Rider University

Rider University is a private university in Lawrence Township, New Jersey. It consists of four academic units: the Norm Brodsky College of Business, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the College of Education and Human Services, and Westminster College of the Arts (consisting of the School of Fine and Performing Arts and Westminster Choir College).

History


The school was founded as Trenton Business College on October 1, 1865, by Henry Beadman Bryant and Henry D. Stratton, operators of the Bryant and Stratton chain of private business schools. The school was located in Temperance Hall at the corner of South Broad and Front Streets in Trenton, New Jersey. Andrew J Rider was appointed as its first president. President Rider owned 500 acres of cranberry bogs near Hammonton, New Jersey. According to tradition, this is why the school colors are cranberry and white.

The school grew and periodically moved to larger quarters. In 1896 women were admitted. In 1896 the school was renamed Rider Business College. President Rider stepped down the following year.

In 1920 the institution moved to East State Street in Trenton and officially became known as Rider College. In 1922 the New Jersey Board of Education granted Rider College permission to confer the degrees of Bachelor of Accounts and Bachelor of Commercial Science. In 1957 Rider Business College introduced liberal studies leading to a Bachelor of Arts degree.

In 1959 Rider College moved its campus to a 283-acre suburban tract on Route 206 in Lawrence Township, N.J. On November 15, 1961, President Franklin F. Moore (a 1927 alumnus of the college) announced the gradual reorganization of the college into five separate schools, each headed by a dean who would report to the provost. The changes took effect with the 1962–63 academic year. The five schools included a new School of Liberal Arts and Sciences.



Rider College merged with nearby Westminster Choir College (WCC), located in Princeton, New Jersey, in 1991–92. The campus of Westminster became the Princeton campus of Rider College. On April 13, 1994, the college became Rider University. In 2007 President Mordechai Rozanski announced the creation of the School of Fine and Performing Arts to integrate the Lawrenceville and Princeton campuses and expand programming for the arts.

Today, Rider's Lawrenceville campus is home to its College of Business Administration; College of Liberal Arts, Education, and Sciences; College of Continuing Studies, School of Education, and part of the Westminster College of the Arts, which is also located on the Princeton campus.

In 2005 Rider completed its 63000 sqft Student Recreation Center (SRC), a 186-bed residence hall, and three-story additions to Ziegler and Hill Residence Halls. The SRC contains locker rooms, a 3600 sqft fitness room and various athletic facilities.

Rider University's bonds have been rated as junk since 2020. As of 2023, the school has experienced financial difficulties and a loss of a fifth of its student body due to declining enrollment.

Presidents
Rider has had seven presidents:
 * 1) Andrew Jackson Rider (1866–1898)
 * 2) Franklin Benjamin Moore (1898–1934)
 * 3) Franklin Frazee Moore (1934–1969)
 * 4) Frank N. Elliott (1969–1990)
 * 5) J. Barton Luedeke (1990–2003)
 * 6) Mordechai Rozanski (2003–2015)
 * 7) Gregory Dell'Omo (2015–present)

Academics
The College of Liberal Arts and Sciences comprises 13 departments, offering a wide array of more than 70 undergraduate majors and minors. The college also offers master's degrees in Business Administration, Education, and Journalism.

Rankings
U.S. News & World Report ranked Rider University tied for 22nd in the Regional Universities North category in 2016. Forbes ranked Rider University 485th on its "America's Top Colleges" list in 2015.

Campus


The 280 acre Lawrenceville campus is in a suburban area three miles (5 km) north of Trenton and five miles (8 km) south of Princeton. There is a man-made lake with a bridge that allows students to cross easily. The Westminster campus is in Princeton, New Jersey.

Academic buildings


Birenbaum Fisher Hall (College of Education & Human Services), the Science and Technology Center (Sciences & Mathematics), the Fine Arts Center (Westminster College of the Arts & Communication), Joseph P. Vonna Academic Annex (Learning Resource Center), the Canastra Health & Sports Center, Anne Brossman Sweigart Hall (Norm Brodsky College of Business Administration), Lynch Adler Hall (History & Philosophy) contain the classrooms and laboratories for all curricula. Built in 2011, Lynch Adler hall is a Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design silver certified, 21250 sqft academic building that stands next to Moore Library.



The Princeton Community Japanese Language School teaches weekend Japanese classes for Japanese citizen children abroad to the standard of the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (MEXT), and it also has classes for people with Japanese as a second language. The main office of the school is in Princeton although the office used on Sundays is in Biernbaum Fisher Hall.

