VOLUME 23 #2

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Dedicating “the new Rodney”

the new Rodney dining hall
Photo by Doug Baker

OUR UD | UD’s new Caesar Rodney Complex on Academy Street, part of a larger plan to bring first-year students together on the east side of campus, was formally dedicated during ceremonies earlier this fall.

The festive event featured University administrators, students, representatives of companies involved in the project, members of spirit teams and the UD Marching Band.

Acting President Nancy Targett hailed the new Caesar Rodney Complex, which includes housing and a state-of-the-art dining facility, as a milestone in the history of the Newark campus.

UD has been working to build “class cohesion” by providing a neighborhood for first-year students, who previously were scattered across campus.

Near the new Caesar Rodney Complex, the University has opened the Louis Redding and Eliphalet Gilbert residence halls, renovated the Harrington Complex and “spruced up the Perkins Student Center as a hub of social activity,” Targett said.

On top of that, plans call for another new residence hall just south of the new complex on Academy Street.

John Cochran, chairman of the University's Board of Trustees, said the naming of the new complex was an easy choice, both because of Delaware history and UD traditions.

Cochran added that Caesar Rodney’s name “has long been a part of UD,” with students who lived in the old Rodney Complex boasting of “West Side pride.”

“This complex is just the latest example of our belief that a great university needs great facilities,” Cochran said. “It reflects the Board’s commitment to keeping our campus beautiful and functional. This is critical to the University’s strategic goals for the future.”

Dawn Thompson, vice president for student life, said the new complex is designed to promote success by helping students gain a sense of comfort and safety at a “place where they feel welcomed.”

“The Caesar Rodney residence and dining hall has been strategically designed to offer every opportunity for our students to engage with one another—and to deepen their engagement in the social fabric of the community they now call home,” Thompson said.

“UD welcomes the first cohort of Caesar Rodney students and looks forward to the great traditions they will establish as this new community takes hold as a fabulous new feature of our campus,” she said. “This facility will serve generations of students, and we know that it is starting off in great hands with the Class of 2019.”

The ceremony was capped with a ribbon cutting and followed by tours of the complex. The dining hall—The Rodney Dining Fresh Food Company, which offers a variety of freshly prepared and made-to-order meals from several cooking stations—is open to the public.

 

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