Everything about Pace University totally explained
Pace University is a
private,
co-educational, and comprehensive multi-campus
university in the
New York metropolitan area with campuses in
New York City and
Westchester County,
New York. Pace was founded by two brothers,
Homer S. Pace and
Charles A. Pace, in
1906, initially as a business school for men and women.
Programs
The environmental law program at the
Pace University School of Law has received national accolades from the annual report on law schools done by
US News and World Report and
The Princeton Review; it ranks number three in the nation in environmental law.
Similarly, the graduate program of the family nurse practitioner in the Lienhard School of Nursing is ranked in the top ten such programs nationally, and has only two top-tier peers in the northeast United States -- (
Yale and
Columbia).
The
Lubin School of Business is among fewer than three percent of business schools internationally with dual accreditation from
AACSB International, which is regarded as being the most prestigious business accreditations worldwide. The MBA program has consistently ranked among the top 20 programs nationwide, while the undergraduate business program ranks among the top 50 private university business programs in the country and among the top four undergraduate business programs in New York City.
Furthermore, the only
Actors Studio MFA program in the United States is located at Pace. Pace University's
Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts is home to the television show
Inside the Actors Studio hosted by
James Lipton, and previously to the late
Tony Randall's
National Actors Theatre.
History
In 1906, the Pace brothers founded the firm of
Pace & Pace to operate their schools of
accountancy and business. The first class of Pace & Pace was composed of thirteen men and women who were taught by
Homer St. Clair Pace and Charles Ashford Pace. Taking a loan of $600, the Pace brothers rented a classroom on one of the floors of the
New York Tribune building, today the site of the
One Pace Plaza complex. Due to rapid growth over the succeeding years, the school was forced to relocate several times around the
Lower Manhattan area.
The Pace brothers' school was soon incorporated as Pace Institute. In addition to its school in New York, the Pace Institute expanded nationwide featuring courses in accountancy and business law in a number of cities throughout the United States. 4,000 students were taking the Pace brothers' courses in
YMCAs in the
New York-
New Jersey area. The Pace Standardized Course in Accounting was also offered in
Boston,
Baltimore,
Washington, D.C.,
Buffalo,
Cleveland,
Detroit,
Milwaukee,
Grand Rapids,
Kansas City,
St. Louis,
Denver,
San Francisco,
Los Angeles,
Portland, and
Seattle. Eventually, concerned about quality control at distant locations, in the 1920s the Pace brothers divested themselves of their private schools outside New York in order to devote their full attention to the original school in lower Manhattan, eventually to become one of the campuses of Pace University.
Taking on the legacy after the death of his uncle Charles and father Homer (in 1940 and 1942 respectively), Robert S. Pace became the president of Pace. In 1947, Pace Institute was approved for college status by the New York State Board of Regents. Then, in 1951 the college purchased its first campus building located at 41
Park Row in
Lower Manhattan. This building, designated a landmark by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission in March 1999, was the
19th-century headquarters of
The New York Times. In 1963 the
Pleasantville campus was established using land and buildings donated by the then-president of
General Foods and Pace alumni and trustee Wayne Marks and his wife Helen.
In 1966,
U.S. Vice President Hubert Humphrey and
New York City Mayor
John Lindsay broke ground for the
One Pace Plaza Civic Center complex, with then Pace president Edward J. Mortola. The former
New York Tribune building at 154 Nassau Street, across from 41
Park Row, was demolished to make way for the new building complex.
The New York State Board of Regents approved Pace College's petition for university status in 1973. Shortly thereafter, in 1975, the College of
White Plains (formerly known as Good Counsel College) consolidated with Pace and became the White Plains campus which at the time was used to house both undergraduate courses and Pace's new law school created in that same year. In September 1976, Pace began offering courses in
Midtown Manhattan in the Equitable Life Assurance Company building (now
AXA Equitable Life Insurance Company) on
Avenue of the Americas, and moved once before moving to its current location in 1997.
Briarcliff College was acquired in 1977 and became the Braircliff campus. A graduate center was opened in 1982 in
White Plains, and in 1987 the Graduate Center moved to the newly-built Westchester Financial Center complex in downtown business district of
White Plains, New York; which at the time of its opening, Pace's graduate computer science program was the first nationally accredited graduate program in the state of New York.