Libraries


The Franklin Moore Library supports the academic programs with a collection of more than 481,000 volumes, 2,000 periodical titles, 650,000 microforms, 134 online databases, electronic access to 42,000 journals, and an audiovisual collection. Westminster Choir College's Talbott Library has specialized music resources including 75,000 books, music scores and periodicals, a choral music reference collection of more than 80,000 titles and more than 31,000 sound and video recordings.

Rider Libraries are the official depository for records created by the New Jersey Business Teachers Association and the Eastern Business Teachers Association. In special collectsion, there is a microfilm collection of Civil War Era diplomatic correspondence between the United States, France. and Great Britain. It also holds a major collection of Delaware Valley newspapers reaching back to the 18th century.

Publications and media

 * The Shadow Yearbook: First published in 1923 two years after the institution officially changed its name to Rider College. The yearbook continues to be published each year by a student staff.
 * The Rider News: The school's student newspaper, founded in 1930, is now published weekly on Wednesdays between September and May.
 * WRRC-FM 107.7 The Bronc : Student-run radio station, founded in 1962.
 * Venture: The literary magazine welcomes submissions from students’ art and literature focusing on any topic
 * The Rider University Network (R.U.N.): The student organization produces television programs in the campus studio. Programs are broadcast on campus and online, founded in 2000.

Student life
Currently on Rider's Lawrenceville Campus, there are more than a dozen Greek organizations. In addition to social Greek organizations, there are professional and honorary fraternities.



On March 30, 2007, 18-year-old student Gary DeVercelly died of alcohol poisoning after heavy drinking at a Phi Kappa Tau fraternity house. The incident was tied to a longstanding hazing tradition involving dangerous quantities of alcohol. Two Rider University officials, including the dean of students, and three students were indicted for aggravated hazing; the charges were dismissed for lack of evidence. Settlement of the civil lawsuit resulted in major policy concessions by the university.

Theater


Westminster College of the Arts has a theater program. Several productions a year give students a variety of opportunities. They are a combination of musicals and straight plays. Professional performing arts facilities include The Yvonne Theater, The Spitz Studio Theater, and Bart Luedeke Arts Center.

Athletics
Athletic teams are nicknamed the Broncs. The school competes in the NCAA Division I Metro Atlantic Athletic Conference. As the MAAC is a non-wrestling conference, Rider's wrestling team competes as a member of the Mid-American Conference.

The intercollegiate sports program at Rider was started by coach Clair Bee in the 1920s. Two of the school's most famous athletic alumni are former Notre Dame basketball coach and current ESPN sportscaster Digger Phelps, who played basketball at Rider from 1959 to 1963, and Jason Thompson, who played basketball at Rider from 2004 to 2008 and was drafted by the Sacramento Kings.

The university competed in football until 1951, when the football team was disbanded.

In 2007, the university redesigned its athletic logo.

Notable alumni

 * [[File:RuPaul with All Stars 7 Contestants at LA DragCon 2022 by dvsross (cropped - Monet X Change) (cropped).jpg|thumb|141x141px|Monét X Change, drag queen and winner of RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars 4]]In entertainment: Rider graduates include: [[Monét X Change]], drag queen and winner of the fourth season of RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars. 
 * In business: Rider graduates include: Mike Pulli, CEO of Pace plc; Thomas O'Riordan, former CEO of American Sporting Goods Corporation;, Howard Stoeckel, CEO of Wawa; Kenneth Yen, CEO of China Motor Corporation; Meg Walsh, president of Medscape Consumer; and Chris Catalano, former CEO of School of Rock and past Chairman of Redbox.
 * In government: Rider graduates include: Nathaniel Barnes, Liberian Ambassador to the United Nations; Craig Carpenito, former United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey; Frederick W. Donnelly, former Mayor of Trenton, New Jersey; and Mark S. Schweiker, MA, 44th Governor of Pennsylvania.
 * In sports: Rider graduates include: Florian Valot, professional soccer player for FC Cincinnati; Jack Armstrong, 1990 Major League Baseball all-star and world champion; Al Downing, 1967 MLB All-Star and strikeout champion and 1971 MLB Comeback Player of the Year; Stella Johnson, professional basketball player in WNBA and all-time leading Bronc scorer; Jeff Kunkel, professional baseball player; Caroline Lind, MBA, Olympic Gold Medal rower at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing; Digger Phelps, ESPN college basketball analyst and former Notre Dame Fighting Irish basketball coach; Bobby Smith, National Soccer Hall of Fame member; and Jason Thompson, basketball player in the NBA.