2013 Rutgers Men's Golf Media Guide

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TABLE OF CONTENTS MEN’S GOLF QUICK FACTS Location: Piscataway, N.J. Enrollment: 43,386 President: Dr. Robert L. Barchi Athletic Director: Tim Pernetti Nickname: Scarlet Knights School Color: Scarlet Athletics Website: www.scarletknights.com Home Course: Rutgers University Golf Course Conference: BIG EAST Men’s Golf Coach: Rob Shutte (Penn State ‘03) 2012 BE Finish: 11th Golf SID: Office Phone: Email:

Kevin Lorincz 732-445-7812 klorincz@scarletknights.com

TABLE OF CONTENTS Quick Facts/TOC....................................................................1 2013 Schedule.......................................................................1 2013 Spring Preview.......................................................2-3 Coaching Staff..........................................................................4 2013 Scarlet Knights......................................................5-7 History/Rutgers Golf Course...........................................8 Rutgers University...................................................... 10-16 Office of Athletic Communications Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey Rutgers Athletic Center 83 Rockafeller Rd. Piscataway, NJ 08854 (732) 445–4200 (732) 445–3636 / 3063 –  FAX Written and edited by: Kevin Lorincz & Stephanie Mamakas Design: Kevin Revoir This guide has been compiled to assist the media with its coverage of the team. Updated results may be obtained throughout the season from the Office of Athletic Communications at (732) 445-4200 or by accessing the Golf Website at www.scarletknights.com

2013 Men’s Golf Spring Schedule Date(s) Event March 16-17 Mission Inn Spring Spectacular March 24-26 C&F Bank Intercollegiate March 31-April 1 Towson Invitational April 20-21 Rutherford Intercollegiate April 28-30 BIG EAST Championship

Location Port St. Lucie, Fla. Williamsburg, Va. Towson, Md. State College, Pa. Orlando, Fla.

2013 Spring Roster

Name Louis Bodine Jonathan Chang Dillon Corbo John Fagan Hyung Mo Kim Jonathan Renza Jacob Stockl Doug Walters

Class Fr. Fr. Jr. Sr. So. Jr. So. Jr.

High School/Hometown Hunterdon Central/Flemington, N.J. Valencia/Valencia, Calif. Montville/Montville, N.J. Hunterdon Central/Flemington, N.J. Old Tappan/Norwood, N.J. Fordham Preparatory/Cortland Manor, N.Y. Arthur L Johnson/Clark, N.J North Warren/Blairstown, N.J.

Head Men’s Golf Coach: Rob Shutte (Second Season) (Penn State ‘03)

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2013 SPRING PREVIEW As the spring season approaches, the Rutgers men’s golf team anxiously awaits the chance to get back out on the links. Under the guidance of second year head coach Rob Shutte, the Scarlet Knights went back to the basics in their off-season training. Due to the colder climate throughout the winter months, the team spent most of their time indoors improving their mental toughness and perfecting crucial fundamentals. The Scarlet Knights concentrated on workouts that forced them to face adversity. By learning to stay 100% focused throughout challenges, the players will be able to remain composed if faced with a tight situation in a round of competition. Along with strengthening their minds, the Scarlet Knights focused on sharpening their technique. The team benefited greatly from a course simulator set up in the Hale Center. The simulator allowed the players to focus strictly on their shots and tempo while avoiding the cold weather and any other distracting elements. This training truly enabled the team to get back to the basics. “When you take away the rest of the land where you would normally hit the ball, when you strip that [land] away it can be really good,” Coach Shutte explained.

ments, tying for third at the Lehigh Invitational and for fifth at the Rutgers Invitational. Stockl maintained a 76 stroke average across four tournaments.

WALTERS

Junior Dillon Corbo (Montville, N.J.) and sophomore Hyung Mo Kim (Norwood, N.J.) bring lots of talent to links as well. Each competed in four events, playing 11 rounds for the Scarlet Knights. As a freshman, Jonathan Chang (Valencia, Calif.) had a stand out season. Competing in all five events, Chang showed his potential after carding a 212 (7168-71) to place third out of 83-competitors at the Rutgers Invitational.

“It ends up bringing it back to just focusing on you and the ball and some of those fundamental things, which are very basic, yet really matter. Whenever you start adding the course, adding the range it can take you away from those fundamentals.” The fall season highlighted the strengths that each player can bring in spring competition. Junior Jonathan Renza (Cortland Manor, N.Y.) came on strong later in the season, setting a course record in the Waterville Collegiate Classic. The tournament took place on the Waterville Links, one of Ireland’s most challenging courses. Showing consistency throughout the entire fall for the Scarlet Knights, were junior Doug Walters (Blairstown, N.J.) and sophomore Jacob Stockl (Clark, N.J.). Walters finished in the top 20 of four tourna-

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FAGAN


2013 SPRING PREVIEW Be prepared to see certain firepower come to light when senior John Fagan (Flemington, NJ) and freshman Louis Bodine (Flemington, N.J.) return to competition. Entering the spring season, the Scarlet Knights will focus on staying in the moment and having confidence in the execution of their shots. The team pushed aside result-oriented expectations to focus mainly on preparation.

The team’s preparation will be put to the test when they start the season March 16, 2013 down in Port St. Lucie, Fla. at the Mission Inn Spring Spectacular. After the C & F Bank Intercollegiate tournament in Williamsburg, Va., the team will travel to Maryland for the Towson Invitational. The team wraps up the season at the Rutherford Intercollegiate tournament in State College, Pa., before heading to the BIG EAST Championship. The Championship is set to take place April 28-30 in Orlando, Fla.

“We are learning how to have zero expectations whatsoever that relate to specific performance. Although, we do have expectations when it comes to our preparation and our effort,” Coach Shutte explained. “We really just want it to be about the preparation. If we are really prepared to win, then the wins will take care of themselves.”