In 1994, all undergraduate programs in White Plains were consolidated to the Pleasantville-Briarcliff campus, and the White Plains campus on North Broadway was given to the law school; resulting in the University's Westchester undergraduate programs in Pleasantville and its Westchester graduate programs in White Plains. Finally in 1997, Pace purchased the World Trade Institute at
1 World Trade Center from the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey.
The year 2006 marked
Pace University's Centennial
. On
March 5,
2006, Pace students, alumni, faculty, and staff from all campuses convened on the Pleasantville campus in a University-wide Centennial Kick-Off Celebration; there was a Pace Centennial train, provided free of charge by the
MTA (Metropolitan Transportation Authority), to take Pace's New York City students, alumni, faculty and staff to Pace's Pleasantville campus. Former President
Bill Clinton received an
honorary doctorate of humane letters from Pace during the ceremony, which was held at the Goldstein Health, Fitness and Recreation Center. Following reception of the honorary degree, he addressed the students, faculty, alumni and staff of Pace, officially kicking off the Centennial anniversary of the University.
Since her last visit in celebration of
Black History Month in 2005, Dr.
Maya Angelou again visited the Pace community on
October 4,
2006 in celebration of Pace's Centennial. Two days later, on
October 6,
2006, (Pace's Founders Day) Pace University rang the
NASDAQ stock market opening bell in Midtown Manhattan to mark the end of the 14-month centennial celebration.
On
May 15,
2007, Pace University President
David A. Caputo announced his early retirement from the presidency on
June 3, 2007. The
Board of Trustees of Pace University appointed
Pace Law School dean
Stephen J. Friedman to the position of
interim president. Friedman has been dean and professor of law at Pace since
2004. He has also served as commissioner of the
Securities and Exchange Commission and as co-chairman of
Debevoise & Plimpton. Chairman of the board of trustees Aniello A. Bianco said the board of trustees would work closely with Dean Friedman to deal with current opportunities and issues facing the university before moving to name a permanent successor to Dr. Caputo. The University's adjuncts were officially recognized as a bargaining unit in 2004 under the auspices of the United Federation of Teachers, but a contact hasn't yet be reached.
Schools and colleges
The University consists of the following schools each with a graduate and undergraduate division:
Campuses
Pace University campuses are located in
New York City and
Westchester County, in
Pleasantville,
Briarcliff Manor, and
White Plains. The University's shuttle service provides transportation between the New York City, White Plains, and Pleasantville-Briarcliff campuses. Furthermore, Pace University has a high school located just ten blocks away from the University's New York City campus (see
Pace University High School).
New York City
» See also: One Pace Plaza and Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts
The New York City campus, the birthplace of Pace, is located in the
Civic Center of
lower Manhattan, next to the
Financial District. Also the campus is next to
New York Downtown Hospital. The campus is walking distance to well-known New York City sites including
Wall Street, the
World Trade Center,
World Financial Center,
South Street Seaport,
Chinatown and
Little Italy. Pace has about 950,000 square feet (88,258 m²) of space in Lower Manhattan. The main building,
One Pace Plaza, is a two-square-block building bounded by Gold, Nassau, Spruce, and Frankfort Streets, directly adjacent to the Manhattan entrance ramp of the
Brooklyn Bridge. Located directly across from
City Hall, the One Pace Plaza complex houses most of the classrooms, administrative offices, a 2,000 square foot (186 m²)
student union, a 750-seat community theater, and an 18-floor high-rise residence hall (known as "Maria's Tower"). 41 Park Row was the
19th-century headquarters of
The New York Times, and carrying on that legacy the building today houses the campus' student newspaper
The Pace Press, as well as student organization offices, faculty offices, the University's bookstore, and classrooms. 41 Park Row also houses the Haskins Laboratories, 2,700 square feet (251 m²) of the late Dr. Seymour H. Hutner, where medical experiments are held, like the
Green tea extract study in the international media. The buildings of 157 William Street, 161 William Street, and 163 William Street were acquired by Pace following the
September 11 attacks to make up for loss of the entire 55th floor, 45,943 square feet, (4,268 m²), in the
North Tower of the
World Trade Center which used to house Pace University's World Trade Institute and World Trade Conference Center (See
the section below entitled September 11, 2001).The Willam Street buildings house classrooms, offices of the Seidenberg School of Computer Science & Information Systems, the university's
business incubators, along with Pace's
Downtown Conference Center
where the
e.MBA residency sessions are held (Pace also has leased office space in 156 William Street). One block away from the site of the future
Fulton Street Transit Centeris one of Pace's own residence halls known as "Fulton Hall", the former Fulton Plaza Hotel on 106
Fulton Street. Pace also leases residence accommodations at the new state-of-the-art residence 55 John Street also in lower Manhattan, and at the
Hotel St. George in nearby prominent
Brooklyn Heights right across the
East River; frequent University shuttle service is provided between the campus and the Brooklyn Heights student residence. Pace also offers classes in
midtown Manhattan in the
art deco Fred F. French Building on at 551
Fifth Avenue; a few blocks away from places such as
Grand Central Terminal,
Bryant Park,
Times Square,
Radio City Music Hall, and
Rockefeller Center. It is a popular location which offers flexibility and convenience to students who live or work in midtown and for students commuting from the borough of
Queens.
