Governors, and President McCormick. Students and alumni of Rutgers, University, and Livingston colleges are overwhelmingly in approval of the changes while many students and alumnae of Douglass College are adamantly opposed to the plan as it would eliminate the all-female college. However, since all undergraduates currently take classes together from the unified faculty anyway and the Women's Clubs, Leadership programs, and Female-only housing would remain under the proposal it would appear that the "Save Douglass" pleas will fall on deaf ears.
Rutgers: History and tradition
Early History
Shortly after the creation of The College of New Jersey (later Princeton University) in 1746, ministers of the Dutch Reformed Church sought to establish autonomy in ecclesiastical affairs. At that time, those who wanted to become ministers in within the church had to travel to the Netherlands to be trained and ordained, and many of the affairs of churches in the American colonies were managed from Europe. Thus, the ministers sought to create a governing body known as a classis to give local autonomy to the church in the colonies, and offer opportunities for the education of ministers.
Throughout the 1750s, Dutch ministers joined the effort to create a classis in the colonies, including Theodorus Jacobus Frelinghuysen who travelled on horseback in winter of 1755 to several congregations throughout the northeast to rally ministers and congregations to the cause. Soon after, Frelinghuysen travelled to the Netherlands to appeal to the General Synod, the Dutch Reformed Church's governing council for the creation of the classis. In 1761, the effort having failed, Frelinghuysen set sail for the colonies, but as the vessel approached New York, he mysteriously perished at sea.
After Frelinghuysen's death, Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh (later Rutgers' first president), established himself as spokesperson for the cause, and a strong supporter of establishing a college in New Jersey. Hardenbergh, travelled to Europe renewing Frelinghuysen's efforts to gain the Synod's approval, but was also rejected. Much to the Synod's chagrin, however, Hardenburgh returned to the colonies with money for the establishment of a college.
Queen's College
The school now called Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, was chartered on November 10, 1766 as "Queen's College," in honor of King George III's Queen-consort, Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz (1744–1818). The charter was signed and the young college supported by William Franklin (1730–1813), the last Royal Governor of New Jersey and illegitimate son of Benjamin Franklin (1706–1790). The original charter specified the establishment both of the college, and of an institution called the Queen's College Grammar School, intended to be a preparatory school affiliated and governed by the college. This institution, today the Rutgers Preparatory School, was a part of the college community until 1957.
The original purpose of Queen's College was to "educate the youth in language, liberal, the divinity, and useful arts and sciences" and for the training of future ministers for the Dutch Reformed Church—though the university is now non-sectarian and makes no religious demands on its students. (Ironically, given the tenets of Christianity, the college first met at a tavern called the Sign of the Red Lion, on what is today the grounds of the Johnson & Johnson corporate headquarters in New Brunswick, New Jersey.) It admitted its first students in 1771—a single sophomore and a handful of first-year students taught by a lone instructor—and granted its first degree in 1774, to Matthew Leydt. When the American Revolution broke out, the college abandoned the tavern and held classes in private houses, in and near New Brunswick. During its early years, the college developed as a classic liberal arts institution.
In its early years, Queen's College was plagued by a lack of funds. In 1793, with the fledgling college falling on hard times, the board of trustees voted on a resoluton to merge with the College of New Jersey (now Princeton University). The measure failed by one vote. The problem did not go away, and in 1795, lacking both funds and tutors, the trustees consider moving the college to New York. Instead, they decide to close, only to reopen in 1808 after the Trustees raised $12,000.
The next year, the College got a building of its own, affectionately called "Old Queen's" (which still stands), which is regarded today by architectural experts as one of the nation's finest examples of Federal architecture. University President Ira Condict laid the cornerstone on 27 April 1809. However, continued financial woes would cause the building to wait 14 years for completion, that combined with a nationwide economic depression and the impending War of 1812 forced Queen's College to close down a second time, in 1812. In its early years, Queen's College, the Queen's College Grammar School, and the New Brunswick Theological Seminary shared space in Old Queens. In 1856, with Old Queens suffering from overcrowding, the Seminary, moved to a home of its own nearby.
In 1825, Queen's College was reopened, and its name was changed to "Rutgers College" in honor of American Revolutionary War hero Colonel Henry Rutgers (1745–1830). According to the Board of Trustees, Colonel Rutgers was honored because he epitomized Christian values, however, it probably helped that the Colonel gave a gift that set the college on secure financial footing. Rutgers, a descendant of an old Dutch family that settled in New Amsterdam (now New York City), gave the fledgling college a $5000 bond and a bell to be placed in the cupola of Old Queens. The college's early troubles inspired numerous student songs, including an adaptation of the drinking song Down Among the Dead Men with the lyrics "Here's a drink to old Rutgers, loyal men, May she ne'er go down but to rise again."
