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The College of New Jersey (TCNJ) is a public university in Ewing Township, New Jersey.It is part of New Jersey's public system of higher education. Established in 1855 as the New Jersey State Normal School, [1] TCNJ was the first normal school, or teaching college, in the state of New Jersey and the fifth in the United States. [8]
“One of the most recognizable restaurants in College Station,” [2] [3] the Dixie Chicken is known as Texas A&M's "favorite local watering hole." [4] The Dixie Chicken is the oldest and most famous bar in the Northgate district. [5] The Dixie Chicken was founded by local businessmen Don Anz and Don Ganter.
WTSR (91.3 FM) is a student-run non-commercial radio station broadcasting from The College of New Jersey (formerly Trenton State College), servicing Mercer County and Bucks County, Pennsylvania, as well as broadcasting over the internet. The station's call letters originally reflected the college's former name: "Trenton State Radio".
The finance program at TCNJ has the largest number of business students [citation needed].The mission of the program is for students to have the ability to analyze the allocation of financial resources within a corporation or government setting; to analyze sources of funding and ramifications of financial decisions.
College basketball coach and athletics administrator Gene Hart: 1952 BA Hockey Hall of Fame broadcaster and former play-by-play voice of the Philadelphia Flyers [42] Hillary Klimowicz: Professional basketball player Tom McCarthy: 1990 Radio play-by-play voice of the Philadelphia Phillies [43] Chickie Geraci Poisson: Feld hockey player and coach
Chicago Federal Reserve president Austan Goolsbee told Yahoo Finance Friday that the central bank 'may be on hold' for now, but he still sees interest rates moving lower over the 'next 12-18 months.'
TCNJ School of Engineering is one of seven schools at The College of New Jersey, consisting of roughly 650 students centered in Armstrong Hall.It offers several undergraduate programs in various engineering disciplines including the traditional mechanical, electrical, and civil engineering fields, but also extending to newer fields such as computer and biomedical engineering.
TCNJ's varsity teams are the top combined first- and second-place finishers of all 424 Division III schools in the nation over more than 25 years. [2] In 1957, TCNJ, then known as Trenton State College, was a founding member of the NJAC (then called the New Jersey State Athletic Conference) along with five other state institutions. [3]