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COACHING STAFF Rob Shutte

Men’s Golf Head Coach Rob Shutte is in his second season as head men’s golf coach at Rutgers University. He has eight years of collegiate head coaching experience, including two seasons as head women’s golf coach at Lehigh University. “We are thrilled to welcome Rob, Caitlin and Charlie to the Rutgers Athletics family,” said Director of Athletics Tim Pernetti on February 14, 2012, the date of the appointment. “Rob will bring great strengths to our men’s golf program with his high energy, excellent coaching and development skills, and a focus on the balance between academics and athletics.” “The mission of the Rutgers University Department of Athletics is perfectly in line with my own core values and beliefs,” said Shutte. “It is a great opportunity for me to pursue a passion of mine, which is developing young men into better players, people and leaders through the game of golf. The BIG EAST is a very competitive conference, and will only improve with the additions of UCF, SMU, Houston and Memphis. If you want to be the best, you need to be able to compete against the best.” With the Mountain Hawks, Shutte directed the team to its first-ever tournament victory at the 2011 Sunshine Spring Invitational. In the classroom, his squad maintained a 3.25 cumulative grade point average during his tenure. Prior to his arrival in Lehigh, Shutte served as head men’s golf coach at Muhlenberg College in Allentown, Pa. from 2005 to 2009. The Mules had three tournament victories and were runner up on four occasions during his tenure. In addition to a trio of individual tourney titles, Zach Oyer graduated with the lowest career stroke average in

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over 15 years. His 2006 squad boasted a 3.23 grade point average, highest among men’s athletic programs. A PGA Class “A” member, Shutte has strong ties to the metropolitan region. He served as Assistant Golf Professional at Arcola Country Club in Paramus, N.J. in 2003 after working as a Program Administrator and Teaching Golf Professional at First Tee of Metropolitan New York in the Bronx in 2002. Off the course, Shutte has balanced his career by serving as Vice President of Independent Financial Advisors in Easton, Pa. since 2004. He has also hosted two radio shows on the ESPN Radio affiliate in Allentown, The Water Cooler Radio Show and The Caddie Shack Radio Program. In the winter, he has volunteered as assistant varsity boys’ basketball at Notre Dame-Green Pond High School. Shutte (pronounced SHOOT-e) earned a bachelor’s degree in parks and recreation management from Penn State University in 2003. During his time in University Park, he received both the Disney World and Augie Boyd Golf Scholarships. Shutte, who hails from a Rutgers family, and his wife Caitlin are the proud parents of a young son named Charlie (Nov. 1, 2011). His father, Bob, was a three-year varsity football letterwinner at Rutgers from 1969-71, playing defensive back, wide receiver and kicker. He was also a three-year letterwinner on the baseball diamond, playing third base and shortstop from 1970-72. His mother, Catherine, is a Rutgers graduate and was a student sportswriter with the Daily Targum as an undergrad.


SCARLET KNIGHTS Louis Bodine

Dillon Corbo

True freshman from the Garden State…The 2011 New Jersey PGA junior champion.

Third-year junior…A 2011-12 and 2010-11 BIG EAST All-Academic honoree...Has competed in 18 career events, playing 47 rounds.

Freshman Hunterdon Central/Flemington, N.J.

FALL 2012: Competed in two events, playing in 5 rounds…Competed as an individual in the Rutgers Invitational, carding a 72 in the first round of the tournament…Competed as an individual in the Waterville Collegiate Classic, carding a 170 (88-82). . HIGH SCHOOL: A 2012 graduate of Hunterdon (N.J.) Central HS…A 2010 Newark Star-Ledger All-State selection…Has also earned multiple First Team All-Skyland and Courier News First Team All-Area accolades…Threetime Star Ledger All Group IV choice (2010, 2011, 2012)…Helped HCHS to win three consecutive state championship titles (2009, 2010, 2011) and the 2010 Tournament of Champions crown… Team captain and fouryear varsity golf letterwinner under head coach Larry Ries…Placed third at the 2011 NJ PGA Challenge, shooting rounds of 72-71….Member of the Copper Hill Country Club…Two-time Copper Hill Men’s Club Champion (2011, 2012)…A 2009 NJSGA William Y. Dear Junior Champion. PERSONAL: Son of Jeff Bodine…Interested in finance.

Jonathan Chang

Freshman • Valencia, Calif. True freshman…West coast product with a great deal of physical talent and a positive attitude…Was the 2012 All-Santa Clarita Boys Golfer of the Year. FALL 2012: Competed in all five events, playing in 13 rounds...Went 2-1 in the STX Match play, defeating his FDU, and Stevenson opponents... Paced the Scarlet Knights at the Rutgers Invitational, carding a one-under 212 (73-68-71) to place third in the 83-competitor field and had tournament-best minus two in par three scoring, while also finishing minus one on par four’s..Placed tied for 27th out of 88 in the Hartford Hawks Invitational with a 228 (74-73-81)...Placed tied for 22nd out of 28 at the Waterville Collegiate Classic with a 165 (92-73)…Tied for 16th out of 45 at the Lehigh Invitational with a 151 (77-73). HIGH SCHOOL: A 2012 graduate of Valencia HS, where he was a threetime team captain and most valuable player under head coach Robert Waters…Was the Foothill League Most Valuable player as a sophomore and senior, with a 69 and 68, respectively…As a senior, earned individual medalist honors in four of six Foothill League matches and had a 72.8 stroke average…In the post-season, shot a two-over 74 at TPC Valencia to finish with a 36-hole total of 148 to capture his third consecutive Newhall Land Cup title...A nationally-ranked AJGA competitor with numerous top finishes in both regional and national junior tournaments…Played four events on the FCWT Junior Tour in 2011-12, making all four cuts and placing tied for ninth at the Classic Club 36 holes…At the AJGA ClubCorp Mission Hills Desert Junior, he finished 17th with a 220 (74-73-73), his second top 20 finish in five AJGA events in the spring of 2012…Is the Rancho Vista course record holder with a 64. PERSONAL: Son of Young and Tae Chang…Interested in business.

Junior • Montville, N.J.

FALL 2012: Competed in four events, playing in 11 rounds...Went 3-0 in STX Match Play, defeating his opponents from FDU, Stevenson, and Towson...Competed in the Hartford Hawks Invitational…Competed as an individual at the Rutgers Invitational, carding a 227 (76-74-77)…Competed in the Waterville Collegiate Classic, carding a 174 (90-84). SPRING 2012: Competed in four events, playing 10 rounds...Had an 81.3 stroke average. FALL 2011: Competed in three events, playing seven rounds…Had an 81.29 stroke average…Carded a 74 in the third round of the Rutgers Invitational. SPRING 2011: Competed in four events, playing 11 rounds…Had an 86.5 stroke average. FALL 2010: Played in three events as a first semester freshman, playing eight rounds…Had a 77.25 stroke average… Shot a season low round of 73 in the third round of the McLaughlin. HIGH SCHOOL: A 2010 graduate of Montville (N.J.) Township HS… Was New Jersey’s No. 2-ranked 2010 high school senior… A Newark Star-Ledger Third Team All Group III selection as a junior and senior…A three-time Northwest Jersey Athletic Conference honoree and two-time team captain under head coach James Miller…Captured the conference individual title as a sophomore and junior, but was unable to compete as a senior due to injury…Bounced back from that injury to place second at the Group III sectional…Won the 2009 N.J. State qualifier for the National PGA Jr. Championship shooting a first round 68.. Just missed qualifying for the 2009 US Junior Amateur Championship by one shot after shooting rounds of 71 and 74 in the qualifier…Has also excelled on both the IJGT and AJGA junior golf tours with multiple top 10 finishes… Was the NJPGA Junior Player of the Year in 2006 and 2007…Also a varsity hockey letterwinner at MTHS…Home course is Rockaway River Country Club, where he is the men’s champion. PERSONAL: Son of Michael and Rosemary Corbo…Majoring in criminal justice.

