Washington Square News | March 30, 2020

Page 1

3 SPORTS

5 ARTS

A Reflection on Lost Endings

Is Gal Gadot the First Horsewoman of the Entertainment Apocalypse?

4 CULTURE

Gallatin Senior Defies Gravity and Expectations

6 OPINION

The Principled Necessity of Tuition Reimbursement

VOLUME LIV | ISSUE 9

MONDAY, MARCH 30, 2020

Tisch Students Lead Movement for Partial Tuition Refunds Tisch Partial Refund Effort sent out a mass email laying out its next steps to get students’ demands met after Tisch Dean Allyson Green responded to concerns about partial refunds on students’ tuitions with a video of herself dancing. By AARUSHI SHARMA Staff Writer

JAKE CAPRIOTTI | WSN

Tisch students have petitioned tuition refunds, but received a video of Dean Green lip syncing and dancing along with a blanket statement of refusal. Many Tisch students have experienced difficulties continuing their classes remotely, and the extra fees meant for equipment, studios and more are no longer applicable to their study.

As NYU has made the full shift to remote instruction, students at Tisch School of the Arts are demanding partial refunds for their classes, many of which are not easily transferable to online platforms. The day before Zoom classes began, Tisch Dean Allyson Green sent an email to students addressing NYU’s decision not to offer partial tuition refunds to students. “I am sorry that in trying to be clear and transparent about tuition refunds (as this is a university decision), I did not acknowledge the heavy financial burden you are under,” the email read. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2

New Yorkers Reflect on the PAUSE By NICK MEAD Deputy News Editor Two days before New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced New York State On PAUSE — a policy mandating non-essential workers remain at home — Tom Birchard made the tough decision to temporarily close his popular East Village restaurant, Veselka. Known for serving pierogi in the East Village 24 hours a day, Veselka

is a favorite among New Yorkers, especially NYU students, as two NYU dorms are located less than five-minutes walking distance from the establishment. “There was a part of me that wanted to stay open just for our loyal fans,” Birchard said. “But our employees were concerned about coming to work and facing the public every day.” Birchard is not alone in his decision. Many businesses across the city were affected as New York City rap-

idly became the United States’ coronavirus epicenter. And with the NYS on PAUSE policy extended to April 15 as of Sunday, restaurant owners are looking to government officials for answers. To stay on top of the rapid updates, Birchard, like many New Yorkers, tunes in to the Governor’s daily briefings on CNBC. “I’ve never been a huge Cuomo fan, but I’ve been inspired by how he’s been handling this,” Birchard said.

“In this situation, my general perspective is he’s been doing a good job. My wife and I go out of our way to watch his briefings every day.” The number of confirmed cases in New York City has risen to 33,768 as of Sunday, March 29. Altogether, New York State has almost 60,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19. Shutting down nonessential business may slow the spread of the virus, while inevitably striking a blow to businesses and tenants

who might barely make enough to pay their bills month to month. According to a 2019 survey, only 40% of Americans have enough money saved to weather a thousand dollar emergency expense, which is minor compared to the income disruption caused by COVID-19. Birchard said he’s confident his business will be able to reopen, but he fears the financial strain his employees will suffer. CONTINUED ON PAGE 2


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