"Rutgers College" became "Rutgers University" in 1924.
Athletics
Rutgers was among the first American institutions to engage in intercollegiate athletics, and participated in a small circle of schools that included Yale University, Columbia University and long-time rival, Princeton University.
On May 2, 1866, in the first intercollegiate athletic event in the United States, the Rutgers baseball team was humiliated by the Princeton team, 40-2.
On November 6, 1869, Rutgers became the "Birthplace of Football" when it defeated Princeton, six "runs" to four, in the first intercollegiate football game ever played (the site, then a field, is now occupied by the College Avenue Gymnasium). Instead of wearing uniforms, the players stripped off their hats, coats, and vests and bound their suspenders around the waistbands of their trousers. For headgear, the Rutgers team wound their scarlet scarves into turbans atop their heads. This led to the College later adopting scarlet as its school color. The game— with rules more resembling those of soccer than the later form of American football—gave birth to a new pastime described as "replete with surprise, strategy, prodigies of determination, and physical prowess." During the 1870s, games resembling rugby became popular at other American colleges, and Rutgers eventually adopted similar rules. These games developed into what is today known as American football.
However, Rutgers proceeded to lose at football to Princeton each year for the next 68 years, only breaking that losing streak in 1938.
An amusing sidenote: the first intercollegiate competition in Ultimate Frisbee was held between Rutgers and Princeton on 6 November 1972—the 103rd anniversary of the first intercollegiate football game.
Today, Rutgers University is a member of the Big East Conference, (in football since 1991, all other sports since 1995) a collegiate athletic conference consisting of sixteen colleges and universities in the Northeastern and Midwestern United States. The Big East is a member of the Bowl Championship Series. Rutgers is a Division I-A school as sanctioned by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Rutgers continues to play Princeton and Columbia every year in nearly every sport the schools all compete in with the exception of Football.
The Rutgers University Fight Song
- R-U, Rah, Rah,
- R-U, Rah, Rah,
- Whoo-Raa, Whoo-Raa;
- Rutgers Rah
- Up-Stream Red Team;
- Red Team Up-Stream
- Rah, Rah,
- Rutgers Rah!!
Mascot
The Rutgers University mascot is the Scarlet Knight.
Since its days when the school was officially known as Queen's College, the athletic teams were referred to as the Queensmen. Officially serving as the mascot figure for several football seasons beginning in 1925 was a giant, colorfully felt-covered, costumed representation of an earlier campus symbol, the "Chanticleer." Though a fighting bird of the kind which other colleges have found success, to some it bore the connotation of "chicken." It is also a little-known fact that the New Brunswick-based broadcast station, WCTC, which serves as the flagship station of Rutgers athletics, had its call letters derived from the word "ChanTiCleer." Chanticleer remained as the nickname for some 30 years.
In the early 1950's, in the hope of spurring both the all-around good athletic promise and RU fighting spirit, a campus-wide selection process changed the mascot to that of a knight. By 1955 , the Scarlet Knight had officially become the new Rutgers mascot.
Traditions and Legacies
Howard Fullerton, a member of the Order of the Bull's Blood, goes down in Rutgers history not only for his penning the alma mater but for allegedly inspiring the theft of a cannon from the campus of Princeton University on 25 April 1875, an event—and the ensuing debate between the two university presidents—reported in nationwide newspapers. The cannon was believed to have belonged to Rutgers when used in battle. Princeton students retaliated by raiding the Rutgers Armory and stealing a few muskets. Eventually the committee appointed by the two colleges recommended the return the stolen items to their owners before the event. When the cannon was returned, Princeton University officials ordered it buried in the ground, encased in cement, with only a few feet of the butt end exposed above ground.
Several Rutgers students attempted to repeat the crime, unsuccessfully, in October 1946, attaching one end of a length of heavy chain to the cannon and the other to their Ford. Surprised by Princeton men and the local constabulatory, they gunned the engine of the Ford so viciously that the car was torn in half. The Rutgers army manages to escape, but with neither the car, nor their prize, the cannon.