John Fagan

Senior • Flemington, N.J. Fourth-year senior…A 2011-12 and 201011 BIG EAST All-Academic honoree…Has competed in 25 collegiate events, playing 62 rounds…Former New Jersey state high school champion. FALL 2012: Competed in four events, playing 10 rounds…Competed in STX Match Play, defeating Stevenson Opponent in the second round…Tied for 32nd out of 83 at the Rutgers Invitational, carding a 228 (77-76-75)…Tied for 23rd out of 45 at the Lehigh In-

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SCARLET KNIGHTS vitational with a 156 (77-79)…Competed in the Waterville Collegiate Classic, carding a 162 (79-83). SPRING 2012: Competed in all five events, playing 13 rounds...Had a 79.4 stroke average...Carded a 74 in the final round of the Rutherford Intercollegiate and the opening round of the Princeton Invitational. FALL 2011: Competed in all five events, playing 12 rounds…Had a 77.08 stroke average…Placed 21st out of 85 competitors at The Connecticut Cup with a 224 (72-77-75). SPRING 2011: Competed in all five events, playing 13 rounds…Had a 77.9 stroke average…Placed tied for 12th out of 78 competitors with a 152 (77-75) at the Penn Quaker Invitational…Carded 74 in the opening and closing rounds of the Princeton Invitational. FALL 2010: Played in all five events, playing 12 rounds…Had a 76.08 stroke average…Finished tied for 38th in the 81-player McLaughlin, carding a second round 71 and a third round 72…Placed tied for 22nd in the 85-player Hartford Hawk Invitational. SPRING 2010: Did not compete in any events. FALL 2009: Competed in the Rutgers Invitational and carded a 150 (7674)…Finished 13th out of 74 players. HIGH SCHOOL: A 2009 graduate of Hunterdon Central HS…A 2009 Newark Star-Ledger Third Team All-State and First Team All Group IV selection…Drained two long putts, one for par and one for birdie, on his last two holes to register a 78 to win the 2009 Group IV Tournament of Champions state individual crown…Helped HCHS to the 2009 Group IV team title at the NJSIAA TOC… Team finished the 2009 season with a 15-3 record and ranked third overall in the state, while also being named the Courier News Team of the Year under head coach Larry Ries…Was named the Star Ledger Boys Golfer of the Week after firing a one-under par 46 (12 holes) to win the 2009 Westfield Blue Devil Tournament. PERSONAL: Son of John and Joanne Fagan…Major is exercise science and sport studies.

Hyung Mo Kim

Sophomore • Norwood, N.J. Second-year sophomore…Competed in 10 events, playing in 27 rounds since his arrival at RU...Steady performer from the Garden State. FALL 2012: Competed in four events, playing in 11 rounds…Competed in STX Match Play, defeating Stevenson opponent 3&2 in the second round…Played as an individual at the Rutgers Invitational, carding a 220 (70-7773) and tying for 10th out of 83 competitiors…Tied for 19th out of 88 at the Hartford Hawks Invitational with a 226 (73-77-76)…Also, had nine birdies and an eagle in the 54-hole event…Tied for 19th out of 28 at the Waterville Collegiate Classic with a 164 (80-84). SPRING 2012: Competed in three events, playing eight rounds…Had a 78.0 stroke average. FALL 2011: Competed in three events, playing eight rounds…Had a 76.5 stroke average…Finished tied for 22nd out of 85 competitors at The Connecticut Cup with a 225 (77-74-74).

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Scholastic: A 2011 graduate of Northern Valley Regional High School at Old Tappan (N.J)…A 2011 New Jersey PGA Third Team All-State honoree…A First Team All-Bergen County selection as a senior and sophomore and second team honoree as a junior…A four-time team M.V.P. and allleague selection under head coach Kevin Hughes….Carded a 74 to earn runner up at the 2011 NJ Group 3 Championships while helping team to an 18 stroke victory…A Newark Star Ledger First Team All Group 3 selection as a junior and second team honoree as a senior. Personal: Interested in accounting…Began golfing competitively at age 12.

Jonathan Renza

Junior • Cortland Manor, N.Y. Third-year junior…A 2011-12 BIG EAST All-Academic honoree…Has competed in 24 career tournaments, playing 59 rounds. FALL 2012: Competed in four events, playing in 10 rounds…Tied for sixth with a 156 (85-71) in the 28_player field at the Waterville Collegiate Classic…Set the tournament course record shooting 71 in the second round and had a tournament-best seven birdies…Carded a 236 (83-78-75) at the Rutgers Invitational to tie for 61st out of 83…Went 2-1 in STX Match Play, defeating his opponents from Stevenson and Towson...Placed 18th out of 45 at the Lehigh Invitational with a 153 (80-73). SPRING 2012: Competed in all five events, playing 13 rounds…Had a 76.2 stroke average…Placed tied for 14th out of 76 competitors at the Princeton Invitational with a 218 (71-74-73). FALL 2011: Competed in all five events, playing 12 rounds…Had a 77.17 stroke average…Finished the fall strong…Placed tied for seventh at the 89 competitor Barnabas Health Intercollegiate with a 147 (76-71)…Finished tied for fifth at the Lehigh Invitational with a 148 (75-73). SPRING 2011: Competed in all five tournaments, playing 13 rounds…Had an 80.6 stroke average…Carded an opening round 71 at the Siena College Homewood Suites Invitational en route to a 10th place finish. FALL 2010: Competed in all five events, playing 11 rounds…Had a team-best 73.81 stroke average…Finished tied for eighth at the 88-player Rutgers Invitational in his initial collegiate event…Placed tied for 24th at the 81-player McLaughlin, which included a second round 70 and a final round 69…Placed tied for 25th at the 85-player Hartford Hawk Invitational. HIGH SCHOOL: A 2010 graduate of Fordham Prep in New York City, where he was an honor student and led the Rams to the 2008 and 2009 City Championship… A two-time (2008, 2007) CHSAA State champion considered one of the top juniors in metro area…Was 10-0 as a senior in 2010…The All-City golfer of the Year in 2009 after finishing runner up in the 2009 CHSAA State Championship…2010 Westchester Amateur titlist...Won four head-to-head matches at the 2010 Met Junior Championship…Played five events on the Metropolitan PGA Junior Tour in 2010 and finished in the top five in all, including a victory at Sedgewood…Was 2nd low qualifier in the 2009 MGA Ike Championship…Had a 4th place finish out of 75 players in the 2009 AJGA Lessing’s Classic where he shot 72, 74 and 68…The 2008 Met PGA Junior Player of the Year, 2008 Met PGA Junior N.Y. City Champion and the 2007 MGA/ MetLife Boys Champion…A four-time all-section selection…Made the cut at the 2008 New York State Open at Bethpage…Home course is Mohan-


SCARLET KNIGHTS sic Golf Course in Yorktown Heights, N.Y...Was also a varsity ice hockey letterwinner at Fordham Prep. PERSONAL: Son of Roy and Mary Jane Renza…Majoring in finance.

