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TUESDAY FEBRUARY 22, 2011
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The Rutgers wrestling team set a school record with its 21st dual meet victory at Drexel on Sunday, bouncing back from last week’s loss to No. 10 Lehigh.
University Board of Governors violates state law
Student to show magical talent at NY performance
BY KRISTINE ROSETTE ENERIO NEWS EDITOR
PERSON OF THE WEEK BY AMY ROWE ASSOCIATE NEWS EDITOR
University student and magician Eric Wilzig studies business by day and performs illusions by night. The 19-year-old Rutgers Business School first-year student handles promotional materials and the marketing end of his traveling magic show, “Extreme Magic of Eric,” while also demonstrating a diverse mix of stage illusions. ERIC WILZIG “My high-energy personality as a performer, along with a diverse mix of neverbefore-seen-or-performed large stage illusions, daring escapes and mind-blowing stunts, makes my award-winning show a truly unique experience,” Wilzig said. The illusions and stunts he performs usually include an element of danger, he said. “The illusions I like the best are ones I consider extreme,” Wilzig said. “I actually risk my life for the audience’s entertainment.” “The Diamond-Plated Steel Box Escape … of Death” is one act Wilzig borrows from his inspiration, Harry Houdini. “I’m handcuffed and stuffed inside a small steel box, locked and strapped by volunteers, [and] I attempt to escape from [it] in full view of the entire audience,” he said. The act won Wilzig the title of “State Magic Champion” from Tannen’s Magic, he said. Wilzig said his audiences react in amazement to one trick in which he catches a paintball in his mouth signed by a random volunteer in the audience who shoots it from a paintball gun.
KEITH FREEMAN / PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR
A state court rules that the Board of Governors did not specify information at a 2008 meeting in Winants Hall on the College Avenue campus.
The University’s Board of Governors committed multiple violations to state law when they discussed public matters during a private session at a 2008 meeting concerning the athletic department, according to a Friday state appellate court ruling. Under the Open Public Meetings Act, also known as the “Sunshine Law,” decision-making public bodies are required to open their meetings to the general public except when the public interest or individual rights are jeopardized. But in a unanimous three-panel decision, the court determined that the current sequence of the board’s meetings undermined the law’s purpose of enabling citizens to hold governing bodies accountable for their decisions. “The board’s regular practice of scheduling an open session, followed by a closed session of indeterminate duration, followed by another open session has the capacity to deter the very public participation the act is designed to promote,” according to the case brief. The University is reviewing the decision’s details and considering all options, said Greg Trevor,
SEE BOARD ON PAGE 4
LOCAL MAN ARRESTED FOR AGGRAVATED ASSAULT A Highland Park resident was arrested for stabbing two University students Saturday morning soon after midnight. The Rutgers University Police Depar tment ar rested suspect Tyrell Brown, 21, for allegedly stabbing two males between 18 and 24 College Ave. during what of ficials determined an alterca-
tion, New Br unswick Police Depar tment Lt. J.T. Miller said. The students sustained non life-threatening injuries, but one male required surger y at St. Peter’s University Hospital, Miller said. Brown, who is not af filiated with the University, was charged
with two counts of aggravated assault, one count of unlawful possession of a weapon and one count of possession of marijuana. He is being held on $35,000 bail at the Middlesex County Adult Correction Center. — Mary Diduch
SEE TALENT ON PAGE 5
Business team places first, advances to world level BY ANKITA PANDA METRO EDITOR
In the annual nationwide New York Society of Security Analysts (NYSSA) Global Investment Challenge, the Rutgers Business School outper formed 15 other business schools in the tri-state area to land first place and the oppor tunity to compete this April for the title of world champion in Omaha, Neb. The challenge, which began the last week of November, ended with first place last Friday for the team, which included Russell Miller, a School of Arts and Sciences senior, Dimitry Malinsky, a graduate student at Rutgers-Newark, Anil Bhatia, a graduate student at Rutgers-Newark, Joshua Cohen, a Rutgers Business School-New Brunswick junior and Andre Mendoza, a Rutgers-Newark senior. The Rutgers Business School received $5,000 for its win and has
AN EVENING WITH JACK
UNIVERSITY
the opportunity to advance to the competition’s world level, said John Longo, the team’s faculty adviser. “I was very happy for the students due to all the hard work they put in. The team was able to bring great pride to Rutgers Business School,” said Longo, clinical associate professor of finance and economics. Schools that participated in the challenge wrote an anonymous report analyzing New Jersey Resources, an energy ser vices firm picked by NYSSA, Longo said. Following all submissions, a select NYSSA group graded the written stock reports and the four highest scorers were invited to compete in the regional finals. The four schools that participated in the regional finals were the University, Pace University, Fordham University and Seton Hall University, he said. Each school had to make a JEFFREY LAZARO / SENIOR STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER presentation in front of a panel of Wall Department of Transportation Services Director Jack Molenaar sits with students Street professionals. in McCormick Hall on Busch campus during a Residence Hall Association to listen
SEE TEAM ON PAGE 4
INDEX
and address student concerns. For the full story, see PAGE 6.
“The School of Arts and Sciences Artists Collective” showcases a new exhibition of their work.
OPINIONS Donald Rumsfeld has spoken out against what he calls President Obama’s habit of apologizing for America.
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