David Rebovich the Political \”Voice of Reason\”

source http://www.thnt.com
Home News Tribune Online 10/18/07

In the purse she brought to her son\’s funeral, Gloria Rebovich carried a letter Rutgers professor W. Carey McWilliams wrote on July 18, 1977. It is the type of letter a proud mom might put on the fridge.



\”David Rebovich has easily been the most outstanding graduate student I have taught during my years at Rutgers. Rebovich has an exceptional mind; his intelligence is subtle, even mercurial . . . He is a person of rare qualities and character, who can make a major contribution to political science,\” McWilliams wrote.

\”That was 30 years ago,\” said his mother, following the Funeral Liturgy at St. Nicholas Byzantine Church in Perth Amboy. \”They\’re saying the same thing today.\”

Though now it can be said of Rebovich he did make a major contribution to political science.

Rebovich, who graduated from Perth Amboy High School in 1967, died Friday at the age of 58, suffering a massive heart attack while teaching a class at Rider University where he was managing director of the New Jersey Institute of Politics.

For those of us covering New Jersey politics he was our go-to guy. A search on his name in The New York Times archives comes up with 277 entries.

\”When I called it was always, \”Brian, what can I do for you?\’ \” said Brian Thompson, the New Jersey reporter for WNBC-TV.

It was the same for the rest of us. \”Rick, what can I do for you?\”

\”He was the voice of reason in a very unreasonable climate,\” said Woodbridge Mayor John McCormac, who attended the funeral service Wednesday at the Costello-Greiner Funeral Home in Woodbridge.

When McCormac was state treasurer in Trenton he understood it would be wise to run ideas past Rebovich. \”If he supported something you did, you had it made. If he didn\’t, you probably shouldn\’t do it,\” McCormac said.

Lilo Stainton got to know Rebovich when she was a reporter in the Trenton bureau of Gannett New Jersey. She later switched sides and became press secretary for Gov. Jon Corzine, who attended Wednesday\’s funeral service.

\”Dave was one of the first persons I reached out to when I came over (to the executive branch),\” Stainton said.

\”He understood he could be of service,\” she said. \”He loved the game of politics and he had fun with it. He understood that nobody was perfect and he loved to tweak the imperfect. I don\’t know how you can replace him. No one else in New Jersey had his skills.\”

Thompson recalled how Rebovich knew how to answer questions from reporters in the print media, who could write in long sentences. \”He knew how to speak to us in sound bites,\” Thompson said of those in television.

\”He was a teacher, even outside the classroom,\” said Thompson.

Rebovich\’s daughter Melissa attends Rider University, and some students asked her if there was anything they could do to help. There was. Six Rider students were chosen to be his pall bearers.

To Charles Burton of Edison, a senior at Rider, it was an honor. As a student at John P. Stevens High School Burton gained an interest in politics, and from reading the papers, he recalled, \”I always saw this name David Rebovich.\”

Burton, who explained that his father died when he was young, said Rebovich would become a mentor, a father figure and a favorite professor, who could give him the skinny on such politicians as Edison mayor Jun Choi and former Middlesex County Democrat Party boss John Lynch.

Another pall bearer, Nicholas Ballasy of Warrington, Pa., explained how Rebovich helped him produce \”On The Issues,\” a television program produced at the university. \”What you loved most was to sit down with him, kick back and relax and talk politics,\” said Ballasy, who took three courses with Rebovich, who peppered his lectures with humor.

I had the opportunity to experience that humor, occasionally working with him in the studio of Jersey 101.5 on Election Night, most memorably in 2000 when we left the studio wondering what\’s up with Florida?

Among those who knew Rebovich the longest is Georgeann Dillman, who graduated one year after Rebovich at Perth Amboy High School. While Rebovich played baseball and basketball in high school, \”His studies always came first. His goal in life was to be a professor.\”

Dillman explained how he loved history and was particularly fond of history teacher Elsie Perlin. \”She saw great things in him,\” Dillman said.

Corzine, who would occasionally be chastised by Rebovich in print, said of Rebovich, \”He was a gentleman.\”

Clearly Rutgers\’ W. Carey McWilliams was on to something 30 years ago.

