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Baruch College is a public university and one of the constituent colleges comprising the City University of New York.

History

Established in 1919, the college sits on the former site of the Free Academy (now City College of New York), which was founded in 1847 and was the first institution of free public higher education in the United States. Originally the City College's School of Business and Civic Administration, the school was renamed in honor of Bernard Baruch, a noted statesman and financier.

In 1968, Baruch became an independent senior college of the City University. The first president of the new college (1969-1970) was the previous federal Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C. Weaver. From 2000 to 2004 the college was under the leadership of the former Comptroller of New York Edward Regan. Its current president is Dr. Kathleen M. Waldron.

Enrollment

Total enrollment at Baruch is over 15,500, including nearly 3,000 graduate students. The student body comes from more than 120 nations. Baruch is particularly noted for its Zicklin School of Business (the largest collegiate school of business in the U.S.), its School of Public Affairs, and the Weismann School of Arts and Sciences. Baruch's location between 22nd and 25th Street on Lexington Avenue is near the financial areas of Wall Street and Midtown Manhattan. The college is known for the quality of its students and the many alumni who have achieved high positions in business and cultural organizations throughout New York City, the United States, and internationally. The particular dedication of its alumni is also noteworthy. Baruch is also distinguished by its diverse student body. For the seventh consecutive time, it has been named the most ethnically diverse institution of higher education in the United States by U.S. News & World Report (2006). It was also ranked as one of the best schools in the Northeastern United States in the 2006 edition of The Princeton Review’s Guide to the Best Northeastern Colleges.

Campus


Vertical Campus

Baruch College’s 17-floor Vertical Campus, opened in Fall 2001, is a modern landmark. With nearly a full city block at its base, 14 curving stories soar above ground while an athletic facility, including a swimming pool, and performing arts center extend three stories below ground. The building brings together staff offices and most of the classroom space for Baruch’s two largest academic units: the Zicklin School of Business and the Mildred and George Weissman School of Arts and Sciences. This physical union of the business and liberal arts programs supports the undergraduate business curriculum, which requires an arts and sciences foundation for the degree; the first-time proximity of the two schools also creates a host of new opportunities for multidisciplinary classes, programs, and initiatives.

Designed by the New York architecture firm of Kohn Pedersen Fox and constructed by the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York, the Vertical Campus also marks a new approach to an urban educational facility. With nearly 800,000 square feet of space to work with, planners at Baruch have attempted in an urban setting to create the sense of open space and quadrangle design that characterizes the typical exurban college campus. Thus, a great deal of space has been given over to three stacked atria, one rising from the ground floor to the fifth floor, with a glass curtain wall facing Baruch’s Information and Technology Building to the north, across Bernard Baruch Way; another, wider atrium rising above that, from the fifth to the eighth floors; and a third, against the southern wall of the building, that rises from the eighth to the 13th floors with a dramatic glass curtain facing south and giving views of Lower Manhattan.

This design allows sunlight from the southern exposure to filter diagonally from the top of the building and along the southern side down to the ground floor entrance lobby and exterior plazas on the north side, along Bernard Baruch Way.

At the same time, each floor is designed as a quadrangle, with a mix of classrooms, research space, and offices around the open atrium and with many open spaces and cul-de-sacs furnished with chairs and tables for conversation, reading, and hanging out between classes. This design unifies the teaching and research facilities as they would likely be encountered in a more traditional campus design.

In 2003 the American Institute of Architects honored the Vertical Campus with the highest award given to an individual building.

Bert W. and Sandra Wasserman Trading Floor / Subotnick Financial Services Center

The Subotnick Center is the only business school resource of its kind in New York and one of a handful of comparable facilities at top educational institutions nationwide. Its centerpiece is the Bert W. and Sandra Wasserman Trading Floor, a fully equipped, simulated trading environment featuring 42 high-end networked computer workstations, continuous live data feeds, real-time market quotes, and computerized trading models.

Academic Centers


Among its many specialized centers and institutes, Baruch College houses several whose mission is to enhance scholarship and learning while addressing the needs of the business and civic community.

  • Lawrence N. Field Center for Entrepreneurship and Small Business offers business owners and potential entrepreneurs one-on-one consulting help with Baruch faculty and business counselors. Its educational programs, networking opportunities, and an array of other services assist some 3,900 clients annually with their small and start-up business endeavors.

  • Baruch Center for Integrity in Financial Reporting is a nexus of research and resources for scholars and the public, examining the broad impact on commerce and society of financial reporting standards and practices. The center aims to foster integrity in financial reporting through the sponsorship of conferences, research, and other scholarly activities touching on every aspect of the financial reporting process.

  • Steven L. Newman Real Estate Institute provides a foundation for education and research concerned with real estate and metropolitan development; its conferences serve as a unique resource for students and New York City real estate and development professionals.