To this day, intrepid Rutgers students journey the 20 miles to Princeton University to place their declaration of ownership of the cannon by painting the cannon scarlet red. Unfortunately, like the students who stole the cannon in 1875, they usually paint the wrong cannon, as there are two on Cannon Green behind Nassau Hall at Princeton. Today, a cannon is placed in the ground before Old Queens at Rutgers, memorializing both this event, and alumni in the service who were killed in action. At Commencement, tradition leads undergraduates to break clay pipes over the cannon, symbolizing the breaking of ties with the college, and leaving behind the good times of one's undergraduate years. This symbolism dates back to when pipe-smoking was fashionable among undergraduates, and many college memories were derived from evenings of pipe smoking and revelry with friends.
The bell in the Old Queen's cupola, an 1826 gift of namesake donor Colonel Henry Rutgers, is traditionally used to announce the graduation of classes. It is also rung on special occasions, including those of prized athletic success. Most recently, the bell was rung when the 1999-2000 women's basketball team advanced to the NCAA Final Four in Philadelphia, and when the 1990 men's soccer team reached the championship game of the NCAA Tournament.
Trivia
- The College Avenue Gymnasium, built on the site where the first college football game was played, hosted New Jersey's 1947 and 1966 Constitutional Conventions.
- In 1810, a book of 104 rules and regulations are published to guide student down a moral path. Among these rules were prohibitions on dancing and fencing schools, billiards, cards, dice, beer and oyster houses, firearms, powder, and public ball alleys; and further, no student was to "disguise himself for the purpose of imposition or amusement," "speak upon the public stage anything indecent, profane, or immoral," or "employ a barber on the Lord's day to dress his head or shave him." Ironically, the Rutgers Dance Marathon started by the Zeta Beta Tau fraternity in the 1970s is one of the largest student run philanthropy events in the country, so much for a dancing prohibition. As for fencing, the Rutgers Fencing team regularly competes with and defeats the nation's top teams such as Duke and NYU.
- In 1879, Mark Twain, the famed American author, accepted an honorary membership into the Philoclean Society at Rutgers, but failed to make the customary monetary contribution.
- In addition to being the "birthplace of college football," Rutgers has given birth to discoveries and innovations such as Cheez-Whiz, water-soluble sustained release polymers, Tetraploids, robotic hands, artificial bovine insemination, several antibiotics, and developed the ceramic tiles for the heat shield on the Space Shuttle. Currently Rutgers researchers are driving closer and closer to an effective cure for AIDS.
- All of the law school scenes in Rounders were filmed in and around Rutgers Law School in Newark, New Jersey.
Alma Mater
The alma mater of Rutgers University is the song entitled On the Banks of the Old Raritan, written by Howard Fullerton (Class of 1872). The lyrics to the song are, as follows:
- I.
- My father sent me to old Rutgers,
- And resolv'd that I should be a man;
- And so I settled down,
- in that noisy college town,
- On the banks of the old Raritan.
- (Chorus)
- On the banks of the old Raritan, my boys,
- where old Rutgers ever more shall stand,
- For has she not stood since the time of the flood,
- On the banks of the old Raritan.
- II.
- Then sing aloud to Alma Mater,
- And keep the scarlet in the van;
- For with her motto high,
- Rutgers' name shall never die,
- On the banks of the old Raritan.
- (Chorus)
- *N.B.: The phrase "my boys" in the first line of the chorus was changed in 1990 to "my friends" in light of Rutgers being coeducational since 1970. When the Alma Mater is performed by the Queen's Chorale, an all-women group, they sing "And resolv'd that I should be a man" quickly followed by "or a woman".