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Men\’s College Tennis:Rider University 7, Wagner College 0

October 18, 2007 –


STATEN ISLAND, N.Y.—The Broncs swept the Seahawks in a non-conference match Thursday afternoon. \”Everyone played well,\” said head coach Ed Torres. \”We’ve played a tough fall schedule so it was nice to get the win today. It was a morale booster.\”

For Rider (3-6), junior Casey Jedlinski (Manalapan) won at first singles 6-2, 6-3 and teamed up with freshman Josh Rultenberg (Lafayette Hill, Pa./Plymouth-Whitemarsh) to win at first doubles 8-3. Rultenberg won at second singles in three sets 6-4, 3-6, 6-3.

\”Josh played a steady Wagner player and everything that Josh sent over got returned,\” said Torres. \”He hung in there and had to play overly aggressive to end the points. Josh has very good night vision because it was pretty dark when his match ended.\”

\”Casey and I finally put the pieces together on the doubles side,\” said Rultenberg. \”I give Casey more of the credit, he played better than I did and picked me up. Overall it was a team effort to get the win today.\”

\”Despite the fact that I was playing in darkness for the third set of the singles, I was able to keep putting the pressure on him and I finally wore him down,\” Rultenberg added. \”Knowing that we clinched the match, I was able to play more relaxed knowing the match didn’t come down to me.\”

Sophomore Will Haight (Turnersville, N.J./Washington Township) won his third singles match 6-2, 6-1 with fellow sophomore Marc Ashed (Vineland) posting a 6-3, 6-1 win at fourth singles. Haight and Ashed teamed up for an 8-1 win at second doubles.

Bronc freshman Chris Esposito (Ocean Grove, N.J./Neptune) (6-0, 6-1) and freshman Robert Olsen (Marlton, N.J./Cherokee) (6-4, 6-1) also posted wins at fifth and sixth singles. Esposito and Tom Becker (Cinnaminson/Holy Cross) won 8-1 at third doubles.

\”Chris is an excellent doubles player,\” said Torres. \”As we enter the conference matches going into the spring, he is going to see more action on the doubles side. He is a good volleyer.\”

\”We did all right,\” said Esposito. \”My partner Tom [Becker] and I dominated the match and I used that momentum to carry through the singles match. It was basically serve, come to the net and put it away. It was pretty much serve and volley.\”

Rider defeated the Seahawks 6-1 last fall and 7-0 in the Spring of 2006.

\”Within the past few matches, we’ve battled,\” Torres added. \”That isn’t evident in the final team result but we have been playing better as the fall has gone on.\”

The Broncs host Saint Francis-Pa. on Saturday in a non-conference match.

-RU-

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Rider U Student Charged with death of fellow student

by South Jersey News Online http://www.nj.com

Thursday October 18, 2007, 1:53 PM

TRENTON, N.J. (AP) — A student at Rider University\’s Westminster Choir College has been charged over a fellow student\’s death, prosecutors said Thursday.

According to the Mercer County Prosecutor\’s Office, 19-year-old Kieran Hunt of Piscataway sold heroin to freshman Justin Warfield and shot it up with him in the Princeton music school\’s parking lot on Tuesday evening.

Prosecutors said Warfield, an 18-year-old from Maryland, had to be taken by ambulance early Wednesday to University Hospital in Princeton, where he was pronounced dead.

Hunt was charged on Wednesday evening with being liable for Warfield\’s drug death, as well as selling him the heroin, and was freed the same evening on $100,000 bail, prosecutors said.

Warfield\’s death comes seven months after another Rider freshman, Gary DeVercelly Jr., died after drinking at a fraternity party on the school\’s main campus in Lawrenceville.

More Rider University more Crime

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Looking for A Good Home

I need a favor!!

My neighbor has a puppy he\’s giving away (FREE!).

It\’s a Dachshund, it\’s house broken, and it\’s great with kids.

He\’s giving it away because his wife says the dog \’stares\’ at her when she is undressing
,

and that gives her the \’Heebie Jeebies\’. I think she is just weird !

If you\’re interested, or know someone who is, let me know.

Here\’s a picture of the dog. …………………………

 

 

 

 

 

submitted by Jodi
 

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