Rutgers Scentsy Warmer

$35.00

Out of stock

The Rutgers University Scentsy warmer is perfect for students, alumni and fans! You can display the Rutgers Scentsy Warmer in a prominent place to show your school pride, while at the same time maintaining a welcoming smell in your home, dorm or workplace. Rutgers University is a school that is over two hundred forty-five years old and deserves to be commemorated with a product that can last equally as long.

Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, was established on November 10, 1766 and was originally chartered as Queens College. It is the only university in the United States that is both a colonial college (founded before the American Revolution) and a land-grant public research facility. It is the largest state university in the state of New Jersey. The university has three main campuses in New Jersey; New Brunswick, Camden, and Newark. Scarlet is the official school color and the school nickname is Old Queen’s. The Rutgers Scentsy warmer features the school color of a scarlet for the base and has a black top. The name of the school is centered in the middle. Scentsy is proud to have this licensed Scentsy warmer as part of our Campus Collection.

The classy Rutgers Scentsy warmer features the school color of a scarlet for the base and has a black top. The name of the school is centered in the middle. Scentsy is proud to have this licensed Scentsy warmer as part of our Campus Collection. The Rutgers University’s sports teams are members of the Big East Conference. The main campus, the New Brunswick campus, competes in Division-1 of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) while the Camden and Newark campuses in Division-III. The university has twenty-two (22) varsity teams. The athletics teams for the main campus in New Brunswick are called the Scarlet Knights. The Newark teams are called the Scarlet Raiders and the Camden teams, the Scarlet Raptors. The Scarlet Knights women’s basketball team has an enviable track record. Selman Abraham Waksman was a former biochemist and microbiologist at Rutgers. His research earned him a Nobel Prize in medicine in 1952. He is credited for the discovery of twenty-two (22) antibiotics including Streptomycin and Neomycin. Streptomycin has proven to be very effective in fighting tuberculosis.