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A love for studying Italian, the language her grandfather grew up with, and a passion for art history sparked by an AP class in high school helped Joanna Zotti earn a coveted internship at the Peggy Guggenheim Collection starting in the fall. Read more about Zotti in the latest in our series profiling members of the Class of 2019.

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Susan N. Wilson has spent decades working to empower women and provide reliable information about sexual health. Her advocacy in the 1980s resulted in New Jersey requiring nearly 600 public school districts to offer family-life and sex education. Read how her pledge of $1.3 million will be used to train college-age women across the state to become tomorrow's political leaders and to continue her mission of promoting comprehensive sex education.   

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Civil rights leaders and prominent lawmakers from around the country came to Rutgers for the second annual Summit for Civil Rights to develop a renewed national agenda to defeat segregation, promote racial justice and provide economic equality. Read more about the two-day event, sponsored by the School of Management and Labor Relations, which drew noted activists including House Majority Whip James Clyburn.

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Programs to prevent HIV in transgender women are helping to lower the rate of new infection but better care and treatment of this vulnerable population is still needed, especially among those of lower income or people of color, according to a study led by Henry Raymond, an associate professor at Rutgers School of Public Health and a core faculty member of Rutgers Global Health Institute.

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Throughout much of Lauryn Adams’s life, people tried to convince her that she would never become a doctor. This spring, as a graduate of Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, she will prove them wrong.  Find out how she worked along the way to encourage other young women of color to pursue their dreams of a career in medicine in the latest in our series on the latest in our series profiling members of the Class of 2019.

 

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As a fine arts student at Rutgers-Newark, Vaughn Spann would collect discarded umbrellas, fabrics, and rope from thrift shops near campus, assembling the objects onto supersized canvasses. Five years later, Spann is still experimenting with materials, adding terrycloth, paper, and twine to his massive abstract paintings. But now collectors are snapping up his work, and critical acclaim of his art has appeared everywhere from The New York Times to Bloomberg. Find out how his connection to Newark continues to shape his career.

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John Barnosky became an advocate for expanding programs for patients with special needs like the one at Rutgers School of Dental Medicine after a delay in finding care for his son, who is on the autism spectrum. Read about what can be done to make a difference to address inadequate care, which can have dire consequences.

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In the wake of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., Jai Patel, a criminal justice major at Rutgers-New Brunswick, helped organize a local March for our Lives in Jersey City, and now has plans to start a Rutgers chapter of Students Demand Action in fall 2019. Find out what he has to say about preventing gun violence in New Jersey.

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Stanley Silvers Bergen Jr., the founding president of the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, which became the largest freestanding health sciences university in the country, aided in the economic recovery of Newark and boosted medical access throughout the state, died on April 24 at his home in Stonington, Maine. Read about the life of the man behind what is now Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences.

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Deaths from opioid overdoses are increasing in New Jersey especially in low-income neighborhood where the opioid reversal drug naloxone is expensive and difficult to obtain, according to Lewis Nelson, chair of the emergency medicine department at Rutgers New Jersey Medical School. Read about a new Rutgers study that found that life-saving drugs are more availble for people living in wealtheir towns, not poorer communities.