Busch Campus of Rutgers University

Busch Campus of Rutgers University

Busch Campus is one of the five campuses at Rutgers University's main New Brunswick/Piscataway area campus, and is located entirely within Piscataway Township, New Jersey. Academic facilities and departments centered on this campus are primarily those related to the natural sciences: physics, pharmacy, engineering, psychology, mathematics and statistics, chemistry, geology and biology. The Rutgers Medical School was also built on this campus in 1970, but a year later was separated by the State to create the College of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and they continue to share the land and facilities on the campus in a slightly irregular arrangement. The campus is named after Charles L. Busch (1902–1971), of Edgewater, New Jersey, an eccentric millionaire, who unexpectedly donated $10 million to the University for biological research at his death in 1971. [1] [2] The campus was formerly known as "University Heights Campus." The land was donated by the state in the 1930s, and a stadium was constructed. The land was formerly a country club, and the original golf course still exists on the campus.

Selected Buildings

  • Waksman Institute of Microbiology is a research facility on the Busch Campus of Rutgers University. It is named after Selman Waksman, who was a faculty member who won the Nobel Prize for Medicine in 1952 for research which led to the discovery of streptomycin. 18 antibiotics were isolated in Waksman's laboratory. Streptomycin and neomycin, and actinomycin, were commercialized.
  • Center for Advanced Biotechnology and Medicine (CABM) was established in 1985 to advance knowledge in the life sciences for the improvement of human health. It is jointly administered by the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey and by Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey. The building was completed in 1990, and has 100,000 square feet (9,300 m2) of lab and office space.
  • Hill Center for the Mathematical Sciences, named for George William Hill (Rutgers 1859), opened in 1971 and houses the Mathematics and Computer Science departments, along with a number of small Centers. It also houses the Mathematical Sciences Library and a large underground data center.
  • William Levine Hall houses the Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy.
  • The Library of Science of Medicine is the main library for science and health collection of the Rutgers University Libraries system.
  • The School of Engineering. The original four-wing building was opened in 1963.
  • The Busch Campus Center and Busch Dining Hall
  • Paul Robeson Cultural Center
  • Administrative Services Building I and two annex buildings
  • Archive building for the University Library system
  • Many residence halls and apartment buildings for undergraduate and graduate students
  • High Point Solutions Stadium and Hale center
  • Yurcak field for LaCrosse and Soccer
  • Sonny Werblin Recreation Center
  • University President's compound
  • Physics facilities
  • Classroom buildings: SERC and ARC
  • University of Medicine and Dentistry Buildings
  • Busch Campus Heat/Electricity Cogeneration plant

References

  1. ^ "New Jersey Briefs; Rutgers Gifts Set-Record Hearing Sought on Rail Freight Traffic Offshore Atom Plant Site Gains". New York Times. October 25, 1973, Thursday. http://select.nytimes.com/gst/abstract.html?res=F10813F63C5D127A93C7AB178BD95F478785F9. Retrieved 2007-08-21. "Dr. Edward J. Bloustein, the Rutgers University president, announced yesterday that the university had received $27,751,646, a record, in gifts, bequests, grants and contracts during the 1972–73 fiscal year. This compared with $19,120,945 in 1971–72, he said. Dr. Bloustein said the bequests included $10-million from the estate of the late Charles L. Busch of Edgewater, the largest gift ever made to the state university." 
  2. ^ Gabrielan, Randall (2001). Piscataway Township. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0738504394. http://books.google.com/books?id=Sx24XbQ4N40C&pg. "... in 1972 for Charles L. Busch, a wealthy investor who, in 1971, willed Rutgers about $10 million for biological research." 

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