9-1-20 entire issue hi res

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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 137, No. 1

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 2020

n

20 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Arts

Sports

Weather

Anabel’s Grocery

Chadwick Boseman

Fall shutdown

Partly Sunny

The student-run store will close this fall, but plans to strengthen its education and outreach efforts. | Page 4

The passing of the renowned actor has moved millions. The Sun’s arts department pays tribute to the star. | Page 13

Student-athletes brace themselves for an unimaginable semester.

HIGH: 78º LOW: 69º

| Page 20

Cornell Identifies First COVID-19 Student Cluster on Campus By ANIL OZA and TAMARA KAMIS Sun Science Editor and Sun Staff Writer

On Friday, Tompkins County Health Department identified a first cluster of nine COVID-19 cases at Cornell, following several small social gatherings where people did not social distance or wear masks. A COVID-19 cluster is five or more connected cases. The county now has 18 active cases. Vice President for Student and Campus Life Ryan Lombardi confirmed that those exposed were Cornell students in an email on Saturday. The last time Tompkins County saw over 18 active cases was Aug. 7, with 19 cases. All of the students in this cluster are in isolation and are receiving check-ins, Lombardi wrote. The students’ names were not disclosed, but Tompkins County Health Department contact tracers will reach out to anyone who may have been exposed during their infectious period. Lombardi reminded students to abide by the

behavioral compact, which includes rules limiting the size of social gatherings, and requires mask wearing and physical distancing. According to Lombardi’s email, multiple students have already been temporarily suspended for reported violations of the behavioral compact. “This is not our desired outcome, but as I stated yesterday, we will not hesitate to do so if the safety of our community is jeopardized,” Lombardi wrote about the temporary suspensions. Students can report those breaking the behavioral health compact to Cornell, and can report non-COVID-19 safety rule compliant workplaces to the New York State Department of Labor. Information regarding COVID-19 prevention and care as well as information about the spread of COVID-19 on campus can be found on Cornell’s COVID-19 dashboard. BEN PARKER / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Anil Oza and Tamara Kamis can be reached at aoza@cornellsun.com and tkamis@cornellsun.com.

Cluster chaos | Lombardi notified the Cornell commmunity Saturday that

the health department has identified a nine-case cluster just before classes.

President Pollack, Top Admins As Fall Semester Approaches, Students Sit in 2-Week Quarantine Outline Fall Semester Plans Report testing bumps, lax rules in residence halls Detail testing, enforcement and anti-racism initiatives By ALEX HALE and MADELINE ROSENBERG Sun News Editor and Sun Assistant News Editor

Thousands of Cornell students have endured the nasal swab test and, for a portion of them, a two-week quarantine. When classes start Wednesday, students will tune into their courses from around the world. But it took months of planning and policy-making to get here. Cornell administrators recently spoke with The Sun about the University’s reopening plan, anti-racism initiatives in light of the Do Better Cornell movement and

BORIS TSANG / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

other pressing campus issues. In attendance for the interview was President Martha E. Pollack, Provost Michael Kotlikoff, Vice President of Student and Campus Life Ryan Lombardi, Vice President of Facilities and Campus Services Rick Burgess, Vice Provost for Academic Affairs and Presidential Advisor for Diversity and Equity Avery August and Vice President for University Relations Joel Malina. Here are the highlights of that conversation. COVID-19 and Reopening Campus

Cornell has almost finished the arrival testing phase of its plan to reopen campus, and it will shift to surveillance testing when classes start Sept. 2. The University has independently built up its testing capacity to about 50,000 people a week, allowing it to not burden the Tompkins County’s testing capacity. “We’re not using up capacity from the county,” Pollack said. “We’ve created our own testing capacity and that’s what we’re monitoring. ... Do we have the supplies we need to continue to do the rest of testing that is at the core of our whole approach?” One recent development came from a University Assembly meeting Aug. 21, when See ADMINISTRATION page 3

By MADELINE ROSENBERG and RAPHY GENDLER Sun Assistant News Editor and Sun Senior Editor

Students from states on New York’s travel advisory list are in the middle of 14-day quarantines. Resident advisers, scrambling to welcome students into dorms, have returned to work after striking for hazard pay and better protection. Ithaca

College has backtracked on an in-person fall. Classes are set to begin in less than two weeks, and many Cornellians will register for classes the same week they move in. It’s a bumpy beginning to an on-campus fall semester. Students from restricted states have started quarantining on campus, many have already settled into

Collegetown apartments and thousands more will flock to Ithaca this week — moving into their dorms with two suitcases, a backpack and no parents to help them. For first-year students, it’s not the start to college they imagined, especially those spending their first two weeks in Ithaca quarantining in a North Campus dorm. See MOVE-IN page 3

BEN PARKER / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Restricted access | Students settled into on-campus housing this past week — wearing masks inside their residence halls and without parents to help them move in.


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