Westchester
Pleasantville-Briarcliff campus
» See also: Choate House (New York)
Classes began in
Westchester County in
Pleasantville,
New York in
1963.
(External Link
) The campus today consists of the former estate of then Vice Chairman of
General Foods Corporation, Wayne Marks (Class of 1928) - previously belonging to 18th century noted physician
Dr. George C. S. Choate (which gave its name to a pond and a house on the campus.)
Located on the 180-acre (73
hectares) in
White Plains, New York in
Westchester County is
Pace University School of Law. Nestled in between the
Cross-Westchester Expressway (
I-287) and
NY Route 22 (North Broadway), the Law School is situated on a spacious 13-acre (5.3
hectares) landscaped suburban campus with a mix of historic and modern buildings. Founded in 1976, Pace Law School is the only law school located between New York City and the state capital of
Albany, New York, 136 miles (219 km) away. The School of Law ranks number three in the nation in environmental law. Frequent Pace shuttle service is provided between the Law School campus and the
White Plains Station of the
Metro-North Railroad for many law students who commute from New York City and throughout the state.
Stephen J. Friedman, former commissioner of the
Securities and Exchange Commission and former co-chairman of
Debevoise & Plimpton, is the current dean of Pace Law School.
Graduate Center
Also located in
White Plains, New York, several blocks away from Pace Law School, is the site of the Graduate Center in White Plain's downtown business district. The Graduate Center is located in a 15-story building in the tree-filled plaza of the Westchester Financial Center, which is located diagonally across the street from the
White Plains Station of the
Metro-North Railroad. Pace University graduate students in both New York City and in the Graduate Center in White Plains represent 47 states, 58 countries, and 2 U.S. territories. The Center houses programs in business, education, computer science and information systems, and public administration; with its own library specifically geared toward graduate students. Being located in the
county seat of Westchester County in White Plain's downtown business district, the Graduate Center is nearby the
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, the Westchester County Courthouse,
Trump Tower City Center, White Plains Performing Arts Center, the
Westchester County Center arena,
The Westchester,
The Source At White Plains, the
Galleria at White Plains, and the White Plains Mall; including regional offices of
IBM,
Verizon,
The Bank of New York,
The Journal News,
New York Power Authority, and United States Postal Service District Office.
Other properties
Pace University High School
Pace University established a public high school and opened its doors to its first class in September
2004. Pace High School is in
New York City school district Region 9, and shares a building with
Middle School 131 at 100 Hester Street in
lower Manhattan, 10 blocks away from the university's New York City campus.
SCI² business incubators
In the fall of
2004, Pace University opened two
business incubators to help early-stage companies grow in New York City in
Lower Manhattan and
Yonkers. SCI², (which stands for Second Century Innovation and Ideas, Corp.) maintains accelerator sites in 163 William Street in Lower Manhattan and in the 116,000 square foot (10,777 m²) NValley Technology Center complex at 470 Nepperhan Avenue in Yonkers. Visit the website at
http://www.sci2.org
.
Women's Justice Center at the Westchester County Family Court-Yonkers
In
2001, the Women's Justice Center of Pace Law School opened a second site at the Westchester County Family Court in
Yonkers, New York (the first being on the law school campus at the 27 Crane Avenue house). The Westchester County Family Court in Yonkers is one of three family courts in Westchester County. The Yonkers office of the Women's Justice Center is located at the Westchester Family Court, 53 South Broadway in Yonkers. Visit the website at
www.law.pace.edu/bwjc
.
Shanghai MS accounting program
Pace University offers the
Master of Science in
Accounting to
Chinese students in
Shanghai, China's largest city. All instruction takes place at
Shanghai University of Finance and Economics (SUFE) and taught by Pace University professors in Shanghai. Established in 1917, Shanghai University of Finance and Economics is recognized as one of the leading business institutions in
China; it was one of the first Chinese higher education institutions authorized to award
master and
doctorate degrees in
economics and
management science and
MBA degrees.
