SCARLET AND BLACK U. community needs to
know about shameful parts of its school’s past SEE OPINIONS, PAGE 6
LAPTOP ORCHESTRA Rutgers Interactive Music
Ensemble intertwines music and technology
SEE INSIDE BEAT, PAGE 8
MEN’S BASKETBALL Rutgers bounced from the Big Ten Tournament with close loss to Purdue SEE SPORTS, BACK
WEATHER Rain High: 46 Low: 28
Serving the Rutgers community since 1869. Independent since 1980.
RUTGERS UNIVERSITY—NEW BRUNSWICK
MONDAY MARCH 5, 2018
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Hillary Clinton set to visit Rutgers, discuss women in politics ERICA D’COSTA ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR
Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will visit Rutgers on March 29 for a conversation hosted by the Rutgers Eagleton Institute of Politics, according to an email announcement from Chancellor Debasish Dutta on Friday. Clinton will sit down with Ruth B. Mandel, director of the institute, from 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the College Avenue Gymnasium to reflect on her extensive political career. She will visit Rutgers as the Eagleton Institute’s 2017-2018 Clifford P. Case Professor of Public Affairs. Clinton will discuss American democracy and her revolutionar y presence in the women’s political movement as a former female presidential nominee, according to the email. “Eagleton is proud to host the most important American political woman of our time,” Mandel said, according to NJ Advance Media. “As a public leader, Hillary Rodham Clinton has crossed traditional boundaries, making both history and headlines ... This visit will afford our students and the Rutgers community an opportunity
to witness a conversation with the person behind the media fog.” Clinton is one of several high-profile political leaders to visit the Rutgers community. The University hosted former Vice President Joe Biden in the fall to speak on sexual assault on college campuses. Rutgers also saw former President Barack Obama as the commencement speaker for the Class of 2016. Although the general admission to this event is free, the University will pay Clinton $25,000 to speak, according to NJ Advance Media. Tickets will be available for the Rutgers community starting March 6, and will then open to the public on March 12, according to the email. “Rutgers contributes to our nation’s conversations about politics, policy and other issues affecting society,” Dutta said, according to TAPintoNewBrunswick. “Our academic mission and innovative research and teaching create an environment in which global thought-leaders such as Secretar y Clinton can share their experiences and perspectives. We welcome her and look for ward to a fulfilling conversation with the Rutgers community.”
Hillary Clinton, former Secretary of State and 2016’s Democratic presidential nominee, will make her first appearance at Rutgers on March 29 for a conversation about American democracy and her involvement in the women’s political movement. WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
Police raid off College Avenue Police corruption costs millions in tax dollars turns up 2 imitation firearms CHRISTIAN ZAPATA NEWS EDITOR
On Saturday afternoon, police executed a court approved search warrant at a home on Sicard Street, directly behind the College Avenue Student Center, following information about possible assault weapons on the premises.
“The New Brunswick Police Depar tment, in conjunction with the Rutgers University Police Depar tment and the Middlesex County Prosecutor’s Of fice followed up on information received from individuals who attended a par ty at the house earlier in the day,” according to a press release from the New Brunswick Police
Depar tment (NBPD). The search turned up two imitation firearms — one resembled an assault rifle and the other resembled a handgun. No charges have been filed against any of the residents at this moment, according to the press release. This investigation is ongoing.
Following a court approved search warrant, local police officers entered a home on Sicard Street this Saturday and found two imitation firearms — one resembled an assault rifle and the other resembled a handgun. No charges have been filed. GOOGLE MAPS
ALEXANDRA DEMATOS CORRESPONDENT
In late 2017, 1 of 2 lawsuits filed in 2012 charging the New Brunswick Police Department (NBPD) with discrimination was settled, costing taxpayers millions of dollars. Four Black police officers filed lawsuits “claiming they were discriminated against by their corrupt bosses,” according to a report from New Brunswick Today. The lawsuits also claimed the cases represented the constant intimidation of people of color on the police force as well as issues of politics — officers donating their time and money to “seven-term Mayor James Cahill are rewarded, while those who don’t are punished,” according to the report. For Rutgers students, such issues within the small city that houses their University can be unsettling, but according to the Rutgers University Police Department (RUPD), it takes action to prevent any similar issues from happening on campus. Michael J. Rein, the deputy chief of University Police, said RUPD is 1 of 17 police departments within the state to be accredited by the Commission on Accreditation for Law
VOLUME 150, ISSUE 29 • UNIVERSITY ... 3 • OPINIONS ... 6 • INSIDE BEAT... 8 • DIVERSIONS ... 9 • SPORTS ... BACK
Enforcement Agencies and is the only department in the state simultaneously accredited by the New Jersey Law Enforcement Accreditation Commission and the International Association of Campus Law Enforcement Administrators. “What this means is that the Rutgers University Police Department holds its members (sworn police officers and non-sworn civilians) … to very high standards which govern: crime prevention and control capabilities; essential management procedures; fair and non-discriminatory personnel practices; service-deliver; interagency cooperation and coordination,” he said in an email. Training within the RUPD includes online and classroom discussions, and its members receive training on University policy 60.1.12 — “Policy Prohibiting Discrimination and Harassment,” and cultural-awareness training that focuses on these issues directly, he said. “The RUPD conducts training on ethics, has supervision in place to monitor working conditions and employees are afforded a multitude of means of reporting concerns,” he said. SEE DOLLARS ON PAGE 4