3-16-20 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 68

MONDAY, MARCH 16, 2020

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ITHACA, NEW YORK

HANNAH ROSENBERG / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

12 Pages – Free

COVID-19 Coverage From This Weekend

BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

COVID-19 Hits Tompkins County

A slope day | Students lounge on Libe Slope on Friday following the announcement that classes were canceled until April.

‘Fairly unchartered waters’

Cornell Suspends Classes For First Time in History

By JOHNATHAN STIMPSON and MEGHNA MAHARISHI

view with The Sun. With COVID-19 spreading seemingly unabated — the number of confirmed cases spiked 30 percent overJust as students booked flights and bus tickets, they night to 421 in New York State — Cornell officials said faced the latest COVID-19 pandemic shock on Friday the accelerated timeline was necessary to give students morning when President Martha E. Pollack canceled the chance to begin making travel plans. classes until April 6. “The greatest shift that I was feeling was the Uncertainty now permeates Cornell’s concern … travel, [which] is becoming campus, as students have now been told more difficult, certainly downstate, in to leave as soon as possible. New York,” said Sharon McMullen, The surprise announcement Assistant Vice President of Student reflects a looming concern that the and Campus Life for Health and current outbreak will worsen by Well-being. spring break. Vice President for The practical logistics of askStudent and Campus Life Ryan ing over 13,000 students to vacate Lombardi conceded that “in all campus is one that leaves a host of likelihood it’s going to show up in unsolved questions. the county if it hasn’t already.” Lombardi had sent out an email Even though Tompkins County to students living on-campus earlisaid that there were still no confirmed er in the week, asking them to fill cases in a Friday afternoon press conferout a form for housing accommodations. ence, Tompkins County administrator Jason COURTESY OF THE CENTERS While the form’s deadline has been extended Molino declared a state of emergency, shutter- FOR DISEASE CONTROL to Sunday, Lombardi said that the majoriing local schools. ty of students who filled out the survey said “As you look across the country right now, we’re in fairly unchartered waters,” Lombardi said in an interSee PRECAUTION page 4

On Saturday, the Tompkins County Health Departmet released in a health advisory that an individual in Tompkins County has tested positive for the COVID-19 disease. The individual, a member of the Ithaca College community, is in mandatory isolation. Along with this case, 52 others are under quarantine and 15 await test results. - See Page 5 New York State Calls State of Emergency

Due to the COVID-19 outbreak, the federal, New York State and Tompkins County governments have all called a state of emergency. In Tompkins Couny, secondary education schools have been closed until April 13. Peer institutions Ithaca College, Syracuse University and SUNY Cortland have instituted virtual classes. - To read the full story visit www.cornellsun.com

Sun Managing Editor and Sun Assistant Managing Editor

Despite Safety Warnings, Students Party On By ALEC GIUFURTA Sun Senior Editor

It’s a tale of two Cornells: There are parties, bars and profane bedsheets; but also panic, hasty departures and those self-quarantining after studying abroad. Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, some students are scrambling for plans to self-quarantine while others defy social distancing. On Saturday, daytime yard parties — colloquially known as “darties” — dotted Collegetown, including one at the East Seneca Street annex of a Cornell organization. Hanging

from the house’s balcony was a bedsheet-turned-banner, spray-painted to read “I’m not fucking leaving,” just a day after President Martha E. Pollack’s announcement to cancel classes starting Friday at 5 p.m. Vice President for Student and Campus Life Ryan Lombardi condemned these parties in a Sunday afternoon email, writing, “Some students – particularly those living off campus in Collegetown – have chosen to use the suspension of classes to host or attend large parties,” he wrote. “Hosting or attending a large party is exactly the opposite of what you

should be doing in this moment,” he continued. Social distancing, a popular defense to the COVID-19 contagion recommended by experts, is what prompted Gov. Andrew Cuomo (D-N.Y.) to cap bars and restaurants to 50 percent capacity. In a GroupMe called “martha can’t make us leave,” with over 2,000 student members, the conflict these parties posed to social distancing was on full display –– revolving around the Catherine Street Block Party schedSee PARTY page 5

Campus Reacts to Cancellations

From first-year students concluding their rookie year on campus, to international students considering for a second time if they depart from the U.S. and go home, to workers in Ithaca responding to recent economic changes, people from the Cornell community and greater Ithaca area react to Cornell’s decision to cancel classes. - See Page 3

BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Students Scramble to Box Belongings

With the announcement on Friday that Cornell classes were suspended for the rest of the month, students rushed to pack up and go home. In order to do so, they looked for boxed storage, which became overwhelmed with the unexpected demand at the time, causing large backups in stores like Collegetown’s UPS, shown above. - See Page 5 Weill Cornell Maintains Some Activity

Weill Cornell Medicine, while also transitioning classes to virtual instruction, has kept some of its operations open for the time being, such as their main residence hall or hands-on clinical activities. This differs from other institutions in the New York City area, as other medical schools in the area have shut down all operations. - To read the full story visit www.cornellsun.com


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