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Courtesy Henry Litsky By Micah Greenberg Features Editor February 07, 2021
This article is part of a series about coronavirus on campus during the Fall 2020 semester.
No guests in dorm rooms. Students shuttled off to Whipple Park residences to isolate. Routine testing and daily Dr. Chatbot surveys. The fall 2020 semester saw the University implementing dozens of new policies to mitigate the spread of COVID-19.
“The only way you can say that we were really missing large numbers of infections is to hypothesize that [UR] students are endowed with magical powers and 90% of them when they’re infected never develop symptoms, and that’s absurd.”
Campus Times
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Campus Times staff has worked hard on a responsive web redesign. Please bear with us as some older content may be temporarilily unavailable. To submit feedback, or to report an issue, email the Web Staff at online@campustimes.org.×
Courtesy Henry Litsky The river campus was adorned with new yellow and blue signage making the new COVID-19 policies extremely clear throughout the fall. By Micah Greenberg Features Editor February 07, 2021
This article is part of a series about coronavirus on campus during the Fall 2020 semester.
For the first two months of the fall 2020 semester, students held their breath waiting to get sent home after what felt like an inevitable COVID-19 outbreak. Keeping a college open during a pandemic seemed like an impossible goal, and as colleges like nearby St. John Fisher cancelled in-per