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INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 138, No. 59

TUESDAY, MARCH 22, 2022

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8 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

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Turning Red

Seventh Heaven

Partly Sunny

Anna Liba ’25 reflects on the multifaceted themes depicted in Disney Pixar's newest release. | Page 5

Quarantine Housing Prompts Concerns By CAMDEN WEHRLE Sun Staff Writer

Though Cornell has dropped weekly testing requirements and eased its mask mandate for vaccinated individuals, students who test positive for COVID-19 remain required to isolate. While some students appreciate the hotel rooms and meals provided by the University, many have expressed frustrations with a lack of communication from the University and difficulty traveling to the hotels. Victoria Gong ’25 was one of the hundreds of students isolated during the spike in COVID-19 cases at the end of the fall 2021 semester. Gong said she was transported by CU Lift to Hotel Ithaca in the Ithaca Commons the day after she reported a positive test to Cornell Health via Daily Check. Gong, who stayed in the hotel last December, said her room was spacious and her ability to order takeout with City Bucks and medical supplies made her isolation period a better experience overall. However, Gong noted that the meals provided by the hotel often didn’t arrive on time — or sometimes did not arrive at all. “The meal schedule was very inconsistent. There were two distinct times that I didn’t get any meals at all,” Gong said.

For the spring 2022 semester, isolation meals look a little different, as isolated students no longer have $500 in City Bucks to spend on meals delivered from restaurants. Roberto Garcia ’25 said that he was able to order food from Collegetown Bagels or Ithaca Bakery when he isolated in Cayuga Blu from March 9 to March 14. These options replaced the City Bucks offered in the fall 2021 semester. “There were pretty good options,” Garcia said. “The food wasn’t always amazing, but it was nice to be able to pick whatever you wanted.” Garcia took a rapid test after feeling symptomatic and received an email from the Daily Check shortly after submitting the positive result. However, he experienced a transportation delay. “I had roughly two and a half hours [to wait] after I told them I was ready for them to actually pick me up,” Garcia said. “I think [Cornell] could have handled getting sick people out of the dorm a little quicker.” According to Garcia, two of his friends also tested positive on the same day and weren’t picked up for several hours after they called the quarantine number. This posed a concern as they wanted to avoid spreading the virus to their roommates. Maya Mau ’24 also isolated in Cayuga

The team concludes its season with three AllAmericans and a seventh place finish. | Page 8

HIGH: 46º LOW: 28º

On the hoof

JULIA NAGEL / SUN PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR

Cornellians learn about dairy farming and meet live cows at the Dairy Open House held in Cornell’s livestock pavilion on March 18. See full story on Page 3.

Blu for five days this month. In contrast to Garcia’s experience transporting to the hotel, she found the process easy, saying that the approximately two-hour wait to be picked up was fine. “I have a single [dorm room], so compared to people that had to sit there with their roommate while being positive, it wasn’t that bad,” Mau said. Mau said she was impressed by the isolation experience, and she enjoyed ordering food from Ithaca Bakery since it was paid for by the University. She also said that snacks and tissues were readily available at

the hotel. Similarly, Clara Enders ’22 said her transportation from the co-op house she lives in to Cayuga Blu went smoothly. “I had heard horror stories about [Cayuga Blu], but it wasn’t bad at all,” Enders said. She said the room she stayed in was comfortable, and food was always delivered on time. To read the rest of this article, please visit cornellsun.com. Camden Wehrle can be reached at cwehrle@cornellsun.com.

Students and Faculty Push for New Swim Facilities By ALLY FERTIG Sun Staff Writer

Complaining of murky water and insufficient available pool time, students and faculty are pushing for a new natatorium — the technical term for indoor swimming facilities — on campus, lobbying the University’s shared governance bodies and advisory committees in athletics. On March 8, the University Assembly overwhelmingly adopted a resolution supporting the Faculty Senate’s “Inclusion and Prioritization of a New Natatorium in the 'Do the Greatest Good' Capital Campaign” resolution, which addresses the need for a new swimming facility. The resolution has also been supported by the Student Assembly and the Faculty Advisory Committee on Athletics and Physical Education, which sponsored the original resolution. The resolution’s author, Prof. Ashleigh Newman, veterinary medicine, has received 17 co-sponsors in the Faculty Senate and much more support in meetings from other senators

who did not officially sign their program, club teams and other originally built as the female-onassorted activities. The pools ly athletic facility, also has a six names. The University’s current also offer an open swim time to lane 25-yard-long pool. Both natatoriums have had “To Do The Greatest Good” the Cornell community, used by problems, capital camwhich have paign does worsened not set aside over time. any money According to for a new the presentanatatorium, despite plantion Newman gave to the ning to raise Faculty Senate $5 Billion. on Feb. 9, Inclusion Teagle Hall in the camneeds a roof paign would replacement, allow for a and discusnew natatorium to be sions of a new funded by pool have been alumni and occurring since JASON WU / SUN ASSISTANT PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR other outside the 1980s. donors, not Troubled waters | Along with the Helen Newman Pool, Teagle Pool, Demetra placing the pictured above, has faced worsening safety conditions over the years. Williams ’24, a whole finanmember of the cial responsibility on Cornell. a group composed of 43 percent diving team, expressed frustraCurrently, the University has students and 57 percent faculty, tion with the current natatorium. two aquatic facilities: a pool in staff and retirees. She hopes that a new natatorium Helen Newman and a larger The Teagle Hall pool, built would include a diving well with one in Teagle Hall. These pools in what was originally campus’s a diving platform as well as overare used by multiple physical men-only athletic facility, has a head showers on the pool deck. education classes, the men’s and main pool with six 25-yard-long “I have seen Teagle’s pool women’s varsity swimming and lanes, and a learning pool for turn both green and purple, on diving teams, the naval ROTC new swimmers. Helen Newman, separate occasions. I have seen

Teagle drained, refilled, then drained again to improve water quality,” Williams said. “I have had late night practices at Ithaca College because our pool was not in good enough condition to host varsity practices.” The pools have also had maintenance issues related to water quality, which caused home competitions for the swimming and diving teams to be moved to Ithaca College’s facilities during the 2019-2020 and 2021-2022 seasons. “At our one and only home meet of 2021-2022 against Brown, in which facilities had spent weeks prior prepping the pool by shocking and filtering the water, one of the Brown divers looked at me and said, ‘Is your pool always this murky?’” Williams told The Sun. “And I responded, ‘This is the cleanest our pool has been in years.’” The resolution supporting a new natatorium proposes that the University build a 50-meter pool in order to increase pool space and, as a result, available swimming hours for the community. See POOL page 3


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