Jacob Stockl

Sophomore • Clark, N.J. Second-year sophomore…Arrived “On the Banks” as one of the top junior golfers in the state of New Jersey…Competed in 12 events, playing in 31 rounds since his arrival at RU. FALL 2012: Competed in all five events, playing in 13 rounds…Went 2-1 in STX Match Play, defeating his opponents from FDU and Stevenson... Posted a 220 (75-71-74) in the Rutgers Invitational to finish tied for 10th out of 83…Placed ninth out of 28 in the Waterville Collegiate Classic with a 158 (79-79)…Tied for a 11th out of 45 at the Lehigh Invitational with a 150 (77-73)…Tied for 39th out of 88 at the Hartford Hawks Invitational with a 232 (77-82-73) and registered a tournament-best two eagles. SPRING 2012: Competed in all five events, playing 13 rounds…Had an 80.1 stroke average. FALL 2011: Competed in two events, playing five rounds…Had a 77.80 stroke average…Carded a 74 in the final round of the Rutgers Invitational. Scholastic: A 2011 graduate of Arthur L Johnson HS in Clark, N.J…A two-time Newark Star Ledger All-State selection, earning first team honors as a junior and second team honors as a senior…A 2011 New Jersey PGA First Team All-State honoree…A First Team Star-Ledger All Group II selection as a junior and senior…A four-time team M.V.P. and team captain under head coach Dan House…Placed second at the 2010 NJSIAA Tournament of Champions with a 73…Won the Union County tournament by two shots as a senior, after also winning the event as a freshman and sophomore…Placed seventh at the 2010 NJSGA Amateur Championship…Had six wins on the junior circuit…Earned a first place finish at the IJGT at Blue Heron Pines, won the NJPGA Junior Championship, was first at the NJPGA Junior Masters, won the qualifier for the national PGA Championship, captured first in the state qualifier for the USGA Junior Boys Championship and won the IJGT at Hershey…Played three years for the New Jersey Junior Ryder Cup team. Personal: Interested in business…Son of Tom and Sharlene Stockl…Began golfing competitively at age eight.

Doug Walters

Junior • Blairstown, N.J. Third-year junior… A 2011-12 and 2010-11 BIG EAST All-Academic honoree…Has competed in 22 career events, playing 55 rounds. FALL 2012: Competed in all five events, playing in 13 rounds…Finished 3-0 in STX Match Play, defeating his opponents from Towson, FDU, and Stevenson...Finished tied for fifth out of 83 with a 217 (71-74-72) at the Rutgers Invitational…Carded a 224 (76-73-75) at the Hartford Hawks Invitational to finish tied for 15th in the 88-player field…Paced the Scarlet Knights at the Lehigh Invitational, carding a 146 (75-71) to finish tied for third in the 45-player field…Tied for 19th out of 28 in the Waterville Collegiate Classic with a 164 (90-74). SPRING 2012: Competed in four events, playing 10 rounds…Had an 80.4 stroke average…Placed tied for 26th at the BIG EAST Championships with a 224 (74-76-74). FALL 2011: Competed in all five events, playing 12 rounds…Had a teambest 75.5 stroke average…Placed tied for 17th at the 83-player Rutgers Invitational with a 223 (75-76-72)…Carded a 72 in the opening round of the Cardinal Intercollegiate…Finished tied for 21st at the 89-competitor Barnabas Health Intercollegiate with a 151 (77-74). SPRING 2011: Competed in all five tournaments, playing 13 rounds… Had a 77.3 stroke average…Carded a 73 in the final round of the Penn Quaker Invitational and a 73 in the opening round of the BIG EAST Championships…Posted a 71 round to open the Princeton Invitational…Finished tied for 19th at the Siena College Homewood Suites Invitational and tied for 22nd at the Princeton Invitational. FALL 2010: Played in three events as a first semester freshman, playing seven rounds…Had a 78.71 stroke average…Carded a 74 in the opening round of the Rutgers Invitational, his initial collegiate event. HIGH SCHOOL: A 2010 graduate of North Warren (N.J.) Regional High School…A Newark Star-Ledger Third Team All-State selection as a senior…Earned Ledger All Group I honors as a junior and senior…Won his second consecutive North Jersey Group I title in 2010 by shooting an even par 71…A three-time All-Skyland Conference selection and two time Easton Express-Times First Team All-Area choice…Led the Patriots to a 12-2 league record and the Valley Division title as a senior under head coach Ryan Hashaway…A four-year varsity letterwinner and twotime team captain…Home course is Bearn Brook Golf Club in Newton, N.J…Finished 21st overall at the 2010 Carter Cup, played at Baltusrol Country Club…Active on the IJGT, MGA, New Jersey PGA, NJSGA, and Junior Golf America Tours …Was the 2008 Junior Golf America Player of the year. PERSONAL: Son of Russell and Suzanne Walters…Majoring in Accounting.

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RUTGERS GOLF HISTORY

RUTGERS MEN’S GOLF HISTORY

Rutgers University Golf Course

The Rutgers men’s golf team has competed in the prestigious BIG EAST Conference since 1995. In 2004, the men’s team was victorious in four fall events and competed in the NCAA Championships in the spring of 2005, marking the first time since 1984 the Scarlet Knights advanced to the NCAA’s. Following the historic 2004-05 season, Rutgers head coach Maura Ballard was named the 2005 BIG EAST Men’s Golf Coach of the Year. “I am flattered to have received this honor,” said Waters at the time. “This is the most talented team I’ve had and it has been a very exciting year. This group has worked extremely hard and I am very proud of them.” The Rutgers men’s golf program has produced a number of top players in its long and proud history. Current professionals who starred at Rutgers include Bill King (Spring Lake Golf Club), Frank Esposito (Brooklake Country Club), Mark Giuliano (Fairmount Country Club), Jim Mrva (Monroe Golf Club, Rochester, NY), John Fagan (Raritan Valley Country Club), and John Schob (Huntington Crescent Club, Huntington, NY). Rutgers has also produced its share of top amateur players, including Bob Marzoli, the 1971 MGA champion, two-time All-American James Guerra, Barry Wiseman, Bruce Young, Ryan MacDonald and Brent Pittman, to name a few. Two men who played a central role in the evolution and history of Rutgers Golf are former long-time head coach Fred Gruninger and former head professional Art DeBlasio. Gruninger, who later went on to serve a long tenure as RU’s athletic director, was a highly-successful head coach at Rutgers, leading the Scarlet Knights to a 109-30-2 record between 1963 and 1972. Art DeBlasio, the Rutgers head pro from 1966-2001, assisted with both the men’s and women’s teams during his 35 years “On the Banks.”