Presidents of Rutgers University
- 1785–1790 Jacob Rutsen Hardenbergh (1736–1790) - Hardenbergh Hall, a "Riverdorm" (towering dorm by the Raritan River, is named for him
- 1791–1795 William Linn (1752–1808)
- 1795–1810 Ira Condict (1764–1811)
- 1810–1825 John Henry Livingston (1746–1825)
- 1825–1840 Philip Milledoler (1775–1852)
- 1840–1850 Abraham Bruyn Hasbrouck (1791–1879)
- 1850–1862 Theodore Frelinghuysen (1787–1862) - Frelinghuysen Hall, a Riverdorm, bears his name
- 1862–1882 William Henry Campbell (1808–1890) - Campbell Hall, a Riverdorm, is named after him
- 1882–1890 Merrill Edward Gates (1848–1922)
- 1891–1906 Austin Scott (1848–1922)
- 1906–1924 William Henry Steele Demarest (1863–1956)
- 1925–1930 John Martin Thomas (1869–1952)
- 1930–1931 Philip Milledoler Brett (1871–1960)
- 1932–1951 Robert Clarkson Clothier (1885–1970)
- 1951–1958 Lewis Webster Jones (1899–1975)
- 1959–1971 Mason Welch Gross(1911–1977) - the Mason Gross School of the Arts is named after him
- 1971–1989 Edward J. Bloustein (1925–1989) - the Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy is named after him
- 1990–2002 Francis L. Lawrence (b. 1937)
- 2002— Richard Levis McCormick (b. 1947)
Notable alumni
Politics, government and public service
- Phillip Alampi, Class of 1934, M.A. 1945 — New Jersey Secretary of Agriculture
- Joseph P. Bradley, Class of 1836 — Associate Justice, United States Supreme Court
- Clifford P. Case, Class of 1925 — United States Senator
- James J. Florio, J.D. 1967 — former Governor of New Jersey
- Louis Freeh, Class of 1971 — Director of the FBI (1993–2001)
- Frederick T. Frelinghuysen, Class of 1836 — Vice Presidential Candidate, United States Senator
- E. Scott Garrett J.D. 1984 — Representative
- Garret A. Hobart, Class of 1863 — Industrialist, Vice President of the United States, (1897–1899)
- James J. Howard, M.Ed. 1958; Representative, (1965–1988)
- Richard Hughes, J.D. 1931 — New Jersey Governor, Chief State Supreme Court Justice
- William Hughes, Class of 1955 — Congressman, Ambassador to Panama
- Jack H. Jacobs, Class of 1966, M.A. 1972 — Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient, military analyst for MSNBC
- Robert Menendez — Representative
- William A. Newell, Class of 1836 — Physician, Governor of New Jersey, (1857-1860)
- Hazel O'Leary — U.S. Secretary of Energy (1993–1997)
- David A. Morse, Class of 1929 — Director-General of ILO who accepted the Nobel Peace Prize in 1969 on behalf of the ILO
- James Schureman, Class of 1775 — Continental Congress, Senator.
- Robert Torricelli, Class of 1974 — United States Senator, Congressman
- Peter W. Rodino, Jr., J.D. 1937 — Congressman
- Foster M. Voorhees, Class of 1876 — Governor of New Jersey, (1898, 1899-1902)
Business
- Roger Ackerman, Class of 1960, M.A. 1962 — former chairman and CEO of Corning, Inc.
- Jay Chiat, Class of 1953 — advertising executive
- James Cullen, Class of 1964 — former president and COO of Bell Atlantic
- Marc Ecko — CEO and Founder of Marc Ecko Enterprises
- Sharon Fordham, Class of 1975 — CEO of WeightWatchers.com, Inc.
- Arthur Goldberg, Class of 1963 — former president and CEO of Park Place Entertainment Corporation
- James Kelly, Class of 1973 — former chairman and CEO of UPS
- Leonor F. Loree, Class of 1877 — President of the Pennsylvania Railroad
- Bernard Marcus, Class of 1951 — Founder of the Home Depot
- Gregg Spiridellis, Class of 1993 — founder of JibJab.com
- David Lloyd Kreeger, Class of 1929 — founder of GEICO
- Ernest Mario, Class of 1961 — former CEO of Glaxo
- Marty Yudkovitz — former president of Tivo
Medicine
- Clifton R. Lacy, Class of 1975 — New Jersey Commissioner of Health and Senior Services
- William Trager, Class of 1930 — developed new treatements for Malaria
- Selman Waksman, Class of 1915 — discovered 22 antibiotics, best known for streptomycin. Nobel laureate.
- H. Boyd Woodruff, Class of 1939/Graduate School 1942 — discovered antibiotic actinomycin.
- Stephen D. Ford, Class of 1979— Chief of Staff, Robert Wood Johnson University Hopsital at Rahway.
Academia
- Carol Christ, Class of 1966 — President of Smith College
- Milton Friedman, Class of 1932 — Economist, Nobel Laureate
- William H. S. Demarest, Class of 1883 — President of Rutgers University
- Philip Milledoler Brett, Class of 1892 — President of Rutgers University, Successful Corporate Attorney
- Carl Woodward, Class of 1914 — President of University of Rhode Island
- William Kirwan, M.A. 1962, 1964 — Chancellor of the University System of Maryland, former President of Ohio State University
- Roy Franklin Nichols, Class of 1918 — Pulitzer Prize-winning historian
Science & Engineering
- Simeon DeWitt, Class of 1776 — Geographer for George Washington and Continental Army during the American Revolution
- Peter C. Schultz, Class of 1964 — co-inventor of fiber optics
- Stanley N. Cohen, Class of 1956 — geneticist, pioneer in gene splicing
- Louis Gluck, Class of 1948 — considered the father of neonatology, the science of caring for newborn infants
- Aaron Puritz, Class of 1995 — advanced sheep herding particularly sheep and shepard relationships with developments in velcro glove technology
- Philip S. Schein, Class of 1961 — cancer researcher, founder of U.S. Bioscience
- Matthew Golombek, Class of 1976 — project scientist in charge of NASA's Pathfinder mission to Mars
- Terry Hart, Class of 1978 — Astronaut, president of LORAL Skynet
Arts & letters
- Martin Agronsky, Class of 1936 — Journalist
- Richard Aregood, Class of 1965 — Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- Alice Aycock, Class of 1968 — Sculptor
- Samuel Blackman, Class of 1927 — Journalist
- James Blish, Class of 1942 — Science fiction and fantasy author.
