The Daily Targum 2014-10-20

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WEATHER Mostly Sunny High: 61 Low: 50

Serving the Rutgers community since 1869. Independent since 1980.

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY—NEW BRUNSWICK

MONDAY, OCTOBER 20, 2014

ONLINE AT DAILYTARGUM.COM

U. club shares toils, joys of raising puppies BY CARLEY ENS CORRESPONDENT

Abbey Hartman cried for two days after being separated from her puppy Nestle. These tears, however, turned into tears of joy soon when she reminded herself that Nestle would help a visually impaired person take control of his or her life. “I can imagine how hard it will be with Nestle,” Hartman said. “But there is nothing but pride in my heart.” Hartman, a Rutgers Business School junior, is the treasurer of the Rutgers University Seeing Eye Puppy Raising Club. The organization trains puppies to be Seeing Eye dogs for the visually and physically impaired. Wes Darcy, a senior in the School of Environmental and Biological Sciences, joined the club when he was a first-year student. As an animal science major and avid dog lover, Darcy said what brought him to the club was the puppies. He said the biggest perk is knowing that he is doing something great for someone else. “I always tell myself I am essentially giving someone else the gift of sight,” Darcy said. The RU-SEPRC is Rutgers’s own student-run division of the national nonprofit organization, The Seeing Eye, Inc. Not everyone in the club gets the opportunity to raise a puppy, Hartman said.

A student must attend at least three club meetings and pass a written assessment before they are allowed to be a sitter. Darcy said he was a sitter for three years before he was given the responsibility of raising a puppy, Chase, this February. Makenzie Bordenabe, president of RU-SEPRC, said the raisers are the “mommies and daddies” of the puppies. These members are in charge of daily care, vet visits and teaching commands. Bordenabe, a School of Environmental and Biological Science senior, said the club also makes sure the dogs are properly exposed to different places. The sitters, or the “aunts and uncles,” take care of the puppies at times when the raisers cannot due to exams or other engagements, Bordenabe said. Raisers can house their dogs in either of f-campus homes or in the Newell and Starkey apar tments on Cook campus, Har tman said. Dogs that are Seeing Eye puppies have identification cards and wear bandanas and vests. The puppies can be brought all over campus, in ever y Rutgers building, except for residence halls, science labs and dining halls. They are even allowed on the buses, Bordenabe said. “Since we have access to all the

Vive measures its users’ intoxication levels and keeps them connected to friends wearing the bracelet via social media. PHOTO ILLUSTRATION BY DENNIS ZURAW / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

New smart bracelet alerts friends about dangerous intoxication levels SABRINA SZTEINBAUM ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR

A new bracelet called Vive is meant to target clubs and festivals in the same way 3-D glasses are used at movie theatres, said Dan Doan, the technical director and interaction designer of Vive. “Everyone in attendance would wear a Vive band,” Doan said via email. “This way, everyone can practice self-awareness and look

out for the friends in their designated group.” Six months ago, a three-minute video about Vive was released on the video-sharing website Vimeo and has recently gained popularity. The video shows three girls drinking alcohol at a club who use Vive to stay connected to each other via social media throughout the night. The wearable device also gets one of the girls out of a dangerous situation in which she ends up alone with a man.

Vive is meant to measure the wearer’s intoxication and dehydration levels, vibrating ever y so often to make sure the user is conscious and in control, according to the video. Once the user puts on the bracelet and activates it upon walking into a party or club, it connects them to other Vive wearers via BlueTooth. A squeeze of the band means SEE BRACELET ON PAGE 4

SEE PUPPIES ON PAGE 4

Professor enters NJ Inventors Hall of Fame KATIE PARK CORRESPONDENT

Richard Riman, distinguished professor in the Depar tment of Materials Science and Engineering, was inducted into the New Jersey Inventors Hall of Fame at its annual awards dinner last Thursday. NJIHoF, established in 1987, celebrates individuals and organizations that have furthered New Jersey’s reputation as the “invention state.” The state is ranked four th nationally in the number of United States patents issued, according to the NJIHoF website. Riman was awarded the “Inventor of the Year” award for his work “related to systems and methods for carbon capture and sequestration utilizing novel concrete products,” according to the New Jersey Technology Council’s website. Riman earned his Bachelor of Science degree in ceramic engineering from Rutgers and went

on to earn his Ph.D. in materials science and engineering with a minor in musical per formance from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. He has been a par t of the University faculty for nearly 28 years, teaching both undergraduate and graduate courses. His current research is fixated on green ceramic manufacturing methods being the solution to technological and environmental problems, according to his Rutgers bio. Riman is the holder of 10 patents, founder of Solidia Technologies Inc., a global technologies solutions provider for construction material industries, as well as the director of the Riman Research Group at Rutgers. Former NJIHoF inductees include Lee de Forest, inventor of the Audion tube, the first transistor, Rutgers’ Selman Waksman and Huber t Lechevalier, creators of antibiotic cream and Thomas Edison, the contested — but ultimately accredited — inventor of the light bulb.

Performers Wazina Zondon (left) and Terna Tilley-Gyado (right) speak about the experiences of Muslims in the LGBT community Friday at the RU Ally Week closing event in Trayes Hall. RUOXUAN YANG

RU Ally Week closes with ‘Coming Out Muslim: Radical Acts of Love’ event NATASHA TRIPATHI CONTRIBUTING WRITER

Terna Tilley-Gyado said she wants to tell other lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender Muslims that the arms of Islam are wide enough to hold them in all their different states: their love, their anger, their desire, their failing and their dying. To end RU Ally Week, Rutgers University Center for Social Jus-

tice Education and LGBT Communities sponsored “Coming Out Muslim: Radical Acts of Love,” a performance produced by Tilley-Gyado and Wazina Zondon about the experiences of Muslims in the LGBT community. Rebecca Reynolds, assistant dean in the Douglass Residential College, said she was interested in the way people balance multiple identities. “I know that for so many students, it’s so hard to balance

their cultural background [and] their religious background with their sense of identity as they move through the campus and [their] college experience,” she said. Per formers Tilley-Gyado and Zondon, both Muslim women, began the event by kneeling on their own prayer rugs to a religious chant. SEE WEEK ON PAGE 4

­­VOLUME 146, ISSUE 86 • UNIVERSITY ... 3 • SCIENCE ... 5 • ON THE WIRE ... 7 • OPINIONS ... 8 • DIVERSIONS ... 10 • CLASSIFIEDS ... 12 • SPORTS ... BACK


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