Connect with us

Top News

UConn students evicted from dorms for holding pandemic party as schools grapple with COVID-19 crisis

Published

on

UConn students evicted from dorms for holding pandemic party as schools grapple with COVID-19 crisis

Several UConn students were looking for new digs Wednesday after the dangers of reopening universities during a pandemic were laid bare in a video which showed undergrads living it up at a packed dorm room party where almost nobody was wearing a mask and there was zero social distancing.

While the worst offenders were slapped with eviction notices, University of Connecticut officials gave no sign that they intend to follow the lead of other universities like Notre Dame and the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill that canceled in-class instruction and sent students home for the semester after coronavirus outbreaks on their campuses.

“These actions do not represent or speak for the 5,000 residents currently composing our residential community,” UConn Dean of Students Eleanor Daugherty and Residential Life Director Pamela Schipani said of the video in a letter to students late Tuesday. “The vast majority of our students are doing the right thing.”

But so far five students who live on campus have tested positive and were placed in UConn’s isolation space and 25 others who came in contact with them were in quarantine, the university said. Two other students who live off-campus had also tested positive.

“There will undoubtedly be more positive cases as more test results are returning in the coming days, and we will address each the same way as we work to protect the health of individual students and our community,” Daugherty said in a statement.

Public health experts like Dr. Howard Koh, a Harvard professor who served as Assistant Secretary for Health for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services under President Barack Obama, said it shouldn’t surprise anyone that America’s universities are struggling right now.

“At every step of the pandemic, society has underestimated the tenacity of the virus and overestimated our ability to contain it,” Koh said in an email to NBC News. “The college outbreaks represent yet another example of this theme.”

But if they want to salvage the fall semester, America’s universities will have to adapt to the current reality.

“Universities represent highly dynamic communities with thousands of young people — from around the country and the world — living and learning in close quarters,” Koh wrote. “These clusters in the opening days of reopening make any sustained in-person learning much less likely for the upcoming Fall.”

At Iowa State University, where 175 students are starting off the semester in quarantine after testing positive for COVID-19, school officials warned that if undergrads continue flouting the school’s rules by partying they could wind up going home.

“Disregarding these health and safety policies jeopardizes the university’s ability to provide in-person experiences and increases the chance that all classes will move online,” Toyia Younger, senior vice president for student affairs, and Sharron Evans, dean of students, said in a statement. “If students want to complete the fall semester on campus, this disregard must stop.”

In North Carolina, frustrated UNC-Chapel Hill students told NBC News that school administrators did not heed the warnings from students, parents and public health experts.

“Everybody told the university not to reopen, and it was only a matter of time,” said Nikhil Rao, a student government senior adviser who has participated in online meetings with provost Bob Blouin every month since April along with other student leaders. “I would be shocked if I didn’t know this was going to happen.”

And in South Bend, Indiana, Notre Dame University President, the Rev. John Jenkins, ordered that all classes for undergraduates go online for the next two weeks after an off-campus party resulted in dozens of students getting infected. He also issued a warning: “If these steps are not successful, we’ll have to send students home as we did last spring.”

West Virginia University has already reported 96 positive cases since students started returning last week to the campus in Morgantown. Meanwhile, state health officials were looking into reports of coronavirus outbreaks at the University of Mississippi and the Mississippi University for Women.

Earlier, Oklahoma State University placed the Pi Beta Phi sorority under quarantine after 23 members tested positive. Clusters of coronavirus infections have also been reported at fraternities and sororities at Auburn University and North Carolina State University.

Some schools like Drexel University have already thrown in the towel and opted for remote-only learning in the fall semester for undergraduates. “We had all hoped to stage our gradual return to campus, but the shifting nature of the COVID-19 pandemic and its impact on other colleges and universities has necessitated a change of course for Drexel,” university president John Fry wrote in a letter to students.

In recent months the average age of people who have contracted COVID-19 has been trending downward, the World Health Organization said.

See also  Jed Lowrie harbors a mystery of injury after a full-go Mets practice

In hard-hit Florida, which on Wednesday became the fifth state to log more than 10,000 COVID-19 deaths, the median age of hospitalizations currently is 42, the state’s health department reported. The other states that have hit that depressing milestone are New York (33,685), New Jersey (15,926), California (11,531) and Texas (10,551), according to the latest NBC News tally.