- Jonathan Carroll, Class of 1971 — Award-winning Author
- Janet Evanovich, Class of 1965 — Best-selling Author
- Jerry Izenberg, Class of 1952 — Emmy-winning sports journalist
- Alfred Joyce Kilmer, Class of 1908 (did not graduate) — poet, died in France during World War I.
- Robert Pinsky, Class of 1962 — Poet Laureate of the United States, Winner of the Pulitzer Prize.
- George Segal, GSNB 1963 — Sculptor
- Michael Shaara, Class of 1951 — author of The Killer Angels and Winner of the Pulitzer Prize
Entertainment and sports
- Mr. Magoo — A cartoon character whose fictional biography included being an alumnus of Rutgers.
- Ruthie Alcaide, Class of 2000 — star of star of MTV's The Real World Hawaii and The Real World Battle of the Sexes.
- Roger Bart — Actor ("The Producers", Tony Award for "You're a Good Man, Charlie Brown")
- Mario Batali, Class of 1982 — Chef, Restauranteur, Television Host (Molto Mario, Iron Chef America)
- Marco Battaglia, Class of 1996 — Football Player, NFL Tight End (Pittsburgh Steelers)
- Bill Bellamy, Class of 1989 — Comedian, Actor
- Jay Bellamy, Class of 1994 — Football Player, NFL Safety (New Orleans Saints)
- Gary Brackett, Class of 2003 — Football Player, NFL Linebacker (Indianapolis Colts)
- Avery Brooks, Class of 1973 — Actor, Educator
- John Carpenter, Class of 1990 — First ever champion of Who Wants to Be a Millionaire television quiz show
- Asia Carrera (born Jessica Bennett), Class of 1995 — Porn Star (who majored in Business and Japanese).
- Kevin Chamberlin — Actor (Tony Award nominations for "Dirty Blonde" and "Seussical")
- Kristin Davis, Class of 1987, — Actress (Sex and the City)
- Calista Flockhart, Class of 1988 — Actress (stage, television, and motion pictures) (The Birdcage)(Ally McBeal), Emmy winner
- James Gandolfini, Class of 1983 — Actor (The Sopranos), Emmy winner
- Bill Jemas, Class of 1980, Writer, creative director, former publisher for Marvel Comics Group
- Nate Jones, Class of 2004 — Football Player, NFL Cornerback (Dallas Cowboys)
- Alexi Lalas, Class of 1991 — Former U.S. Soccer National Team member, present President & General Manager of MetroStars in MLS
- Ray Lucas, Class of 1996 — Football Player, NFL Quarterback 1996-2002 (New York Jets, Miami Dolphins), TV Football commentator
- William Mastrosimone, Class of 1980 — Playwright, Golden Globe Award winner
- Mike McMahon, Class of 2001 — Football Player, NFL Quarterback (Philadelphia Eagles)
- Linda Miles aka "Shaniqua", Class of 2001 — World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE) Wrestler, winner of WWE Tough Enough 2 competition on MTV
- Oswald "Ozzie" Nelson, Class of 1927 — Musician and Actor (The Adventures of Ozzie and Harriet)
- Shaun O'Hara, Class of 2000 — Football Player, NFL Center (New York Giants)
- Dan Renzi, Class of 1996 — star of MTV's The Real World Miami, model, gay and lesbian rights activist
- Paul Robeson, Class of 1919 — Athlete, Actor, Singer, Political Activist, NFL Guard 1920-1922 (Akron Pros, Milwaukee Badgers)
- L.J. Smith, Class of 2003 — Football Player, NFL Tight End (Philadelphia Eagles)
- Aaron Stanford, Class of 2000 — Actor ("X2", "Tadpole")
- David Stern, Class of 1963 — Commissioner of the National Basketball Association
- Tammy Sutton-Brown, Class of 2001 — Basketball player, Charlotte Sting of the WNBA
