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Stockton continued to grow rapidly. Housing II opened in November 1981. With the opening of the N-Wing College Center & Housing III in February 1983, Stockton State College achieved a high student-residency rate among New Jersey state colleges. [citation needed] In 1993, the college's name was changed to the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey.
Richard Emil Bjork (1930–1984) [1] was Vice-Chancellor of the New Jersey Board of Higher Education. He served as the Interim President of Glassboro State College [2] and later he was instrumental in the site selection, naming, and development of Richard Stockton State College where he served as the college's first president.
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Tom Sallay (born c. 1979) is an American college football coach. He is the head football coach for Culver–Stockton College, a position he has held since 2017. [1 ...
Ingrid and Jim Best look at memorabilia at the last reunion of former employees of the Stockton Developmental Center at the Cancun restaurant in downtown Stockton on Saturday, Oct. 8, 2022.
The Stockton Campus, featuring a tower, rose gardens, architectural columns, brick-faced buildings, and numerous [21] trees, has been used in Hollywood films, due to its aesthetic likeness to East Coast Ivy League universities: High Time, Raiders of the Lost Ark, Indiana Jones and the Kingdom of the Crystal Skull, The Sure Thing, Dead Man on Campus, All the King's Men, Flubber, and Dreamscape ...
Harvey Kesselman (born June 18, 1951) is an American academic administrator who served as the fifth president of Stockton University in Galloway Township, New Jersey. [1] He is the first Stockton alumnus to become president and was a member of the first class at Stockton. [2]
Vera King Farris (July 18, 1938 [2] – November 28, 2009 [3] [4]) was the third president of the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey from May 25, 1983, to June 3, 2003. [5] She was the first female African-American president of a New Jersey public college and one of the first in the nation.