The Rutgers University Golf Course was founded in 1961 with the construction of the present day 18-hole layout that was expertly designed by Hal Purdy, a noted golf architect. The course was officially opened May 29, 1963. Today, the par-71 Rutgers Golf Course (par-72 for women) can be stretched to 6,337 yards and features a course rating of 70.5 and a slope of 130. Over the past decade, the Rutgers Golf Course has undergone extensive renovations and updates, which include a modern irrigation system, the addition of several bunkers and the planting of many trees, including a host of impressive evergreens. Once a rather wide-open tract, today’s Rutgers Golf Course features a host of tree-lined holes, featuring undulating greens and water that comes into play on five holes. A round of golf at the Rutgers Golf Course offers a panoramic view of a plethora of academic buildings, including the world famous Waksman Institute of Microbiology, a stately structure that rests to the left of the first fairway. Every golfer who enjoys the Rutgers Golf Course can also gaze at several athleticrelated complexes. To the left of the fifth and sixth hole offers a view of the Indoor Bubble, in which the Rutgers football team trains during inclement weather. Rising majestically to the left of the sixth green is Rutgers Stadium, the home of the Scarlet Knight football team. The Rutgers Golf Course features a newly-expanded driving range, and a 12,000 square foot short game practice facility and putting green. Jill Jerauld, a former Futures Tour and European Tour player, joined the Rutgers University Golf Course as the Course Pro/Manager in November 2001. She is the only female Professional Golf Association (PGA) - certified head pro in the state of New Jersey. For 10 years prior to joining Rutgers University Golf Course, she was the head pro at Blueberry Hill Golf Course in Russell, PA. Since Jerauld took over management of the Rutgers University Golf Course, she has successfully implemented a pace-of-play system that has decreased the time of an average round of golf by as much as one hour. DID YOU KNOW? Every hole at the Rutgers Golf Course is named for a tree that can be found on the course and that the par-3 11th hole, named Sour Gum, is home to the oldest Japanese sour gum tree in the state. Contact Information Rutgers University Golf Course 777 Hoes Lane West Piscataway, NJ 08854-8022 732/445-2637 (pro shop)

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D r . R obert L . B archi President of the University Robert L. Barchi is the 20th president of Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, a position he assumed on September 1, 2012. From 2004 to 2012, Dr. Barchi served as president of Thomas Jefferson University, nationally regarded as a top university dedicated to health sciences education and research. Previously, he was provost and chief academic officer of the University of Pennsylvania, where he had responsibility for Penn’s 12 schools, their academic programs, athletics, students, and faculty. Dr. Barchi began his academic career in 1972 on the Penn faculty. He founded the university’s Department of Neuroscience, was chair of Penn’s Department of Neurology, and for more than a decade was director of its Mahoney Institute of Neurological Sciences. Appointed provost and chief academic officer in 1999, he recruited new leadership for nine of the twelve schools at Penn and established a number of university-wide interdisciplinary educational and research institutes. Dr. Barchi assumed the presidency of Thomas Jefferson University in 2004. Under his leadership, the university grew from three to six schools, including the establishment of the Jefferson School of Pharmacy. During his eight-year presidency, enrollment across Jefferson increased more than 50%, fundraising doubled in spite of the economic downturn, and 22 new endowed professorships and 50 endowed scholarships were established. He also oversaw the transformation of the institution’s urban environment into a vibrant university campus. Throughout his career, Dr. Barchi has been active as a clinical neurologist and as researcher in the fields of neuroscience and neurology. In 1993, he was elected to the Institute of Medicine of the National Academy of Sciences for his work on the structure and function of voltage-gated ion channels. He is also a member of the American Society for Clinical Investigation and the Association of American Physicians, and is a Fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. Barchi received his B.S. and M.S. degrees from Georgetown University, and Ph.D. and M.D. degrees from the University of Pennsylvania.


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TIM PERNETTI DIRECTOR OF INTERCOLLEGIATE ATHLETICS A New Jersey native with a strong passion for his alma mater, Tim Pernetti has come full-circle in becoming one of the nation’s youngest leaders in college athletics. A former student-athlete “On the Banks”, Pernetti was named Rutgers’ sixth Director of Intercollegiate Athletics on February 26, 2009. He oversees 24 men’s and women’s intercollegiate teams in New Brunswick, a larger number than fielded at most of the university’s peer institutions. Pernetti has been influential in the world of college athletics since he received a bachelor’s degree in journalism and mass media from Rutgers in 1993, and a master’s degree in communication in 1995. Pernetti’s influence on Rutgers Athletics has been immediate – from the key coaching hires of Mike Rice (men’s basketball), Dan Donigan (men’s soccer) and Brian Brecht (men’s lacrosse) – to securing the first two naming rights partnerships in Rutgers Athletics history. Under his leadership, Rutgers inked a 10-year naming rights deal with High Point Solutions to acquire the naming rights for Rutgers Stadium, along with a 10-year contract with Audi for the Audi Rutgers Club at High Point Solutions Stadium. Both deals have netted the Department of Athletics nearly one million dollars in new revenue to the annual budget. Two other key objectives on Pernetti’s watch were to secure a new food vendor for Rutgers Athletics and secure an all-sports shoe and apparel deal for the department. Pernetti led the charge to bring Sodexo to Rutgers as the exclusive concessionaire and caterer for the Athletics Department. The 10-year agreement will enhance the gameday experience, significantly increase revenues to Athletics, and fund future capital improvements at High Point Solutions Stadium and the RAC. He further directed negotiations with Nike to execute the first-ever all-sports shoe and apparel deal for all 24 sports at Rutgers. The five-year agreement worth approximately $5.2M in equipment and apparel will provide state-ofthe-art apparel for all Rutgers student-athletes. During his introductory press conference, Pernetti spoke about his vision to build a broadband network to deliver hundreds of live events. That promise has blossomed into RVision, powered by ScarletKnights.com, as RVision has streamed hundreds of live events per year, including unprecedented live game coverage for