- Jeff Torborg, Class of 1963 — Major League Baseball Catcher (Los Angeles Dodgers and California Angels) and Manager (several teams)
- Sue Wicks, Class of 1988 — Basketball player, member of the 1988 Olympic team and New York Liberty (1997-2002) of the WNBA
- Lisa Williamson aka "Sista Soulja", Class of 1986 — Rapper, Executive director of Sean "PDiddy" Combs' "Daddy's House" non-profit childrens organization, one of the founders of the 1999 Million Women March in Philadelphia
Crime and terrorism
- Ramzi Yousef — Terrorist, involved in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing (studied Chemical Engineering, briefly)
- Nidal Ayyad — Terrorist, involved in 1993 World Trade Center bombing (graduated in Chemical Engineering )
Notable faculty
- Miguel Algarin
- Haim Brezis
- Stephen Bronner — Professor of Political Science, Comparative Literature and German Studies
- Avery Brooks — Associate Professor of Fine Arts
- Claire Calandra — Professor of Business, former COO of Tycom Ltd
- Vašek Chvátal
- Michael Curtis
- Ralph Ellison — Author of The Invisible Man
- James J. Florio — former Governor of New Jersey (1989-1993)
- Jerry Fodor — Professor of Philosophy and Cognitive Science
- David S. Foglesong
- Israel Gelfand
- Ruth Bader Ginsburg — Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court
- Lila Gleitman
- Alvin Goldman — Professor of Philosophy
- Leon Golub
- Mason W. Gross
- Andras Hajnal
- Henryk Iwaniec — Professor of Mathematics
- Jeffry Kahn — Professor of Mathematics
- Temma Kaplan--Professor of History and Women's Studies
- Leonid Khachiyan — Professor of Mathematics
- Ernest Lepore — Professor of Philosophy
- Alan Leslie
- David Levering Lewis — Professor of History, Winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Biography (2001)
- Roy Lichtenstein
- Tomás Eloy Martínez — Famous argentinian journalist and writer
- Matt K Matsuda--Associate Professor of History
- Colin McGinn — Professor of Philosophy
- Alan Prince
- Zenon Pylyshyn
- Michael Saks — Professor of Mathematics, Winner of the Gödel Prize (2004)
- Saharon Shelah — Professor of Mathematics
- Stephen Stich — Professor of Philosophy
- Mario Szegedy — Professor of Mathematics
- Endre Szemeredi — Professor of Mathematics
- Lionel Tiger
- Jay Tischfield
- Robert Trivers — Professor of Anthropology
- Wise Young
- Doron Zeilberger — Professor of Mathematics, Winner of the Steele Prize for Seminal Contributions to Research (1998)
Student organizations
A list of student organizations at Rutgers University, mostly endorsed by the university administration (some are not for various reasons), including links to their official websites when available.
Student Government
- Rutgers College Governing Association
- Rutgers College Programming Council
- Livingston College Governing Association
- Douglass College Governing Association
- Cook College Council
- Graduate Student Association
- Engineering Governing Council (College of Engineering)
- Pharmacy Governing Council (College of Pharmacy)
- Newark College of Arts & Sciences SGA
- Rutgers University Senate
Media
- RU-tv, the Rutgers University Television Network
- The Daily Targum — established 1869, one of the nation's oldest college newpspaers.
- Rutgers Review
- The Medium — Rutgers University's controversial humor paper.
- The Rutgers Centurion - a conservative publication which publishes videos of professors on their website.
