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COVID-19 Precautions in Effect for Move-in 2021
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Fireworks, Not Gunshots; Porch-Jumper: Melrose Police Log Patch 5 hrs ago © Mike Carraggi/Patch
MELROSE, MA The following are excerpts from the Melrose police log for the week of March 29.
Monday, March 29
9:17 a.m. Report of a stolen bicycle outside a Main Street restaurant.
10:55 a.m. Police made a traffic stop on East Foster Street. They issued a summons to a 25-year-old Malden man on charges of speeding, failing to stop/yield and uninsured motor vehicle. The car was towed.
Tuesday, March 30
12:52 p.m. Someone on Pratt Street locked their keys in the car with a child inside.
9:42 p.m. Someone reported hearing gunshots on Penney Road. Police reported it was just fireworks.
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CARL RUSSO/staff photo. The Clean River Project crew disposed of 3,000 syringes from abandoned homeless camps in Lawrence recently.
Carl Russo
CARL RUSSO/staff photoRocky Morrison, president of Clean River Project, left, and crew member Kenneth Gingras, remove large items during a portion of the homeless camp cleanup in Lawrence.
Carl Russo
CARL RUSSO/staff photo. Kenneth Gingras, left and his brother Kevin of the Clean River Project, rake debris and collect syringes during a recent clean-up of abandoned homeless camps in Lawrence.
Carl Russo
CARL RUSSO/staff photo. Kevin Gingras of the Clean River Project is silhouetted against the sky as he rakes debris. Rocky Morrison, president of Clean River Project, and his crew removed lots of junk from abandoned homeless camps in Lawrence recently.
In the video above, BU Today
goes along with admissions ambassador Hikima Lukomwa (Sargent’22) as she gives a live virtual tour of the Charles River Campus to a group of prospective students tuning in remotely via Zoom.
This year, because of the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, campus admissions tours have had to go virtual. Instead of walking across campus trailed by a group of high schoolers and their families, BU admissions ambassadors like Hikima Lukomwa (Sargent’22) are conducting tours via iPhone, with prospective students logging on from all over the world to catch a glimpse of the Charles River Campus.
Lukomwa, who is also the Admissions Student Diversity Board community-linked coordinator, began giving campus tours as a freshman. During a normal year, she does this in person, walking backward (a necessary skill for these ambassadors) as she takes students up Bay State Road and across campus, her voice amplified so prospective students and their families can hear her answ
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