New York and New Jersey racked up thousands of deaths in the early days of the pandemic when health officials were still trying to come up with a strategy for slowing the spread of COVID-19 and fearful they would run out of hospital beds.

The number of new cases and fatalities exploded in Southern and Sun Belt states like Florida, Texas and Arizona after they started reopening in May at the urging of President Donald Trump while COVID-19 was still cresting.

“We haven’t seen an explosion of new cases,” Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, a staunch Trump supporter, declared on April 29 when the state had tallied 1,218 COVID-19 deaths and 33,193 cases.

That same day, DeSantis signed an executive order to begin reopening the state after a little less than two months in quarantine.

As of Wednesday, there were 10,066 Covid-19 deaths in Florida and over 580,000 confirmed cases.

California, which now has the most confirmed cases with more than 640,000, was the first to enact shelter-in-place rules. But Gov. Gavin Newsom, under pressure from business and other group, began lifting restrictions in May and June, after which the number of new cases and deaths skyrocketed.

Nationally, the number of confirmed COVID-19 cases has topped 5.5 million, and the death toll as of Wednesday morning was close to 173,000, according to NBC News numbers. The U.S., which leads the world in both categories, has accounted for about a quarter of the more than 22 million cases and more than 782,000 deaths around the globe.

In other developments:

  • If you’re caught not wearing a mask in Hoboken, New Jersey, you could be hit with a fine of $250 or more. The city council in the crowded little city across the Hudson River from Manhattan was expected Wednesday to vote on a measure that would put teeth into the city’s mask mandate. It comes after more than half of the 3,000 residents who took part in a mask survey

    said they favored slapping mask refuseniks with hefty fines. Mayor Ravi Bhalla said it has been tried in communities on Cape Cod like Chatham. “If you don’t have a face mask on, you automatically get a $300 fine, and from what I hear they have virtually 100 percent compliance, everyone has a mask on” Bhalla said. While most public health experts and the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention guidelines recommend wearing masks to slow the spread of the virus, the issue was politicized by President Trump’s initial refusal to wear one and there has been resistance from some members of the public.

  • Speaking of masks, the 17-year-old Sesame Place worker in Pennsylvania who got his jaw busted after he told a couple to don face coverings can rest easy. The U.S. Marshals on Wednesday arrested 39-year-old Troy McCoy after authorities say he tried to barricade himself inside his Bronx, New York home. Shakerra Bonds, 31, who lives with McCoy, was expected to surrender to authorities later. Both face aggravated assault, simple assault, reckless endangerment, conspiracy, disorderly conduct and harassment charges stemming from the alleged Aug. 9 incident near the Captain Cookie’s High C’s Adventure ride.

  • As New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio moved forward with plans to reopen classrooms in the nation’s biggest public school system, the powerful city teachers union said it was prepared to take legal action and even go on strike if conditions are not safe. “The minute we feel the mayor is trying to force people into a situation that is unsafe, we go to court; we go to job actions,” United Federation of Teachers (UFT) President Michael Mulgrew warned. If teachers were to walk off their jobs, they would be breaking the so-called “Taylor Law” which would fine and even jail teachers for striking. Earlier this month, New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo Gov. gave public schools in the state the green light to reopen classrooms in the fall.
  • The pandemic has not slowed the pace of police shootings, the American Civil Liberties Union reported Wednesday. Blacks, Latinos and Native Americans “are still more likely than white people to be shot and killed by police,” the report revealed. “We thought maybe police would slow down their killing of people during the pandemic,” Udi Ofer, the director of the ACLU’s Justice Division, said. “We were wrong.”
See also  God of War Ragnarok received a trailer in Portuguese

Continue Reading
Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Top News

Portuguese historical films will premiere on 29 December.

Published

on

Portuguese historical films will premiere on 29 December.

Method Media Bermuda will present the documentary FABRIC: Portuguese History in Bermuda on Thursday, December 29 at the Underwater Research Institute of Bermuda.

A spokesperson said: “Method Media is proud to bring Bermuda Fabric: Portugal History to Bermuda for its 5th and 6th showing at the Bermuda Underwater Observatory. In November and December 2019, Cloth: A Portuguese Story in Bermuda had four sold-out screenings. Now that Bermuda has reopened after the pandemic, it’s time to bring the film back for at least two screenings.

