February 11, 2022

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The Huntington News February 11, 2022

The independent student newspaper of the Northeastern community

@HuntNewsNU

BLM CO-FOUNDER DISCUSSES ABOLITION, ACTIVISM By Katie Mogg News Staff As a part of the Central Library Author Talk Series, the Boston Public Library partnered with Trident Booksellers & Cafe Jan. 31 to host a virtual discussion with Patrisse Cullors, activist, author and co-founder of the Black Lives Matter, or BLM, movement. The event was moderated by L’Merchie Frazier, director of education and interpretation at the Museum of African American History, and focused on Cullors’ latest publication “An Abolitionist’s Handbook: 12 Steps to Change Yourself and the World.” When hearing the word “abolition,”

Frazier acknowledged that most people think of the 18th or 19th century when the United States confronted the moral implications of transatlantic slave trade and chattel slavery. But Cullors said she wants her readers to re-imagine the meaning of abolition and incorporate the idea into their daily lives. “Abolition is really also about how we treat each other. It’s about how we take care of each other,” Cullors said. “My hope and my prayers is that abolition can be a solve and a balm for many of us as we try to chart a new world.” Frazier explained that Cullors’ vision of abolition is not about the past but working toward a better future.

“You have brought to us, just in your definition [of abolition], this idea of change, a change toward a future that is not bound by the practices that we have had here before, nor a narrative that’s been here before,” Frazier said. Although chattel slavery was abolished with the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, Cullors explained that slavery still survives in today’s society through the incarceration system. Cullors said she hopes that her book can inspire people to lobby against the current criminal justice system in favor of a new structure that prioritizes compassion and care. Today’s carceral system, which HANDBOOK, on Page 4

Photo by Katie Mogg Trident Booksellers & Cafe’s Black History Month book section is on display throughout the month of February.

Q&A: Henderson on endemic plans By Avery Bleichfeld and Marta Hill | News Staff Ken Henderson, Northeastern’s chancellor and senior vice president for learning, spoke with The News in a 30-minute virtual conversation Jan. 26 about the closure of wellness housing, the university’s endemic approach to COVID-19 and its goals moving forward. Below is a transcript of the full conversation, which has been edited for length and clarity.

Photo courtesy Jeopardy Productions, Inc. NU student Liz Feltner (right) stands with “Jeopardy!” host Mayim Bialik (left). Feltner will compete in the “Jeopardy! National College Championship starting this week.

NU student on ‘Jeopardy!’ college championship By Jessica Xing News Staff Northeastern student Liz Feltner will fulfill her lifelong dream of competing in the “Jeopardy! National College Championship” starting Feb. 11. Feltner, a fifth-year political science and business administration combined major, will be one of 36 undergraduate students from across the United States competing for the grand prize in this year’s championship. Feltner’s journey included a threepart audition process, many weeks spent preparing for the competition

and the challenge of having to wait to tell most of her friends about the show. While Feltner has auditioned for both the regular “Jeopardy!” game and the “Jeopardy! National College Championship” multiple times in the past, she never got past the initial online quiz until her most recent attempt. However, Feltner has been a huge fan of the show and trivia for years. “I used to watch it at home with my family every single night while we ate dinner,” she said. “I love trivia, I’ve always been kind of a trivia hound. … So I was like, ‘I have to. I have to be on it.’”

Feltner’s audition process started in November 2020, when she took the online test for the “Jeopardy! National College Championship.” After passing the test — ­ the criteria for which are not — Feltner was invited to join a Zoom call in December 2020. During this second phase, she and nine others in the Zoom took another online test with the producers instructing them to keep their microphones and cameras on in order to prevent cheating. In January 2021, Feltner was invited to a formal Zoom audition where she was joined by eight other students. TRIVIA, on Page 3

The Huntington News: Northeastern is moving toward treating COVID-19 as an endemic instead of a pandemic. How was that decision made? What led up to Northeastern making that switch this semester? Chancellor Ken Henderson: What has become very clear during the pandemic, and in the last six months especially, is that COVID-19 is unfortunately going to be with us for the foreseeable future. Therefore, that means that in one form or another, the virus is going to be circulating within the world’s population for at least a period of time, but probably for quite an extended period of time. And that then means that we are unlikely to actually rid the planet of COVID-19. And therefore it moves into an endemic phase — it’s a virus that we have to deal with on an ongoing basis, likely in a seasonal manner in similar ways that we actually deal with the cold and the flu, other respiratory illnesses. HN: Would you say that Northeastern is currently treating COVID-19 as an endemic or it’s moving toward treating COVID-19 as an endemic? Henderson: We can get into the

pedantic sort of nomenclature here, but the way that we’re dealing with it is we’re learning to live with it in a much more normalized fashion. I would put it [that way] rather than worrying too much about the words that surround that because you can use pandemic and endemic in terms of the current scale of the virus, like how much of it there is around. Rather than [worrying about nomenclature], it’s more talking about, how do we actually deal with the virus in our current circumstance and make sure that we are managing it appropriately. HN: In an email to students Jan. 7, you announced the closure of wellness housing for students who test positive this semester. Students have expressed concerns about living with roommates who have tested positive for COVID-19; how would you address students’ concerns? Henderson: The concerns are completely understandable. And really what we’re looking at — and this is not just [on] an individual level, but on the public health scale level — is a mind shift into the place where there will be a risk of infection, but the risk of severe COVID-19, on Page 3

LIFESTYLE

CITY

MULTIMEDIA

Learn about the studentorganized Black Music Matters Festival.

Read about the webinar at which George Floyd’s brother recently spoke.

Check out our new podcast reviewing the top stories.

Bren Joy and redveil at AfterHours

Philonise Floyd memorializes his brother

Photo by Karissa Korman

PAGE 8 redveil performs at AfterHours.

Hot Off the Press: a recap podcast

Photo courtesy Talia Lissauer

PAGE 5 A 2020 Minnesota protest.


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