Vanessa LoBue Named Association for Psychological Science Fellow for 2021 rutgers.edu - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from rutgers.edu Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
By TAPINTO NEW BRUNSWICK
March 9, 2021 at 7:07 PM
Kevin Egan brings decades of service to the city and a unique insight into labor relations to his new position.
Kevin Egan brings decades of service to the city and a unique insight into labor relations to his .
Credits: Rutgers University
Mohammad A. Zubair, a physician specializing in pulmonary disease and sleep disorder medicine in New Jersey for nearly 30 years, has officially joined the Board of Governors.
Mohammad A. Zubair, a physician specializing in pulmonary disease and sleep disorder medicine in .
Credits: Rutgers University
March 9, 2021 at 7:07 PM
NEW BRUNSWICK, NJ - Kevin P. Egan, a member City Council since 2011, was inducted today into the Rutgers University Board of Governors.
Rutgers to divest its $1 6 billion endowment from fossil fuels whyy.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from whyy.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Mohammad A. Zubair (left) and Kevin P. Egan join the board as public governors
Mohammad A. Zubair, a physician specializing in pulmonary disease and sleep disorder medicine in New Jersey for nearly 30 years, and Kevin P. Egan, a member of the New Brunswick City Council and St. Peter’s Hospital Foundation Board of Trustees, were inducted into the Rutgers University Board of Governors today. They join the board as public governors appointed by New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy and confirmed by the state Senate.
“Mohammed and Kevin bring valuable and diverse backgrounds and perspectives to the Board of Governors,” said board Chair Mark A. Angelson. “Mohammed has deep experience and insights into our state’s complex health care system, and Kevin brings an extensive background in local government and business. We look forward to their contributions toward moving Rutgers University forward during a challenging time.”
The Gov. Phil Murphy who struck an agreement to revamp and expand the state s politically tainted corporate tax incentive program is not the same Murphy who waged war on the program a year ago.
Back then, those entrenched in the grassroots ranks of the New Jersey Democratic Party heralded Murphy as the new, progressive Moses who would lead their flock to the promised land of reform a land where taxpayer dollars are doled out by merit, not simply to those with political clout.
But by agreeing to a complicated, 219-page agreement that was approved Monday by both houses of the Legislature after less than a week of deliberation, Murphy instead led Democrats back to the old, familiar confines of the Trenton backroom.