many of the Scarlet Knights Olympic Sports. Prior to returning to Rutgers, Pernetti was the Executive Vice President, Content, for CBS College Sports Network. In that role, he oversaw the rights and relationship business, on-air talent, and all network programming and content on air, online and across all distribution platforms for the nation’s first company dedicated to college sports. Pernetti helped to build the CBS College Sports Network, previously CSTV, prior to its launch in 2003, and has played a critical role in establishing it as the multi-media leader in college sports programming, content, news and information. He was a recipient of the prestigious Sports Business Journal Forty under Forty Award, and the Multichannel News 40 under 40 Award both in 2008. Charged with developing relationships, acquiring rights and creating multi-platform original programming for the first ever 24-hour sports college sports network, Pernetti successfully navigatedthrough a complicated web of media rights deals to come up with new ways toserve college sports fans. Pernetti worked closely with the NCAA and hundreds of schools in every major conference, securing over 2,500 hours ofevent pro


13 gramming each year and multiple NCAA Championships across 35 men’s and women’s sports. Pernetti was in charge of the CBS College Sports Network exclusive long-term agreements with the US Naval Academy, Mountain West Conference, Conference USA, and the Atlantic 10. Further, he managed company relationships with more than 30 conferences and thousands of institutions. Pernetti remains most proud of establishing a strong relationship in women’s collegiate sports including the establishment of a women’s basketball game of the week package in 2004 with the Big East Conference. In 2006, Pernetti spearheaded a landmark multi-media partnership with the NCAA to make CBS College Sports Network the home of Division II Sports. The innovative deal effectively increased the scope and reach of NCAA Division II sports with hundreds of games now available nationally via the broadcast network and online. Pernetti’s commitment to providing greater exposure to women’s and under-served sports is evidenced by the network’s unprecedented coverage of lacrosse and volleyball, among others. He has also been at the forefront of the development and creation of the Collegiate Nationals, which crowns champions in dozens of high endurance sports, and innovative original production including CBS College Sports Network’s groundbreaking NCAA March Madness Central, NCAA March Madness Highlights on CBS College Sports,

and the WIRED franchise which gives viewers an inside look at games and events through wireless microphones on coaches during game action. Prior to joining CBS College Sports Network, Pernetti served eight years at ABC-TV and ABC Sports most recently as Director of Programming, where he was integral in acquiring, managing and developing several ABC Sports properties including college football, the Bowl Championship Series, and college basketball. For five years, Pernetti handled relationships and negotiated television rights with all of the major collegiate conferences. As a student at Rutgers, Pernetti was a four-year letterwinner at tight end on the Rutgers football squad. He was also the color commentator for Rutgers Football on the Rutgers Football Radio Network and announced weekly NFL games nationally on Sports USA Radio. A resident of Oakland, N.J., Pernetti is married to the former Danielle Bahto. His wife also graduated from Rutgers and was a letterwinner on the women’s lacrosse team. Danielle and Tim are the proud parents of their three children – Max, Conor and Natalie. In his spare time Pernetti is the Commissioner of Oakland (N.J.) Recreation Youth football program, serves on the Board of Directors of the Reed Academy (a school in Oakland serving children with autistic spectrum disorder), and has been named a member of the NY/NJ Super Bowl Host Committee for Community Engagement.

ATHLETIC ADMINISTRATION

Jason Baum Sr. Associate Director of Athletics/ Communications

Brian Colvin Associate Director of Athletics/ Finance & Administration

Doug Fillis Senior Associate Athletic Director Administration

Kathleen Hickey Sr. Associate Director of Athletics/SWA

Douglas Kokoskie Sr. Associate Director of Athletics/ Operations

Dr. Robert Monaco Associate Director of Athletics/ Sports Medicine

Nick Ojea Associate Director of Athletics/ Compliance

Janine Purcaro Chief Financial Officer for Intercollegiate Athletics

John Ternyila Sr. Associate Director of Athletics/Finance

Shawn Tucker Assistant Director of Athletics/ Student-Athlete Development


14 A BRIEF HISTORY Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, is one of the leading universities in the nation. The university is comprised of 28 degree-granting divisions; 10 undergraduate colleges, 10 graduate schools, and eight schools offering both undergraduate and graduate degrees. Six are located in Camden, eight in Newark, and 13 in New Brunswick and one in Newark and New Brunswick. Rutgers has a unique history as a colonial college, a land-grant institution, and a state university. Chartered in 1766 as Queen’s College, the eighth institution of higher learning to be founded in the colonies, the school opened its doors in New Brunswick in 1771 with a handful of first-year students. During its early years, the college developed as a classic liberal arts institution. In 1825, the name of the college was changed to honor a former trustee and Revolutionary War veteran, Colonel Henry 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, the College of Engineering (now the School of Engineering) in 1914, and the College of Agriculture (now the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences) 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 Residential College, part of the School of Arts and Sciences) in 1918, and the School of Education (now Graduate School of Education) in 1924. In 1924, Rutgers College officially became Rutgers University; a reflection of the institution’s rapidly expanding number of schools and academic programs. Early in the century, Rutgers had begun offering educational opportunities to women when the New Jersey College for Women was founded in 1918, and to adult learners when University College, an evening division, was established in 1934. After World War II, enrollment exploded as Rutgers admitted all qualified candidates under the GI Bill. Rutgers was becoming an institution for all people, and in 1945 and 1956, state legislative acts formally designated Rutgers as The State University of New Jersey. A flurry of expansion ensued. The University of Newark (now Rutgers–Newark) joined Rutgers in 1946, followed by the College of South Jersey (now Rutgers–Camden) in 1950. An ambitious building program added libraries, classrooms, and student housing across the three regional campuses. In 1969, Livingston College opened, providing a co-educational residential experience with a special commitment to diversity. Graduate education in the arts and sciences grew through the establishment of the Graduate School–New Brunswick, the Graduate School–Newark, and the Graduate School–Camden. Professional schools were formed to serve students in the fields of business; communication, information, and library studies; criminal justice; education; fine arts; law; management and labor relations; nursing; planning and public policy; psychology; public affairs and administration; and social work. Meanwhile, as industry and government sought partners in solving problems and advancing knowledge, the concept of the research university emerged. In 1981, Rutgers adopted a blueprint for its transformation into a major public research university. With increased support from state, federal, and corporate partners, Rutgers’ strength in research grew dramatically. In 1989, in recognition of its enhanced stature, Rutgers was invited to join the prestigious Association of American Universities, an organization comprising the top 61 research universities in North America. Today, professors and students work in more than 200 specialized research centers, unraveling mysteries in marine sciences, early childhood education, neuroscience, advanced materials, climate change, nutrition, homeland security, transportation, stem cells, and many other areas that can improve life both in New Jersey and around the world. A 2007 major reorganization of undergraduate education in New Brunswick reinvigorated the undergraduate experience for both students and faculty by combining the traditions and strengths of four undergraduate liberal arts colleges—Douglass, Livingston, Rutgers, and University—into a single School of Arts and Sciences. With 28 schools and colleges, Rutgers offers more than 100 undergraduate majors and more than 180 graduate and professional degree programs. The university graduated more than 13,000 students last year, and has more than 400,000 living alumni residing in all 50 states and on six continents. Rutgers also sponsors community initiatives in all 21 New Jersey counties. Universitywide, new degree programs, research endeavors, and community outreach are in development to meet the demands of the 21st century. Today, Rutgers continues to grow, both in its facilities and in the variety and depth of its educational and research programs. The university’s goals for the future include the continued provision of the highest quality education, along with the increased support of research and commitment to public service to meet the needs of society.

