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CELEB RATIN G

OVE R

FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 2025

50

YE A R S

O F

IN DE PE N D E N T

ST U D E NT

J O U R NA L I S M

THE INDEPENDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER AT BOSTON UNIVERSITY

YEAR LV. VOLUME B. ISSUE I

FEATURES PAGE 4

EDITORIAL PAGE 8

SPORTS PAGE 12

Freshman David Sipos runs for Brookline Town Meeting

Young people cope with the threat of climate change

Men’s basketball picks up 8th straight home win

HOLLY GUSTAVSEN | PHOTO CO-EDITOR EMMA CLEMENT | GRAPHICS EDITOR

BY CHINANUEKPELE OKOLI Contributing Writer

AND MADYLINE SWEARING Campus Co-Editor

Walking up the stairs is difficult for Boston University junior Caine Murcia. With a disability that makes half of their body go numb, they have to use an elevator to access other floors. When the sole elevator in the College of General Studies was broken for a month, Murcia struggled to go up and down the stairs.

“I’m leaning against the wall, trying not to fall and lose my balance,” they said. “It’s really hard to navigate around that when you have to send an email being like, ‘I just don’t know when I’ll be able to attend classes again.’” Murcia added inaccessibility in classroom buildings impedes their ability to learn. They are not alone in their challenges. Around one in four –– or 61 million –– Americans report living with at least one disability, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

INACCESSIBLE

Nearly 21% of college students reported having a disability in 2020, according to the Government Accountability Office. Anna Lim, Deaf Studies lecturer in Wheelock College of Education and Human Development, experiences inaccessibility daily as a Deaf person. “I’ll go to work and then sometimes, in Boston, the bus

Ibram X. Kendi leaves BU, CAR to close BY NICOLE ABRAMS Senior Writer

Ibram X. Kendi, author, activist and founder of the Boston University Center for Antiracist Research, is leaving BU after five years, and CAR will close June 30 when its charter with the University expires, according to a Jan. 30 announcement. Kendi will be joining Howard University in Washington, D.C. as the director of the newly established Howard University Institute for Advanced Study.

Current CAR staff will remain employed by BU through June 30 and receive resources and support from the University to help with their transition and job searches, according to a University statement. “We thank Dr. Kendi and the Center’s staff and affiliated faculty for their contributions in advancing scholarship, teaching, and policymaking,” the statement says. “The University wishes Dr. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

will break down and I’ll have no idea what’s happening,” Lim said through a sign language interpreter. At BU, Lim has struggled to receive dental treatment, access sporting events and attend meetings. Personally, she’s had trouble finding mental health therapy. “That uncertainty is the most challenging aspect in my personal life,” Lim said. “It’s not

just the school. It can be work and then personal life as well.” Leela Munsiff, former president of the BU Disability Collective and a College of Arts and Sciences alumni, understands that feeling of uncertainty. “We’re the last group that people think of accommodating or making spaces inclusive for,” Munsiff said. “There’s this idea CONTINUED ON PAGE 11

City of Boston launches Family Overdose Support Fund BY LAUREN ALBANO Campus Co-Editor

When Brendan Little worked as policy director for the City of Boston’s Office of Recovery Services, he often received requests from constituents to help pay for their loved ones’ funerals, but the office did not have the dedicated funds to support them. Little, who is in long-term recovery from a substance abuse disorder, dropped out of high

school and later earned his GED. He recalled mailing his college application, only to realize he couldn’t afford the $200 processing fee. “I remember just feeling really ashamed and sad and stressed,” Little said. “That $200, at that point, wasn’t just an amount of money I needed. It was my selfworth.” CONTINUED ON PAGE 3


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