  • Bernard L. Schwartz Communication Institute, named for a prominent enterpreneur Bernard L. Schwartz, works to integrate both academic and professional communication across the Baruch curriculum to ensure success in the classroom and the workplace. In addition, the institute supports advanced research and fosters relationships between communication experts from higher education and the business community.

  • Center for the Study of Business and Government conducts empirical analysis of the underlying economic and social problems and trends that are frequently the subject of public policy.

  • Baruch College Survey Unit conducts surveys on a broad range of programmatic and policy concerns, with a focus on New York City.

  • Center for Transition and Leadership in Government was created by the School of Public Affairs to address the lack of institutional memory that is anticipated as a result of term limits for New York City’s elected officials. The center provides access to non-partisan policy research and sponsors forums led by past and current public officials to help aspiring City Council candidates deal with complex issues without first having to acquire years of on-the-job experience.

  • Weissman Center for International Business sponsors numerous programs, conferences, and forums for students, faculty, and business professionals that enrich understanding of critical issues in international business and the global economy.

Association for Business Communication

Baruch College has been the headquarters of the Association for Business Communication (ABC) since 1990. The Association for Business Communication (ABC) is the primary academic organization for the field of business communication scholarship, research, education and practice.

Zicklin School of Business

The Zicklin School of Business is the largest collegiate school of business in the nation and the only CUNY unit that offers business programs accredited by the AACSB International: The Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business. The Zicklin School offers degree programs leading to the BBA, MBA, Executive MBA, MS, Executive MS in Finance, and the Baruch/Mt. Sinai MBA in Health Care Administration, which is accredited by the Accrediting Commission on Education for Health Care Administration (ACEHSA). Among its exciting new initiatives is the Zicklin Full-time MBA program, which enrolls a select group of candidates whose credentials and average GMAT scores of 650 place them among the top students in the nation. The Zicklin School also offers a combined degree program in accountancy that meets the latest education requirements for the CPA exam and enables students to complete an undergraduate degree program of their choice and an MS in accountancy in five years. The Zicklin School houses the City University's PhD in business and offers a joint degree program leading to the JD/MBA degrees in conjunction with both Brooklyn Law School and The New York Law School.

Baruch Alumni


Baruch alumni fill key positions in every sector of the city’s economy—corporate, business, civic, and nonprofit. To a degree unusual among public academic institutions, Baruch College is strongly endowed by a supportive and active group of alumni. Without their commitment, the College’s increasing level of excellence and outstanding reputation would not be possible.

Famous/Distinguished Alumni

  • William Newman ('47)- Founder and chairman of New Plan Excel Realty Trust, Inc.
  • Irwin Engelman ('55)- Director of New Plan Excel Realty Trust, Inc. Director at various other companies.
  • Lawrence N. Field- Founder and principal of NSB Associates.
  • Marvin Antonowsky (B.B.A. '49, MBA '52)- Media executive.
  • Lawrence Zicklin (1957)- Managing principal and chairman of Neuberger Berman (Now part of Lehman Brothers).
  • William F. Aldinger III ('69)- Chairman and CEO of HSBC North America Holdings.
  • Abraham Briloff (’37, MS, ’41)- Professor of Accounting.
  • Nora McAniff- Co-chief operating officer of Time Inc.
  • Bill Mccreary- Broadcaster.
  • Michael L. Royce- Executive Director, New York Foundation for the Arts.
  • Arthur Ainsberg ('68, MBA ‘72)- Director of Independent Research, Morgan Stanley
  • Larry Quinlan- Chief Information Officer, Deloitte & Touche USA LLP.
  • Bert Mitchell- Chairman and CEO of Mitchell & Titus, LLP.
  • JoAnn F. Ryan ('79, MS '83)-President & CEO, ConEdison Solutions.
  • Michael I. Roth ('67)- Chairman & CEO, The Interpublic Group of Companies, Inc.
  • Nathaniel Younger - Bank of America's Youth Entrepreneur of the Year 2006.
  • Craig A. Stanley- member of New Jersey General Assembly since 1996
  • Marcia A. Karrow - member of New Jersey General Assembly
  • Dennis Levine - a prominent player in the Wall Street insider trading scandals of the mid-1980s
  • Ralph Lauren - Chairman and CEO of Polo Ralph Lauren (dropped out).
  • Jennifer Lopez - actress, singer, and dancer (dropped out).
  • Famous/Distinguished Faculty


  • Joel Brind - professor of biology and a leading scientific advocate of the abortion-breast cancer hypothesis.
  • Robert J. Myers - professor of communication and the Executive Director of the Association for Business Communication
  • Yoshihiro Tsurumi - professor of international business, economist, internationally-recognized scholar in the fields of multinational business strategy and global competitiveness of a nation's economy
  • Fraternities and Sororities on Campus


  • Alpha Epsilon Pi - international Jewish college fraternity
  • Sigma Sigma Rho - a South Asian based sorority
  • External links


    City University of New York | Business schools in the United States

    ニューヨーク市立大学バルーク校

     

    This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the "Baruch College".

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