- The Anthologist -
- Black Voice/Carta Latina
- Conversasian
- Hanwoori - The Korean-American Newsletter at Rutgers
- Knight Time Productions
- Scarlet Letter
- Screenwriters Community of Rutgers University
- WRSU FM radio
Academic Organizations
- Academic Team
- American Medical Students Association
- American Studies Association
- Association for Women in Communications
- Association of Black Journalists
- Association of Undergraduate Geneticists
- Biochemistry Club
- Biology Club
- Chemistry Society
- Consulting Club
- Debate Union
- Geological Society of Rutgers
- Health Professions United
- HP Agora
- Information Technology & Informatics Council
- James Dickson Carr Society
- Korean Economic & Business Association
- Management Science Information Systems (MSIS) Society
- Master Minds
- Minority Association for Pre-Health Students
- Minority Engineering Educational Task
- Minority Business Students Association
- National Association of Black Accountants-New Brunswick Student Chapter
- Neuroscience Association
- Philosophy Club
- Pre-Dental Society
- Pre-Law Society
- Pre-Med Society
- Psychological Society at Rutgers
- Public Health Association
- Public Relations Student Society of America
- Science Association (Rutgers)
- Society for Professional Journalists
- Society of Physics Students
- Undergraduate Anthropology Club
- Undergraduate Geographic Society
- Undergraduate Student Alliance of Computer Scientists
Social and Political Organizations
- The 1000 Men and Women of Rutgers–also known as Rutgers1000 or RU1000 (defunct)
- Community Empowerment Project
- American Civil Liberties Union
- American Muslim Affairs Committee
- Amnesty International
- Association of International Relations
- Bisexual, Gay and Lesbian Alliance of Rutgers University
- Culture Jam: Students Against Excessive Consumerism
- Democrats
- Global Pact
- Green Party
- Humans Against Meat
- Israel Public Affairs Committee
- Israeli Action Committee of RU
- The Mason Gross Project
- Microfinance Initiative
- National Association for the Advancement of Colored People
- NJ Solidarity
- Progressive Student Alliance
- Rutgers College Republicans, the university's chapter of the College Republican National Committee
- Students for a Free Tibet
- Undergraduate Women's Studies Association
Art, Music and Performance Organizations
- Rutgers University Glee Club - established in 1872, is one of the premier all-male college singing groups.
- Asian Acapella Group
- Bhangra
- Cabaret Theatre
- Casual Harmony
- College Avenue Players
- Deep Treble (coed a capella)
- Film & Theatre Alliance
- First Light (a capella)
- Kirkpatrick Choir
- Kol Halayla, Hillel Jewish Acapella Singers
- Liberated Gospel Choir
- Musician's Guild
- Orphan Sporks
- Performing Dance Company
- Queen's Chorale
- The Queen's Men (defunct)
- South Asian Performing Artists
- Tap Troupe (RU)
- Voorhees Choir
Fraternities and Sororities
- Alpha Chi Omega
- Alpha Epsilon Pi
- Alpha Kappa Lambda
- Alpha Sigma Phi (Colony)
- Chi Phi
- Chi Psi
- Delta Kappa Epsilon
- Delta Chi
- Delta Gamma
- Delta Phi [St. Elmo]
- FIJI
- Gamma Phi Beta
- Gamma Sigma
- Kappa Zeta Psi
- Lambda Theta Phi
- Lambda Sigma Upsilon
- Omega Phi Chi
- Phi Kappa Sigma
- Phi Kappa Tau
- Phi Sigma Kappa
- Phi Sigma Sigma
- Pi Kappa Alpha
- Psi Upsilon
- Sigma Alpha Mu
- Sigma Beta Rho
- Sigma Chi
- Sigma Delta Tau
- Sigma Kappa
- Sigma Phi Epsilon
- Sigma Pi
- Theta Chi
- Zeta Beta Tau
- Zeta Psi
- Zeta Tau Alpha
Community Service
- Alpha Phi Omega
- Carousel Community Program
- Children's AIDS Network
- Circle K
- Community Cares
- Community Outreach/Big Buddy Program
- Goya Project
- Habitat for Humanity
- Human Development Project
- Jewish Community Service Organization
- Operation Smile
- Reach Out And Read
- Red Cross Club
- RU 4 the Troops
- Rutgers Readers
- Rutgers University Humanitarian Alliance (RUHA)
- Scarlet Listeners-Peer Support and Referral Center
- Tzu-Ching Buddhist Compassion Relief Foundation
- Unite for Sight
Honorary Organizations
- Alpha Epsilon Delta
- Cap and Skull is an honor society at Rutgers University, established in 1900.
