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Consumers Buy More Food When They Order Cold Meals and Drinks, Reports Rutgers‒Camden Researcher : Rutgers-Camden Campus News

Choosing a hot sandwich instead of a cold one may be better for your waistline, according to a study by a Rutgers University‒Camden scholar. The research suggests that people consuming the same food or beverage cold find their meal to be less satisfying, so they purchase additional items, such as potato chips and cookies, to compensate for their appetites. “It’s not exactly clear where these expectations come from,” says Maureen Morrin, the Henry Rutgers Professor of Marketing at Rutgers‒Camden. “But it is likely that people’s expectations about how full certain foods will make them feel develop over time, after repeated consumption episodes.”

Rutgers health expert to discuss battle against COVID, state of health care, population health and inequity

Dr. Richard Marlink. (File photo) Dr. Richard Marlink, the director of the Rutgers Global Health Institute, will be featured on a webinar on all things COVID-19 (including the latest Johnson & Johnson vaccine) and population health. The webinar is presented and hosted by James Barrood, a well-known figure in the New Jersey tech community. Marlink, the inaugural Henry Rutgers Professor of Global Health, came to Rutgers University in the summer of 2017 after two decades at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, where he served as the executive director of the Harvard AIDS Institute. The webinar will discuss a number of issues, including:

The Future of Monumentality: What is Monumentality?

January 27, 2021 Join Next City for the first of two virtual conversations in our series, “The Future of Monumentality,” as we examine the past, present, and future of public monuments from the unique intersection of art, design, and urbanism. The speaker series, moderated by New York Times critic Salamishah Tillet, is co-presented in partnership with the High Line. In 2020 communities around the world protested the institutional racism of police violence toward Black, Latinx, and Indigenous people the same people who have experienced disproportionately devastating health effects and economic hardship during the COVID-19 pandemic. Among the most powerful symbols engaged by these protests has been the removal and defacing of monuments, as well as their use as focal points and backdrops for rallies, speeches, performances, and collections of protest signs. And as the disturbing insurrection in Washington, D.C., has shown, white supremacists continue to wield and deface monuments

Street Signs

Print As part of its social justice public art initiative, the City of Newark collaborated with hundreds of activists, community members, and artists to make definitive statements on, literally, two of the city’s better-known streets. Halsey Street, adjacent to Rutgers University–Newark, now has a mural featuring 25-foot-tall letters painted in traffic-yellow brightness that spell ALL BLACK LIVES MATTER. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard now bears the words ABOLISH WHITE SUPREMACY. Among the artists contributing were students in the graphic design program in the Department of Arts, Culture, and Media at Rutgers–Newark. The collaboration reunited community members in a city and an art scene hard hit by the COVID-19 pandemic, and Chantal Fischzang, an assistant professor in the program, organized 40 students to work with 40 local artists to draft and outline the mural’s letterforms. The Murals for Justice Newark were designed using a typeface called Martin, named for Marti

Next City Partners with High Line To Imagine Future of Monumentality – Next City

PHILADELPHIA Next City today announces it is partnering with the High Line to present “The Future of Monumentality,” a speaker series at the unique intersection of art, design, and urbanism. This series of two panels, moderated by New York Times critic Salamishah Tillet, will be held on January 27 and 28 and are open now for registration at nextcity.org. The series engages artists, historians, government leaders, and placemakers on the subject of public monuments, examining the civic, aesthetic, and historical contexts these influential objects inhabit.  Government officials, artists, historians, and protestors have faced renewed debates on the role of monuments in public spaces, particularly as many of these statues often seen as symbols of structural racism and other inequities served as prominent backdrops to protests in cities around the world throughout the past year and earlier. Inspired by these ongoing debates, the Future of Monumentality Speaker Series asks: Who det

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