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March 17, 2021 VOLUME XLI, ISSUE 3
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Reflecting On a Year of COVID-19
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By MICHELLE AGARON, KATRINA LAMBERT, and SOPHIE PARTRIDGE-HICKS Asst. News Editor, News Editor and Editor-in-Chief
In the spring of 2020, Rachana Komatireddy, Fordham College at Lincoln Center (FCLC) ’22, said she was just starting to settle into her new role as chair of operations for the United Student Government (USG) at Fordham. She used to wake up early in the morning to give herself enough time to walk to her classes for the day. After class, she would walk through the Lowenstein Center hallways and randomly bump into a friend, which “would turn into a 40-minute conversation,” she said.
Eventually, she made it back to her dorm room and saw her roommates, whom she described as her closest friends at the time, and they would talk about their days together. “I remember zooming through Argo to get to the USG office because I’d always be trying to get to a meeting on time,” she said. “Sometimes you accidentally run into someone randomly on the street and you’re like, ‘OK, let’s go grab lunch together.’” Journeying through her days, she remembered that there were a lot of opportunities for interactions and spontaneity. Now, in the spring of 2021, her days, like those of all members of the Fordham community, are spent
completely differently — and not just because of the amount of hand sanitizer she now uses, Komatireddy said. The Early Days and Initial Impact of the Crisis On March 1, 2020, the first case of coronavirus was confirmed in New York City. By March 7, there were 11 total cases in the city — 76 in New York state — leading Gov. Andrew Cuomo to declare a state of emergency to contain the spread of the virus.
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Fordham Declares In-Person Fall Six Months in Advance
The decision to announce the full operation of Fordham’s campuses six months in advance of the fall 2021 semester was based on the new Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) guidelines and U.S. goals to extend vaccine eligibility to all adults by May. On March 8, the CDC issued new COVID-19 guidelines. Vaccinated individuals can now gather indoors with other vaccinated individuals without wearing masks
or social distancing. They can also visit with one other household that does include vaccinated individuals if that household is at “low risk for severe disease.” Jacobs said that these guidelines are promising since they change the constraints for university operation and can affect how classrooms, dining halls, residential buildings and club meeting spaces will function in the fall when students and staff are vaccinated. The New York Times predicts that at the U.S.’s current pace, 90% of adults will have received their vaccine by Aug. 22 — only two weeks before the start of the fall semester on Sept. 1. It is still too early to predict what life will be like in the fall, but Jacobs said that the university wanted to signal its plans as early as possible “without being irresponsible.”
According to the CDC, there is still the possibility for vaccinated people to host the coronavirus and spread it to others. Jacobs said that he hopes with the Fordham community vaccinated, students will come into contact with the virus “dramatically less.” The purpose behind the early announcement was to aid faculty in preparing for the fall semester, provide guidance to admitted students to base college decisions on and allow students extra time for planning their academic schedules. Registration for summer 2021 courses on March 8 was the busiest day for Fordham’s online banner service in the university’s history, according to Jacobs. Since summer and fall registration are very closely linked, he said that the university wanted to provide clarity for students with the fall registration period approaching.
Conversations around fall planning have been ongoing for two months with deans and leadership in the faculty senate. Jacobs said that there was no effort to hold or accelerate the March 9 announcement, and the email was likely to be sent to the community during that week regardless. “Once we crafted the letter, we realized the anniversary was on the ninth. It made it particularly salient to send it on that day,” he said. Fordham’s reopening plan for the fall 2020 semester, Fordham Forward, was released on June 30, giving students who wished to return to campus only four to six weeks to plan and quarantine.
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By JOE KOTTKE News Editor
The first day of March 2020 began with New York’s first confirmed case of the coronavirus. By March 9 there were more than 100 cases in the state and Fordham, like other universities, halted in-person instruction and shifted coursework and campus activities to online modalities. On the one-year anniversary of the suspension, University President Rev. Joseph M. McShane, S.J., announced that the university is preparing to offer a fully in-person fall 2021 semester. Yet, the U.S. surpassed 500,000 coronavirus-related deaths in February 2021 and there are still more than 29 million cases around the country as of March 14. Dennis Jacobs, senior vice president for academic affairs, referred to McShane’s email as a message
Student Free Speech Page 3
of directionality and said that more guidance will come in the months ahead. “The only thing we can say at this point is that we will not compromise the safety of individuals or the community as a whole. That is job number one,” he said. The Reasons Behind Announcing Six Months Ahead of Time
Women's B-Ball Bested Battling for Autonomy Broadway Reopening
The Student Voice of Fordham Lincoln Center
Making the Decision
see FALL SEMESTER page 4
Out of This World Page 15