- Golden Key International Honour Society
- National Society of Collegiate Scholars
- Phi Alpha Delta Law Fraternity
- Phi Beta Kappa Liberal Arts Honors Society
- Tau Beta Pi
- Eta Kappa Nu
Leisure Clubs
- BlitzFahren AutoKlub
- Chess Club
- Multiplayer Gaming League
- Outdoors Club
- Student Linux User Group
- Rutgers Table Tennis Club
Cultural Organizations
- Alliance & Understanding
- Armenian Club
- Asian Student Council
- Association of Indians at Rutgers
- Association of Philippine Students
- Bengali Students Association
- Black Student Union
- Cantonese Club
- Central and South American Alliance
- Chinese Dance Troupe
- Chinese Student Organization
Douglass Black Students Congress
- Electronic Music Club
- German Club
- Haitian Association at Rutgers University
- Hellenic Cultural Association
- International Students Association
- Japanese Cultural Association
- Jewish Student Union
- Karaoke Club
- Korean Cultural Group
- Korean Students Association
- Latin American Womyn's Organization
- Latino Student Council
- Latinos for Academic and Social Excellence
- Lebanese American Students of Rutgers University
- Pakistani Student Association
- Paul Robeson Club
- Persian Cultural Club
- Polish Club
- Portuguese Language Community
- Rutgers Organization of Nippon Students
- Rutgers Union Estudiantil Puertorriquena
- Sharing Our Light
- Sociedad Estudiantil Dominicana
- Society of Latin American Men
- Taiwanese American Student Association
- Turkish Student Association
- TWESE, Association of Africans & Friends of Africa
- Ukrainian Students Club
- Union of Cuban American Students
- United Black Council
- Vietnamese Student Association
- West Indian Student Organization
Religious Organizations
- Bahá'í Campus Association of Rutgers University
- Bible Fellowship (Rutgers University)
- Buddha's Light Dharma Joy Club
- Campus Advance
- Campus Crusade for Christ
- Catholic Students Association
- Chabad Jewish Student Organization
- Chinese Christian Fellowship
- Coptic Orthodox Fellowship
- Divine Youth Associates
- Filipinos in Christ
- Hillel
- Hindu Students Council
- Indian Christian Fellowship
- International Youth Fellowship
- Intervarsity Multi-Ethnic Christian Fellowship
- InterVarsity Rutgers Christian Fellowship
- Joshua Cantonese Christian Fellowship
- Korean Catholic Circle
- Islamic Society at Rutgers University
- Korean Christian Fellowship
- Manna Ministries
- RU Pagan Student Association
- Resurrection Ministries
- Rutgers University Sikhs
Buildings and Campuses
Campuses
- College Ave campus
- Cook/Douglass campus
- Camden campus
- Busch campus
- Newark campus
- Livingston campus
- Downtown New Brunswick campus
Residence Halls
- University Center at Easton Avenue (College Ave campus)
- Hardenbergh Hall (College Ave campus)
- Rockoff Hall (downtown New Brunswick campus)
- Ford Hall (College Ave campus)
- Campbell Hall (College Ave campus)
- Frelinghuysen Hall (College Ave campus)
- Demarest Hall (College Ave campus)
- McCormick Hall (Busch campus)
- Clothier Hall (College Ave campus)
- Davidson dorms (Busch campus)
- Hegeman Hall (College Ave campus)
- Brett Hall (College Ave campus)
- Tinsley Hall (College Ave campus)
- Stonier Hall (College Ave campus)
- Mettler Hall (College Ave campus)
- Wessels Hall (College Ave campus)
- Pell Hall (College Ave campus)
- Leupp Hall (College Ave campus)
- Old Gibbons Residence Campus (Cook/Douglass campus)
- New Gibbons Residence Campus (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Katzenbach Hall (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Lippencott Hall (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Bunting-Cobb Hall (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Woodbury Hall (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Henderson Apartments (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Newell Apartments (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Starkey Apartments (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Corwin Residence Campus (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Jameson Residence Campus (Cook/Douglass campus)
- Livingston Quads (Livingston campus)
- Ernest A. Lynton Towers (Livingston campus)
- Silvers Apartments (Busch campus)
- Buell Apartments (Busch campus)
- Barr Hall (Busch campus)
- Mattia Hall (Busch campus)
- Allen Hall (Busch campus)
- Metzger Hall (Busch campus)
- Marvin Apartments (Busch campus)
- Winkler Hall (Busch campus)
- Judson Hall (Busch campus)
- Crosby Hall (Busch campus)
- Russell Apartments (Busch campus)
- Richardson Apartments (Busch campus)
- Johnson Apartments (Busch campus)
- Nichols Apartments (Busch campus)
- Camden Tower (Camden campus)
- Camden Apartments (Camden campus)
- 77 Bleeker Street (Newark campus)
- Talbott Apartments (Newark campus)
- Woodward Hall (Newark campus)
- 29 James St. (Newark campus)
External links
- www.rutgers.edu — Rutgers University website
- nbp.rutgers.edu — Rutgers-New Brunswick/Piscataway Website
- The Daily Targum — the daily newspaper at Rutgers University, since 1869.
- Rutgers Alumni Association — Established 1831, fourth oldest alumni group in the Nation.
- "Rutgers Through the Years" Timeline — more on Rutgers history