The Daily Targum 2014-09-30

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Serving the Rutgers community since 1869. Independent since 1980.

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY—NEW BRUNSWICK

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 2014

ONLINE AT DAILYTARGUM.COM

Rutgers endows chair for icon Gloria Steinem LIN LAN CORRESPONDENT

The New York Times, a newspaper with the second-largest circulation in the United States, also has the largest gap in gender representation. Out of the 3,556 bylines it printed last year, 30 percent belonged to women, according to the Women’s Media Center. Journals, newspapers and blogs pride themselves on being public watchdogs who keep powerful institutions in check, but feminist icon Gloria Steinem has spent her career attempting to hold the media accountable for their actions. In honor of Steinem’s lifelong dedication to pushing feminist values through her journalism and activist work, Rutgers announced its support yesterday for the Gloria Steinem Endowed Chair, a position that will fund teaching and research for an individual who exemplifies Steinem’s values of equal representation in the media.

The creation of the chair involved multidisciplinary collaboration among the School of Communication and Information, the Department of Women’s and Gender Studies and the Institute for Women’s Leadership. The chair will be selected from a diverse array of fields in communication, media and women’s and gender studies. He or she will teach at least one undergraduate course per semester. The position is not restricted to female faculty, according to an article in The New York Times. Steinem, a celebrated figure and feminist spokesperson, began her career when she co-founded Ms. Magazine, a publication intended to push feminist issues into the mainstream media in the 1970s. Steinem exemplifies someone who holds the media accountable for representing all people, especially SEE CHAIR ON PAGE 4

GRAPHIC BY MURTUZA HUSSAIN / STAFF DESIGNER

Documents provide analysis of Rutgers’ sticker, average net price ERIN PETENKO ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR

U. urges students to take sexual assault survey JILLIAN PASTOR STAFF WRITER

White House’s United States Department of Justice recently asked Rutgers’ Center on Violence Against Women and Children to issue a climate survey regarding cases of sexual assaults that occur on college campuses. The Department of Justice task force has put together a survey that aims to show how common campus assault is, and how students perceive sexual violence.

The survey is part of the iSPEAK Project on campus. Sarah McMahon, the acting co-director of VAWC, is currently leading the survey. “We named it iSPEAK because it gives students a voice that they may not have had before,” said McMahon, an assistant professor in the School of Social Work. VAWC is a part of the Rutgers School of Social Work. Unlike any other office in the country, the

At Records Hall on the College Avenue campus, students wait in line at the Office of Student Accounting looking to talk to the Office of Financial Aid. Time and again, the employees tell students to leave the building and go around the corner to another entrance.

Luis Fernandez, academic affairs chair for the Rutgers University Student Assembly, sees this as a sign of the confusion and bureaucracy behind the Rutgers tuition system. Fernandez hails from New Brunswick and is the son of a single mother from Puerto Rico. “It’s a question of balancing the school being so big and making it inti-

mate for students,” he said. The question can be important to students who need to rely on lowering tuition through aid and loans, especially when sticker prices mean different things at different institutions. According to The College Board, the sticker price for the average fourSEE PRICE ON PAGE 6

SEE SURVEY ON PAGE 4

Healthy dining options are available at Rutgers dining halls. The Rutgers University Healthy Dining Team offers students advice on nutritious food options. TIAN LI / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER / SEPTEMBER 2013

Team gives advice on responsible eating JILLIAN PASTOR STAFF WRITER

The White House task force reports an estimated one in five women are sexually assaulted in college. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY MICHELLE KLEJMONT / PHOTO EDITOR

Eating healthy is difficult in college. With endless buffets of food and double swipe take-out options, students sometimes lose sight of a healthy diet. The Rutgers University Healthy Dining Team, a combined program between Rutgers University Dining Services and the Department of Nutritional Sciences, aims to combat the tendency to slump into the

vortex of ramen and soda. RUHDT educates students about healthy eating and living on campus. The team is composed of eight members. Besides newsletters, booths and events, the team also participates in research through surveys at the booths. Jesse Tannehill, a member of the RUHDT, said the annual research is geared toward the college-aged population. Tannehill, a School of Environmental and Biological Sciences

senior, said many of RUHDT’s findings have been selected for presentation and publication. “My favorite part is working with other [RUHDT] members to help inform students with what’s going on in the nutrition world,” he said. “We work hard to educate fellow students and help them make healthy dining choices.” Through weekly newsletters, RUHDT informs students about

­­VOLUME 146, ISSUE 72 • UNIVERSITY ... 3 • TECH TUESDAY ... 7 • OPINIONS ... 8 • DIVERSIONS ... 10 • CLASSIFIEDS ... 12 • SPORTS ... BACK

SEE TEAM ON PAGE 5


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