RUTGERS AT A GLANCE • Chartered in 1766 as Queen’s College, Rutgers is the eighth oldest college in the nation. • Rutgers was designated The State University of New Jersey by legislative acts in 1945 and 1956. • Rutgers is New Jersey’s largest public research university and is located on three regional campuses in Camden, Newark, and New Brunswick/ Piscataway. • Rutgers was named New Jersey’s land-grant university in 1864 and has a special responsibility for serving the needs of the state. • Rutgers is a member of the Association of American Universities (AAU), a highly selective organization comprised of the 61 leading research universities in North America.


15 • There are 28 degree-granting schools and colleges, offering more than 270 total bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral and professional degree programs. • Rutgers is one of New Jersey’s major employers with more than 13,000 full-time faculty and staff (full- and part-time). • For every dollar New Jersey invests in Rutgers, the university channels $6 into the state’s economy. The University’s 2009 economic impact report showed that Rutgers and its faculty, staff, students and visitors channel $3.8 billion in direct and indirect spending into the state economy – more than six times the state’s $595.3 million investment in the university. • With holdings of more than 3.6 million volumes, the Rutgers library system ranks among the nation’s largest. • Rutgers enrolls more than 58,000 students, including more than 43,000 undergraduates and 14,000 graduate students. • More than 13,000 students earned a degree from Rutgers in the 2011-2012 academic year. • The university has more than 400,000 living alumni; 200,000 alumni reside in New Jersey. • In 2008, the Middle States Commission on Higher Education reaccredited Rutgers for the next 10 years.

TEACHING AND LEARNING • Rutgers faculty include an Abel Prize winner, Fulbright Scholars, Guggenheim Fellows, members of the American Academy of Arts and Science, fellows of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, a National Endowment for the Arts “Jazz Master” and winners of many other prestigious awards and grants. • Rutgers History Professor Annette Gordon-Reed was awarded the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in history for her landmark work, The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family (W. W. Norton, 2008). • The graduate philosophy department is ranked third in the English-speaking world by the Philosophical Gourmet Report. • Rutgers Business School-Newark and New Brunswick (RBS) is uniquely positioned at the epicenter of global business – just under 20 minutes from New York City – giving students easy access to leading global corporations to build lasting relationships. RBS delivers cutting-edge curricula that combine the mix of business and science required by today’s employers. • RBS is consistently ranked as the top business school in New Jersey and among the top three in the Greater New York Metropolitan area. The Executive MBA is ranked 24th in the U.S. by The Financial Times and the Master of Quantitative Finance is among the top 10 programs nationally, as ranked by Wall Street executives. The MBA program was ranked 30th in the country for the employment rate of its graduates three months after graduation by U.S. News & World Report. To meet rising demand, a new on-year MBA track was created for students with advanced standing. • In Newark, the business school resides in a new state-of-the-art building which opened in 2009. In New Brunswick, a new building will open in 2013 as the center of a new Livingston Professional Campus, accommodating the massive growth in the new four-year undergraduate program. • The Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy is ranked third among the nation’s top graduate programs in urban planning according to a survey by Planetizen, a Los Angeles-based planning and development network.

RESEARCH • Streptomycin, the first effective cure for tuberculosis, and other potent antibiotics were discovered at Rutgers by Professor Selman Waksman and his students in the 1940s. Waksman received the Nobel Prize for his important contributions to medicine. • The Rutgers Stem Cell Research Center, part of the Division of Life Sciences of the School of Arts and Sciences, is located in Nelson Laboratories on the New Brunswick campus where its mission is to support research with human embryonic stem cells for Rutgers University researchers and collaborators. • The Rutgers Cell and DNA Repository is a valuable resource for researchers around the world studying the role heredity plays in such complex genetic diseases as schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, autism, Alzheimer’s, alcoholism, diabetes, and Tourette’s syndrome. • The Protein Data Bank, based at Rutgers, is the international repository of three-dimensional protein structures. With $30 million in federal funding, the data bank provides vital information on more than 82,500 proteins and other macromolecules for scientists working to design more effective treatments for disease. • Rutgers’ Institute of Marine and Coastal Sciences ranks fourth among the top oceanographic research institutions in the world, according to a recent poll conducted by Thomson Reuters. • The Ernest Mario School of Pharmacy, the only public pharmacy school in New Jersey and one of the top institutions of its kind in the nation, ranks in the top 15 percent among pharmacy schools nationwide in research dollars awarded by the National Institutes of Health with $7.6 million of funding awarded to the school in 2009. • Rutgers holds more than 600 United States patents, half of which have been issued in the last decade. To date over 80 start-up companies have been created based on Rutgers technologies; three-quarters of these are New Jersey - based. • Rutgers is a partner in the Southern African Large Telescope, one of the world’s largest optical telescopes and the southern hemisphere’s newest eyeon-the-sky.

SERVICE TO NEW JERSEY • Rutgers’ Center for Government Services trains New Jersey’s municipal employees to better serve their constituents and trains approximately 20,000 annually through 16 separate programs and 600 courses. • Rutgers Continuing Education offers more than 4,000 course sections with 120,000 annual enrollments. Courses are offered in every county in New Jersey. • The Office of the New Jersey State Climatologist at Rutgers is the state’s official weather resource. • Each year on a single Saturday in the spring, Rutgers opens its doors to the world for “Rutgers Day.” More than 250,000 people have visited the five New Brunswick campuses during the event the last four years to celebrate the institution’s three-part mission of teaching, research and service. “Rutgers Day,” which made its debut in 2009, is an expansion of the successful annual New Jersey Folk Festival and Ag Field Day programs.