Theater and the arts
The Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts is the principal theatre of Pace University and is located at the University's New York City campus in Lower Manhattan. The 750-seat
Michael Schimmel Center for the Arts is home the television show
Inside the Actors Studio hosted by
James Lipton and previously the home of the
National Actors Theatre, a theatre company founded by the late actor
Tony Randall who was in residence. The
National Actors Theatre was the only professional theatre company housed in a university in
New York City. Theater productions at Pace have included such stars as
Tony Randall,
Al Pacino,
Steve Buscemi,
Dominic Chianese,
Billy Crudup,
Charles Durning,
Paul Giamatti,
John Goodman,
Chazz Palminteri,
Linda Emond,
Len Cariou,
Roberta Maxwell, and
Jeff Goldblum. Pace is also one of the venues for the
Tribeca Film Festival, the Tribeca Theater Festival, the
New York International Fringe Festival (FringeNYC) the
River-to-River Festival
(New York City’s largest free-to-the-public summer festival), and Grammy Career Day of
Grammy in the Schools
. The Woodward Hall 135-seat theater at the campus at
Briarcliff Manor in
Westchester is home to the
Hudson Stage Company
.
Athletics
Pace's sports teams are called the
Setters; the University's mascot is the
Setter. Pace University sponsors nineteen intercollegiate varsity sports. Its affiliations include the
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) Division II,
Northeast Ten Conference, and
Eastern College Athletic Conference (ECAC). The school's official colors are blue and gold.
Pace's athletic facilities are highlighted by the 29,000 square foot (6,968 m²)
Goldstein Health, Fitness and Recreation Center in Pleasantville, New York, which boasts a 2400-seat arena, eight-lane swimming pool, weight/fitness room, aerobics/dance room, training room, locker rooms, equipment room, meeting rooms, and offices of the athletics department.
Facts:
Head Baseball Coach: Henry Manning
Pitching Coach: Trevor Brown
School song
The
alma mater of Pace University was written by Ivan Fox '54. The lyrics to the song are as follows:
»
Alma Mater, hearts and voices sing to thee our everlasting praise;
Each and every heart rejoices at the thought of happy days. » Pace, Oh Pace, we'll ne'er forget you, nor the friends we hold so dear;
Memories will linger ever and will brighten coming years.
» Alma Mater, stand forever, love is strong as we go marching by;
So thee, we raise our voices with your standard held on high. » Pace, Oh Pace, we'll ever follow where thy beacons show the way;
True to thee we'll be forever as we labor day by day.
September 11, 2001
On the day of the terrorist attacks of
September 11,
2001, Pace University, four blocks from Ground Zero, lost 4 students and over 40 alumni. On September 11, 2001, students were made to leave classes and evacuate to other locations in
One Pace Plaza at 10:00 AM. The New York City
EMT cleared out the Admissions Lobby and made it into a
triage center for victims of the attack
(External Link
). Many of the patients were New York City police officers, firefighters and other emergency workers. Debris and about three inches of dust and ashes laid over the Pace New York City campus area and local streets. None of Pace's buildings were damaged except in the World Trade Center; Pace lost the entire 55th floor, 45,943 square feet, (4,268 m²) in the
North Tower of the
World Trade Center which used to house Pace University's World Trade Institute and the Pace University World Trade Conference Center (now the Downtown Conference Center). A
memorial
to students and alumni who lost their lives on 9/11 stands on all three campuses of Pace University. A gift from the
American Kennel Club, a statue of a
German Shepherd dog stands in front of One Pace Plaza to commemorate Pace's support as a triage center on 9/11
(External Link
).
Click here to read the first issue
of The Pace Press (New York City campus student newspaper) printed after 9/11.
Notable Persons
Notable graduates and former students at Pace include:
Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. - Alumnus; Professor of Environmental Law; Radio co-host, Ring of Fire
Fahad Qureshi - Renowned Financial Modeler and Wall Street Quant (aka the EXCELerator).
Vincent Pastore - Actor; Best known for his role as Sal "Big Pussy" Bonpensiero in the HBO television drama series The Sopranos
Diana Scarwid - Actress; Oscar nominee & Emmy nominee
Hank Wasiak
- Emmy award winning actor(External Link
)
Phil Hall - Writer, Film Threat
Paul Dano - Actor; Little Miss Sunshine; Winner of the best debut performance for his role in L.I.E.
