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Baruch College Campus High School was a vision between Anthony Alvarado, the former superintendent of Community School District 2, and Matthew Goldstein, former president of Baruch College. They wanted to create a small, liberal arts college preparatory high school on a college campus. In 1997, the school was established.
4 Baruch uses a simple and fable-like style, with speech-making animals, fruit that never rots, and an eagle sent by the Lord that revives the dead. Some parts of 4 Baruch appear to have been added in the Christian era, such as the last chapter; due to these insertions, some scholars consider 4 Baruch to have Christian origins. [ 2 ]
Edward Regan (1950), president of Baruch College from 2000 to 2004 David M. Robinson (1988), Robert H.N. Ho Professor in Asian Studies at Colgate University Gregory J. Vincent (1983), president of Talladega College and former president of Hobart and William Smith Colleges
Sen. Alex Padilla, D-Calif. former Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Marcia L. Fudge; Rep. Ted Lieu, D-Calif. Sen. Tammy Baldwin, D-Wis.
During the first three years, the college provided a five-month course of study. In 1927, the program was expanded to ten-months with one graduating class each year. Major Dwight D. Eisenhower graduated from the college in 1933 and later served on the faculty. In 1940, the colleges expanded to two classes and then graduated four classes in 1941.
In 1968, the Baruch School of Business was spun off as Baruch College, an independent senior college in the CUNY system. [ citation needed ] The first president of the new college (1969–1970) was the previous Federal Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Robert C. Weaver .
Class 1977 Major Finance & Economics Notability Managing Director, Maxim Group, LLC References www.maximgrp.com Lara Abrash: 1994 MBA Chairman and CEO of Deloitte & Touche LLP [1] William F. Aldinger II: 1959 Chairman and CEO of HSBC North America Holdings [2] Anthony Chan: 1979 BBA Chief economist with JP Morgan Chase Bank, N.A. [3] Akis ...
The School of Public and International Affairs was later named after Austin W. Marxe who donated $30 million to the college in 2016. Austin W. Marxe was a 1965 graduate of Baruch College and an investment banker. It was the largest donation to Baruch College and the second largest in the history of City University of New York. [2] [3] [4]