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Rutgers University

According to source – The recently expanded Summer Housing and Internship program funded by the state Department of Children and Families graduated its largest class of 40 on Thursday at Crossroads Theatre.

Since 2006, the program only was available to 10 homeless students attending the city and Piscataway campuses of Rutgers University, said Donna N. Wardell, a spokeswoman and instructor at Rutgers’ School of Social Work, which administers the program.

Wardell stated the program expanded this year to the university’s Newark and Camden campuses, together with Montclair State University.

The program is made for young adults who are aging out of the New Jersey foster care system,” Wardell said. “Children in New Jersey who are in foster care get scholarships to go to college. During the year, these youngsters live in dormitories at their respective colleges. Frequently in the summer, however, they’ve got nowhere to live , which can sometimes derail their education.”

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February 18th, 2011 Rutgers University none Comments

According to source, As couples shower each other with love this Valentine’s Day, researchers at Rutgers suggest that dopamine is at the heart of  it.

According to a trio of researchers at Rutgers University, dopamine levels in the brain are central to the feeling of love. But there are significant differences between feelings of romantic love and long-term love.

“I’ve long maintained that romantic love is an addiction — a perfectly wonderful addiction when it’s going well and a perfectly terrible addiction when it’s going poorly,” said Rutgers research professor Helen Fisher, a member of Human Evolutionary Studies in the anthropology department in New Brunswick.

Fisher and two colleagues scanned the brains of about 60 people in various stages of love; 17 people had just fallen madly in love, 15 had just been rejected in love, and 17 people in their 50s who were married an average of 21 years who said they were still in love with their partner.

The scans show those people rejected in love had activity in the part of the brain associated with addiction.

Those in short-term relationships showed activity in the brain region associated with anxiety.

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