3-9 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 136, No. 65

MONDAY, MARCH 9, 2020

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12 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Synthesized

Mushrooms

Title drought

Partly Sunny

Robert Moog, Ph.D. ’64, inventor of the synthesizer, was celebrated in a three day-long exhibit. | Page 3

Fungi test tensions between machine and man in new exhibit.

Women’s hockey lost out on the ECAC title with a defeat by Princeton.

| Page 6

HIGH: 63º LOW: 47º

| Page 12

Cornell Braces for Coronavirus as Cases Rise University continues to place pause on travel, large events By JOHNATHAN STIMPSON, MEGHNA MAHARISHI and KATHRYN STAMM Sun Managing Editor, Sun Assistant Managing Editor, and Sun News Editor

Three days after Cornell unfurled more stringent travel and event restrictions, the COVID-19 outbreak caused West Coast campuses to cancel in-person classes. On the opposite coast, the governor of New York declared a state of emergency amid a climbing number of cases. As recently as three weeks ago, the coronavirus was contained mostly to China, with policies focused on limiting international travel to East Asia.

“I don’t know what’s going to happen in the future, and that’s scary.” Habeeb Jimoh At the time, Tompkins County health officials maintained that the risk of infection in Ithaca remained “low.” Now, the Tompkins County Health Department has a person under investigation for

COVID-19, the health department announced in a March 8 press release. The patient is currently in isolation as they undergo testing for the virus. In February, the Centers for Disease Control tested two Cornell students who showed symptoms similar to COVID-19 — the students tested negative. As of Saturday afternoon, 42 people have been quarantined in Tompkins County; six were released after showing no symptoms and 36 are still under quarantine. The Tompkins County Health Department did not respond to a request for comment by the time of publication. In a sign of the virus’ continuing strength, Columbia University announced Sunday night that it would cancel classes for at least two days after a person on campus was quarantined under suspicion of coronavirus exposure. That individual has not yet tested positive for COVID-19. See COVID-19 page 5

ANDREW BURTON / THE NEW YORK TIMES

College cancellations | Stanford and the University of Washington (above) have closed classrooms, opting to move teaching online. Columbia University canceled classes for at least two days, it announced Sunday night.

Spring break plans put on hold as students take precautions By MIHIKA BADJATE Sun Staff Writer

While confirmed American cases of the novel coronavirus have reached upwards of 500 and the worldwide count now exceeds 100,000, Cornell has yet to report a case of COVID-19. Even so, the virus has significantly impacted the Cornell community in other ways, interrupting students’ plans to visit home, putting a hold on educational travel and spreading anxiety about

the potential effects of an outbreak on campus. On Thursday, Cornell released a slew of new measures aimed at preventing the transfer of the virus on campus, prohibiting large group events that draw people from outside Ithaca, as well as banning all international travel associated with the University. This policy has so far affected at least dozens of students who were registered for Cornell- sponSee SPRING BREAK page 11

S.A. Presidential Hopefuls Discuss Platforms, Initiatives By MEGHANA SRIVASTAVA Sun Staff Writer

As another round of elections for the Student Assembly begins, three

candidates are vying for the position of S.A. President: Dillon Anadkat ’21, Uchenna Chukwukere ’21 and Catherine Huang ’21. Although the Student

Assembly is an elected body that is meant to represent undergraduates by making proposals to the University, all three candidates agree that there is

increasingly a disconnect between the body and its constituents. “I go to my friends and I say to my friends, you know, ‘I want to run for

MICHAEL WENYE LI / SUN SENIOR PHOTOGRAPHER

Assembly candidates | Pictured left to right: Dillon Anadkat ’21, Catherine Huang ’21 and Uchenna Chukwukere ’21.

president of the Student Assembly,” Anadkat said in an interview with The Sun. “And so often the responses were, ‘What the hell’s the Student Assembly?’ And that really shouldn't be the case.” Anadkat is an international student in the College of Arts and Sciences studying government. He described himself as “an outsider and a fresh face,” given that he has not previously held a position on the assembly. Huang currently serves as executive vice president, while Chukwukere is an undesignated voting representative at-large and appropriations committee member. “One of the biggest

issues is that S.A. members are not holding themselves accountable, not reaching out to their constituencies, and [there is a] lack of cultural sensitivity,” Chukwekere said. As a solution to some of these issues, Chukwekere proposed implementing Intergroup Dialogue Project training for S.A. representatives. Huang highlighted similar issues, proposing to create a feedback form for students to more easily reach out to their representatives, as well as ensuring that representatives regularly meet with their constituents. See S.A. page 3


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