Tracy DeLuca
- RN, BCA; Head nurse of actor Christopher Reeve, after he was rendered a quadriplegic
John P. Cahill - Development Chief of Lower Manhattan and the World Trade Center site
Richard F. Zannino
- CEO, Dow Jones
Boris M. Fidelman
- CEO, Dunhill Group LTD
Richard Grasso - Chairman & CEO (1995-2003) of the New York Stock Exchange
Edward F. Murphy
- Executive Vice President, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Ivan G. Seidenberg - President & CEO, Verizon
Mel Karmazin - CEO, Sirius Satellite Radio; Former President & CEO, CBS; former COO, Viacom
Daniel E. Davids
- Executive Vice President & General Manager, The History Channel
Marie J. Toulantis
- CEO, Barnes & Noble.com
James E. Quinn
- President, Tiffany & Co.(External Link
)
Herbert L. Henkel - Chairman, Ingersoll-Rand Company; former President & CEO
Michael A. Clinton
- Executive Vice President & Chief Marketing Officer and Publishing Director, Hearst Corporation
Edward W. Stack
- Chairman (1977-2000) and Board Member, National Baseball Hall of Fame Chairman & CEO, Dick's Sporting Goods
Suzanne Weyn - Author of over forty novels, most notably, The Bar Code Tattoo and Bar Code Rebellion
Sherene Fearon - published author of migraine research, rapid HIV testing, and long bone fracture in inner city emergency room department
Donald W. Bolz - Chief Information and Operations Officer, The Park Avenue Bank
Trivia
season 5, episode 13 - "" - was filmed on the New York City campus, including the inside of One Pace Plaza; (originally aired March 12, 2006.)
In Dawson's Creek, episode 6 - "Great Xpectations" - Jen Lindley (played by Michelle Williams) was searching on a college information website searching for colleges to attend after high school, the webpage she was on had information on Pace University; (originally aired November 8, 2000.)
The student-run coffeehouse of the Briarcliff Commons at the campus at Briarcliff is named 'Pace Perk' (Opened February 4, 2000) in reference to 'Central Perk' of the TV show 'Friends'.
Actress Francis Lee McCain, widely known as 'Billy's mother Lynn Peltzer' in the film 'Gremlins' (1984), lived in 33 Crane Avenue, White Plains, NY; a house that's now part of the University's law school campus in White Plains, which currently houses the Office of Development and Alumni Relations, as well as Pace's Center for Continuing Legal Education.
The architect designers of One Pace Plaza were Daniel P. Higgins and Otto R. Eggers, firm Eggers & Higgins, architects on the Thomas Jefferson Memorial in Washington D.C.
Horace Greeley, founder of the New York Tribune (where Pace had its first home), died in the residence/private hospital of Dr. George C. S. Choate which (ironically) today is part of the campus of Pace University in Pleasantville, New York.
In recognition of Pace's international outreach efforts during the 1960s, an elementary school in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil was inaugurated as "Escola Municipal Pace."
Joseph R. Baczko, the current dean the Lubin School of Business, is former President/COO of Blockbuster Entertainment and founder/President of Toys "R" Us International.
The National Football League football team New York Giants trained pre-season between 1975-1987 at Pace University in Pleasantville; players used to stay at North Hall, one of the residence halls.
Pace was one of the sites for National Basketball Association's New York Knicks Summer Camp in 2006
Pace University is one of the largest employers in Westchester County, New York.
Pace University was chosen to be one of the venues for the 2007 Empire State Games in the State of New York
The New York City campus is the site of a New York City Park, Drumgoole Plaza.
Pace University hosted the 2003 Democratic Presidential Candidate Debate
In 2004, Pace hosted a rally for the Kerry-Edwards campaign at the Willcox Gym in Pleasantville, as well as a speech given by John Kerry in 2003.
From July-August 2006 Pace University hosted the 2006 Debates and Town Hall Meetings: Democratic debate for governor of the State of New York, Republican debate for U.S. Senate, New York State Attorney General Town Hall Meeting, Democratic debate for Attorney General of the State of New York, U.S. Senate Town Hall Meeting, New York State Governor Town Hall Meeting
American School & University magazine's Educational Interiors Showcase named the New York State Judicial Institute, at Pace University School of Law in White Plains, an outstanding classroom project. The building is a three-story building designed for teaching seminars for judges from all over the country. American School & University magazine's Educational Interiors Showcase also named Marks Hall on the Pleasantville campus as outstanding interior renovation.
An all-University commencement ceremony for all campuses was held at Madison Square Garden from the 1960s until 1989. Previously Pace held commencements at the Waldorf=Astoria during the 1950s. Today, Radio City Music Hall is the regular home of commencement ceremonies for the New York City campus, the Westchester commencement is held at the university's Goldstein Health, Fitness and Recreation Center in Pleasantville (prior to 2003 at Westchester County Center
), while the Law School commencement is held outdoors at their campus.Further Information
Get more info on 'Pace University'.
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