The Daily Targum 2013-01-29

Page 1

GAINING WEIGHT

CRIME AND EMPLOYMENT RUSA focuses on changing the

Junior Vincent Dellefave moved up a weight class this season from 125 pounds to 133 pounds, a change that has benifited both him and the Rutgers wrestling team on the mat. SPORTS, BACK

existing system of crime prevention and reporting as well as starting a board to advocate for the University’s student workers. UNIVERSITY, PAGE 3

ZERO TOLERANCE Tuesday columnist Mike Denis talks torture and ‘Zero Dark Thirty’ in his debut column. OPINIONS, PAGE 8

Serving the Rutgers community since 1869. Independent since 1980.

WEATHER Mostly Cloudy High: 46 Nighttime Low: 40

TUESDAY, JANUAR Y 29, 2013

RUTGERS UNIVERSITY—NEW BRUNSWICK

ONLINE AT DAILYTARGUM.COM

NJPIRG chapter to focus on global warming campaign Agenda also includes campaigns against corporations, hunger, homelessness BY ALEX MEIER CORRESPONDENT

The University’s chapter of the New Jersey Public Interest Research Group will promote three campaigns around campus this year that address political, social and environmental issues affecting people at a university, state and national level. One of the campaigns, End Citizens United, collected 350 petitions last semester opposing corporate spending in politics and hosted a panel discussion with four University professors, said Justin Habler, the campaign’s lead coordinator. Another campaign, Hunger and Homelessness, responded to the devastation of Superstorm Sandy by organizing ‘Dodgeball Knight,’ a Sandy relief

CIVIL PROGRESS Larry Greene, a history professor at Seton Hall University, discusses the negative role New Jersey played in the issue of slavery at the New Jersey African Americans and the Civil War lecture at Alexander Library. He spoke yesterday about Abraham Lincoln’s opinion on slavery as Lincoln began to conceive that slavery was coming to an end, and the possibility that blacks could be part of the nation. SMARANDA TOLOSANO

Updated wireless service enables faster Internet Several buildings are equipped with better RUWireless, RUWireless_Secure technology BY JUSTINA OTERO CORRESPONDENT

The University recently upgraded the technology that is used to run RUWireless and RUWireless_Secure in various buildings on campus in order to ensure effective operation. Within the past two months, the University updated the Internet system in Hickman Hall and Loree Hall on Douglass campus, Beck Hall and Kilmer Library on Livingston campus, the Library of Science and Medicine on Busch campus and Alexander Library on the College Avenue campus, said Brian Luper, associate director of Central Systems and Services. He said issues with connectivity in the past could be attributed to the need

for the update, especially in buildings such as Hickman Hall, which was running the oldest version of hardware the University has. “We expect that RUWireless will always need to adapt and improve as more devices rely on wireless technology. Our goal is to try to keep ahead of the demand and make the procedure to connect to RUWireless and RUWireless_Secure as simple as possible,” he said. Chris Bradshaw, a School of Arts and Sciences junior, said upgrades will improve students’ educational experience and should be considered important and necessary. “Progression is always [welcome],” he said. “I think out-of-date hardware not SEE

INTERNET ON PAGE 6

dodgeball tournament that raised almost $2,000 for the cause, said Marta Adamu, co-lead coordinator of the campaign. The Stop Global Warming Campaign is new to the University’s PIRG chapter, but will serve as its lead campaign, said Christi Capazzo, event coordinator for the campaign. STOP GLOBAL WARMING CAMPAIGN As officials in Washington, D.C. continue to dispute an array of environmental issues, NJPIRG’s newest campaign, Stop Global Warming, will be SEE

CAMPAIGN ON PAGE 5

University Chase agreement broke deal with credit union BY MATT MATILSKY CONTRIBUTING WRITER

At the beginning of the fall 2012 semester, the University began exclusively hosting six Chase Bank ATMs on the University’s New Brunswick campus, but violated a verbal agreement with the Rutgers Federal Credit Union in the process. The University had originally promised the credit union two ATMs on the College Avenue and Busch campuses, said Elizabeth O’ConnellGanges, executive director of Student Life. The

school had to rescind their offer upon discovering that the RFCU is not affiliated with the school, she said. The credit union, a separate entity from the school, must go through the same process as Chase did to rent ATM space, O’ConnellGanges said. The University eventually gave the spots originally reser ved for the RFCU to Chase, which gives the University $43,200 annually in rent from Chase, according to the contract. SEE

AGREEMENT ON PAGE 7

Students can only use Chase ATMs following a University contract with the bank that went into effect last September. Colin Gross, a University graduate student, uses the ATM at the Rutgers Student Center on the College Avenue campus. Marie Holowka, CEO of the Rutgers Federal Credit Union, said the University broke a verbal agreement with the union because it promised them two ATMs, but later opted to provide Chase both of them. SHIRLEY YU

TODAY, TUESDAY, JAN. 29 IS THE FINAL DAY TO DROP CLASSES WITHOUT A “W” THE STUDENT HOUSING LOTTERY APPLICATION FOR THE 2013-2014 YEAR CLOSES TONIGHT, JAN. 29, AT 11:59 P.M. VOLUME 144, ISSUE 67 • UNIVERSITY ... 3 • OPINIONS ... 8 • DIVERSIONS ... 10 • CLASSIFIEDS ... 12 • SPOR TS ... BACK


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.