“There are tickets Ptix.bm For $ 20 – sessions at 15:30 and 18:00. Both screenings will be followed by a short Q&A session.

Director and producer Milton Raboso says, “FABRIC is a definitive account of the Portuguese community in Bermuda and its 151 years of history, but it also places Bermuda, Acors and Portugal in the world history and the events that have fueled those 151 years.

“It took more than 10 years to implement FABRIC. The film was supported by the Minister of Culture, the Government of the Azores and private donors.

Bermuda Media Method [MMB] Created in 2011 by producer Milton Raposo. MMB has created content for a wide range of clients: Bermuda’s new hospital renovation, reinsurance, travel campaigns, international sports and more. MMB pays special attention to artistic, cultural and historical content.

More about

#History of Bermuda #A photo #Portuguese

Model: Everybody, Entertainment, Movies/Movies, History, News

Continue Reading

Top News

CRISTANO RONALDO CAN MAKE UP A GIANT IN CARIOCA AND PORTUGUESE TECHNICIAN SAYS ‘There will be room’

Published

on

CRISTANO RONALDO CAN MAKE UP A GIANT IN CARIOCA AND PORTUGUESE TECHNICIAN SAYS 'There will be room'

News

This is a fact or event of journalistic interest. This may be new or recent information. This also applies to the novelty of an already known situation.

Article

Mostly original text. Expresses the opinion of the author, but not necessarily the opinion of the newspaper. It can be written by journalists or specialists from different fields.

Investigative

A report that contains unknown facts or episodes with a pronounced denunciatory content. This requires special methods and resources.

Content commerce

Editorial content that offers the reader conditions for making purchases.

Analysis

This is the interpretation of the news, taking into account information that goes beyond the facts told. It uses data, brings events and scenario forecasts, as well as past contexts.

Editorial

Analytical text translating the official position of the vehicle in relation to the facts covered.

Sponsored

This is an institutional article on a topic of interest to the company sponsoring the report.

fact checking

Content that confirms the accuracy and authenticity of the disclosed information or facts.

Context

This is an article that brings subsidies, historical data and relevant information to help understand a fact or news.

special

An exciting report that details the various aspects and developments of this topic. It brings data, statistics, historical context, as well as stories of characters that are affected by or directly related to the topic in question.

Criticism

A text with detailed analysis and opinions on products, services and works of art in a wide variety of fields such as literature, music, film and visual arts.

Continue Reading

Top News

Maestro de Braga is the first Portuguese in the National Symphony Orchestra of Cuba.

Published

on

Maestro de Braga is the first Portuguese in the National Symphony Orchestra of Cuba.

Maestro Filipe Cunha, Artistic Director of the Philharmonic Orchestra of Braga, has been invited to conduct the Cuban National Symphony Orchestra, as announced today.

According to a statement sent by O MINHO, “he will be the first Portuguese conductor to conduct this orchestra in its entire history.”

In addition to this orchestra, the maestro will also work with the Lyceo Mozarteum de la Habana Symphony Orchestra.

The concerts will take place on 4 and 12 March 2023 at the National Theater of Cuba in Havana.

In the words of the maestro, quoted in the statement, “these will be very beautiful concerts with difficult but very complex pieces” and therefore he feels “very motivated”.

From the very beginning, Rachmaninoff’s Piano Concerto No. 2 will be performed by an Italian pianist (Luigi Borzillo), whom the maestro wants to bring to Portugal later this year. In the same concert, Mendelshon’s First Symphony will be performed.

Then, at the second concert, in the company of the Mexican clarinetist Angel Zedillo, he will perform the Louis Sfora Concerto No. 2. In this concert, the maestro also conducts Tchaikovsky’s Fifth Symphony.

“This is an international recognition of my work. An invitation that I accept with humility and great responsibility. I was surprised to learn that I would be the first Portuguese member of the Cuban National Symphony Orchestra. This is a very great honor,” the maestro said in a statement.

“I take with me the name of the city of Braga and Portugal with all the responsibility that goes with it, and I hope to do a good job there, leaving a good image and putting on great concerts. These will be very special concerts because, in addition to performing pieces that I love, especially Rachmaninov and Tchaikovsky, I will be directing two wonderful soloists who are also my friends. It will be very beautiful,” concludes Filipe Cunha.

See also  The US Navy will send two aircraft carriers and several warships to the South China Sea

Continue Reading

Trending