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Move over microbreweries. Megan Muehlbauer, a Rutgers New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Station agent, believes she has stumbled upon the next big food trend and wants to help put New Jersey on the map. Read our release and the story in Food and Wine to find out how she is laying the groundwork to revive the state’s hard cider industry that dates back to colonial times and prospered before prohibition.

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Read our Q&A to learn what Rutgers Biomedical and Health Sciences Chancellor Brian Strom has to say about challenges facing the health care system in the U.S. and what they mean for health care in New Jersey in advance of a symposium Tuesday on the issue hosted by Rutgers and RWJBarnabas Health. 

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Nancy DiTomaso has spent her career studying the ways in which race, gender, and culture create or deny job and career opportunities. Her 2013 book, The American Non-Dilemma: Racial Inequality Without Racism, examines the ways in which inequality is reproduced – not through discrimination against minorities but through advantages afforded whites. Learn more about DiTomaso, a Distinguished Professor in the Department of Management and Global Business at Rutgers Business School-Newark and New Brunswick.

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Student food pantries across Rutgers help fill the gaps for groceries while removing the stigma around food insecurity. Learn why food pantries are important to help students facing challenging times succeed academically and how to help support them at Rutgers.

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Natasha Hemmings, the new chief executive officer for the Girl Scouts Heart of New Jersey, is working to bring scouting to parts of the state where the organization has not traditionally had a strong presence – in cities such as Newark, Elizabeth, Jersey City, and Irvington. Find out how her degree from the School of Public Affairs and Administration at Rutgers-Newark helped shape her career.

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A multimillion-dollar grant will help Rutgers University Behavioral Health Care (UBHC) provide assistance beyond traditional outpatient services to 4,000 people over the next two years. Adults with mental illness and substance abuse disorders, as well as children with serious emotional disturbances, will be offered access to high-quality, community-based services.