The Daily Targum 2014-09-24

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Serving the Rutgers community since 1869. Independent since 1980.

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY—NEW BRUNSWICK

WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 2014

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Friends, Rutgers faculty share stories in Kovacs’ memory SABRINA SZTEINBAUM ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR

Rutgers juniors Steven Mercadante (left) and Raymond Delpino (right) will be visiting Harvard University for the “Bipartisan Advocacy: Finding Common Ground” conference. COURTESY OF AMANDA MARZILIANO

Rutgers students head to Harvard for conference ERIN PETENKO ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR

Raymond Delpino came to Rutgers as a biochemistry major, but realized his true passion was politics during his first semester. Now the School of Arts and Sciences junior is preparing for a future career as a social studies teacher by teaching the student body the importance of voting.

Delpino and his co-worker Steven Mercadante are going to Harvard University next week for the “Bipartisan Advocacy: Finding Common Ground” conference. At the conference, the interns at the Eagleton Institute of Politics will practice their knowledge of politics and discuss their project to SEE CONFERENCE ON PAGE 6

When Jesse Runyon was a junior in high school, he went to Stop & Shop before the junior prom to buy tea lights. He used them to craft huge letters spelling out “PROM,” which he covered in glitter. The tea lights illuminated the glitter, and this is how he asked Caitlyn Kovacs to the prom. “I came up behind her and gave her a rose,” he said. “And the expression on her face … she knew she was loved.” Kovacs, the 19-year-old School of Environmental and Biological sophomore who passed away Sunday morning, was sweet, bubbly and selfless, said Runyon, 20, from South Brunswick. From Lil’ Wayne to “screamo” to the “High School Musical” soundtrack, her childhood best friend Tammy Mehman, a School of Arts and Sciences sophomore, said Kovacs was the designated DJ of their hangouts. Runyon saw Kovacs’ Facebook photos and thought she was pretty. They became friends and began dating on Aug. 17, 2011. Though they were not dating at the time of her death, Runyon said the two still loved each other. Kovacs visited

Caitlyn Kovacs, a 19-year-old Rutgers student and an animal sciences major, died Sunday morning. FACEBOOK Runyon on Saturday, and his last spoken words to her were “I love you,” before telling her to get home safely. “She was literally the best part of my life. She meant the world to me,” he said. “We would always get in little fights, but it was the unconditional love that kept us together.”

Runyon spoke of her Kovacs, an animal science major, loved animals and worked at Beg ‘n Bark, a Princeton-based pet-sitting business. Kovacs told Brenda Janner, the SEE MEMORY ON PAGE 4

Author explains public’s climate change denial DARSHAN NANDHA CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Humanity is headed downhill and needs to act now to get the climate back to normal, George Marshall said. Marshall, author of “Don’t Even Think About It: Why Our Brains are Wired to Ignore Climate,” addressed this dilemma at a lecture

and book signing held yesterday at the Cook Student Center. Marshall is the co-founder of the Climate Outreach and Information Network, a 10-year-old nonprofit organization based in Oxford, England, that deals with communication of climate change. COIN usually works with people involved in SEE DENIAL ON PAGE 5

Thirteen physicians from the Cancer Institute of New Jersey, located at 195 Little Albany St., were named among the “Top Doctors in the Garden State” for 2014. DENNIS ZURAW / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

U. physicians named NJ’s ‘Top Doctors’ LIN LAN CORRESPONDENT

An estimated 564,800 Americans will die this year from cancer — a little more than 1,500 patients a day, according to the Thomara Latimer Cancer Foundation. The disease has challenged scientists for years, not only in the painstaking searches for cures, but also in the caring of those whose

lives and communities are forever altered by a single diagnosis. The physicians at Rutgers Cancer Institute of New Jersey have labored in a multitude of ways to solve these problems, including new methods of research, programs and psychological care. Last week, 13 of these physicians were named among Inside Jersey’s “Top Doctors in the Garden State” for 2014. Each year, Inside Jersey,

a lifestyle magazine featured on nj.com, lists the “Top Doctors” in the nation and in each region. The lists are compiled through the research of Castle Connolly Medical Ltd., an expert-led team that puts together a database where patients can search for doctors based on their names, specialty and location. SEE DOCTORS ON PAGE 5

George Marshall, author of “Don’t Even Think About It: Why Our Brains are Wired to Ignore Climate Change,” spoke yesterday at Cook campus. DAPHNE ALVA / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

­­VOLUME 146, ISSUE 68 • UNIVERSITY ... 3 • FOOD & DRINK ... 7 • OPINIONS ... 8 • DIVERSIONS ... 10 • CLASSIFIEDS ... 12 • SPORTS ... BACK


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