16 SERVICE TO THE NATION • Rutgers New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station has offices in all 21 New Jersey counties and serves the residents of the state through research, education and service programs that run the gamut from 4-H Youth Development to family and community health. Research from the Experiment Station has led to renowned Jersey tomatoes, disease-resistant dogwoods, improved coastline management, new forms of mosquito control and world-famous turfgrass varieties that have been used everywhere from the new Yankee Stadium to the Augusta National Golf Club. • Rutgers School of Environmental and Biological Sciences builds on a tradition of hands-on learning and research excellence in areas that cover the biological spectrum from organisms to ecosystems. Students and researchers alike are dedicated to finding solutions to the problems that most concern our state’s residents, particularly in the areas of environmental sustainability, alternative energy, food, health and nutrition. • Such nationally respected institutes at Rutgers, including the National Transit Institute, the National Institute for Early Education Research and the Institute for Health, Health Care Policy and Aging Research, are helping to shape national and state policy in critical areas. • Rutgers is the nation’s primary source for anti-terror security training for public transit workers. • In April of 2009, Rutgers was selected by the United States Department of Homeland Security (DHS) to co-lead a new DHS Center of Excellence in Command, Control, and Interoperability (CCI) to conduct research into the technological issues involved with maintaining homeland security. It is one of 12 DHS Centers of Excellence in the nation. • The Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy’s National Transit Institute is one of seven academic institutions around the nation that comprise a National Transportation Security Center of Excellence. • Most meals ready to eat (MREs) manufactured for our nation’s troops are produced using Rutgers-developed technology. • The Douglass Developmental Disabilities Center is a pioneer in developing effective methods to help autistic children.

rutgers administrative officers Robert L. Barchi, Ph.D., President Richard Edwards, Ph.D., Interim Executive Vice President for Academic Affairs Jonathan R. Alger, J.D., Senior Vice President and General Counsel Bruce C. Fehn, B.S., C.P.A., Senior Vice President for Finance and Administration David L. Finegold, Ph.D., Senior Vice President for Lifelong Learning and Strategic Growth Initiatives Gregory S. Blimling, Ph.D., Vice President for Student Affairs Leslie A. Fehrenbach, B.S., Secretary of the University Carol P. Herring, B.A., President for Rutgers University Foundation; Executive Vice President for Development and Alumni Relations Peter J. McDonough Jr., B.A., Vice President for Public Affairs Kim Manning, M.B.A., Vice President for University Relations Courtney O. McAnuff, M.P.A., Vice President for Enrollment Management Michael J. Pazzani, Ph.D., Vice President for Research and Economic Development Tim Pernetti, M.C.I.S., Director of Intercollegiate Athletics Wendell E. Pritchett, Ph.D., J.D., Chancellor, Rutgers–Camden Barry V. Qualls, Ph.D., Vice President for Undergraduate Education Donna Thornton, M.P.A., Vice President for Alumni Relations Nancy S. Winterbauer, Ed.D., Vice President for University Budgeting Philip L. Yeagle, Ph.D., Interim Chancellor, Rutgers–Newark

BOARD OF GOVERNORS 2012-13 Ralph Izzo, Chair Gerald C. Harvey, Vice Chair Robert L. Barchi, ex officio Anthony J. DePetris Mark P. Hershhorn M. William Howard, Jr. Gordon A. MacInnes Joseph J. Roberts, Jr. John F. Russo, Sr. Kenneth M. Schmidt Daniel H. Schulman Candace L. Straight

Paul Panayotatos, Faculty Representative Samuel Rabinowitz, Faculty Representative Joseph T. Cashin, Student Representative OFFICERS OF THE BOARD Bruce C. Fehn, Treasurer Leslie A. Fehrenbach, Secretary Mary Claire Brennan, Assistant Secretary

BOARD OF TRUSTEES 2012-13 Dudley H. Rivers, Jr., Chair Margaret T. Derrick, Vice Chair Dorothy W. Cantor, Vice Chair Robert L. Barchi, ex officio Sol J. Barer Felix M. Beck, Emeritus Gregory Bender Andrew S. Berns William E. Best Joan L. Bildner, Emerita Michael A. Bogdonoff Floyd H. Bragg, Emeritus Gregory Q. Brown Dominick J. Burzichelli John Herbert Carman, Emeritus Peter Cartmell, Emeritus Kevin J. Collins, Emeritus Hollis A. Copeland Steven M. Darien Marisa A. Dietrich Carleton C. Dilatush, Emeritus James F. Dougherty Robert P. Eichert, Emeritus Evelyn S. Field, Emerita Lora L. Fong Jeanne M. Fox, Emerita John R. Futey Albert R. Gamper, Jr. Ronald J. Garutti Ronald W. Giaconia, Emeritus Rochelle Gizinski, Emerita Evangeline Gomez

Leslie E. Goodman, Emeritus Joyce W. Harley M. Wilma Harris John A. Hendricks Robert A. Hering Mark P. Hershhorn Carleton A. Holstrom, Emeritus M. William Howard, Jr. John D. Hugelmeyer Frank B. Hundley Ralph Izzo Paul B. Jennings, Emeritus Nimesh S. Jhaveri Roberta Kanarick Tilak Lal Walter L. Leib, Emeritus Richard A. Levao, Emeritus Jennifer Lewis-Hall Christine M. Lomiguen Debra Ann Lynch Gordon A. MacInnes Duncan L. MacMillan Rashida Y. V. MacMurray Iris Martinez-Campbell Carol Ann Monroe Robert E. Mortensen Patricia Nachtigal, Emerita Gene O’Hara, Emeritus John A. O’Malley Dean J. Paranicas, Emeritus Jose A. Piazza Sidney Rabinowitz

George A. Rears Norman Reitman, Emeritus Joseph J. Roberts, Jr. Alejandro Roman John F. Russo, Sr. Louis A. Sapirman Kenneth M. Schmidt Richard H. Shindell Susan Stabile Dorothy M. Stanaitis, Emerita Robert L. Stevenson Sandy J. Stewart Candace L. Straight Heather C. Taylor Anne M. Thomas, Emerita Michael R. Tuosto, Emeritus Laurel A. Van Leer Lucas J. Visconti Martha A. Cotter, Faculty Representative Menahem Spiegel, Faculty Representative Katherine Rose E. Yabut, Student Representative OFFICERS OF THE BOARD Bruce C. Fehn, Treasurer Leslie A. Fehrenbach, Secretary Mary Claire Brennan, Assistant Secretary


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