This article is from the source 'nytimes' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.
You can find the current article at its original source at https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/24/us/coronavirus-university-presidents-harvard-bacow.html
The article has changed 7 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.
Version 5 | Version 6 |
---|---|
College Presidents Have Bad News to Deliver. For Harvard’s, It’s That He Has Coronavirus. | College Presidents Have Bad News to Deliver. For Harvard’s, It’s That He Has Coronavirus. |
(6 months later) | |
One college dean likened the battle against the coronavirus to the Peloponnesian War. A university president compared the turmoil on her campus to a bad bridge hand. And another president disclosed that he and his wife had been infected. | One college dean likened the battle against the coronavirus to the Peloponnesian War. A university president compared the turmoil on her campus to a bad bridge hand. And another president disclosed that he and his wife had been infected. |
In letters to students, faculty and staff members, university administrators in recent days have cut the spring semester short and ordered classes to go online. They have broken the news that commencement will be called off and, sometimes, that tuition will not be refunded. They have calmed nerves, and raised hackles, with their words — and sometimes their dance moves. | In letters to students, faculty and staff members, university administrators in recent days have cut the spring semester short and ordered classes to go online. They have broken the news that commencement will be called off and, sometimes, that tuition will not be refunded. They have calmed nerves, and raised hackles, with their words — and sometimes their dance moves. |
On Tuesday, the president of Harvard University, Lawrence S. Bacow, shared that he and his wife had tested positive for the coronavirus. He said that he did not know how they had contracted it, but were heartened that they had not come into contact with many people over the last few days. | On Tuesday, the president of Harvard University, Lawrence S. Bacow, shared that he and his wife had tested positive for the coronavirus. He said that he did not know how they had contracted it, but were heartened that they had not come into contact with many people over the last few days. |
“We started experiencing symptoms on Sunday — first coughs then fevers, chills and muscle aches — and contacted our doctors on Monday,” Mr. Bacow wrote. “We were tested yesterday and just received the results a few minutes ago. We wanted to share this news with all of you as soon as possible.” | “We started experiencing symptoms on Sunday — first coughs then fevers, chills and muscle aches — and contacted our doctors on Monday,” Mr. Bacow wrote. “We were tested yesterday and just received the results a few minutes ago. We wanted to share this news with all of you as soon as possible.” |
Here are some other ways that administrators have broken bad news in recent days. | Here are some other ways that administrators have broken bad news in recent days. |
Mark B. Rosenberg, president of Florida International University in Miami, framed his efforts to deal with Covid-19 around a nightmare he had, ominously set in Italy, where the virus has killed more than 6,000 people. | Mark B. Rosenberg, president of Florida International University in Miami, framed his efforts to deal with Covid-19 around a nightmare he had, ominously set in Italy, where the virus has killed more than 6,000 people. |
Allyson Green, dean of New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, raised her arms, twirled, swung her hips and ended with her hands crossed over her chest. In a two-plus-minute dance video she sent to students on Sunday, Ms. Green, a choreographer, displayed defiance, joy, confusion, sadness and solidarity. | Allyson Green, dean of New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts, raised her arms, twirled, swung her hips and ended with her hands crossed over her chest. In a two-plus-minute dance video she sent to students on Sunday, Ms. Green, a choreographer, displayed defiance, joy, confusion, sadness and solidarity. |
Ms. Green explained why she had chosen to dance to the song “Losing My Religion” by R.E.M. She told students and faculty that they could choose to watch the video, or not, and she would not hold it against them either way. The video had thousands of views by the next day. | Ms. Green explained why she had chosen to dance to the song “Losing My Religion” by R.E.M. She told students and faculty that they could choose to watch the video, or not, and she would not hold it against them either way. The video had thousands of views by the next day. |
Bridge is not necessarily the card game of choice among the younger set, but Cornell’s president, Martha E. Pollack, told students in a recent email that playing it had taught her how to persevere. | Bridge is not necessarily the card game of choice among the younger set, but Cornell’s president, Martha E. Pollack, told students in a recent email that playing it had taught her how to persevere. |
Before revealing his own positive test on Tuesday, Mr. Bacow of Harvard had sent students a letter with his reflections about running along the Charles River while social distancing. | Before revealing his own positive test on Tuesday, Mr. Bacow of Harvard had sent students a letter with his reflections about running along the Charles River while social distancing. |
Mr. Bacow wanted to just say “thank you,” he said, to everyone who had pitched in, from students and parents who helped move them out of residence halls, to faculty members who were switching to online learning, to researchers and health care providers on the front lines of the pandemic. | Mr. Bacow wanted to just say “thank you,” he said, to everyone who had pitched in, from students and parents who helped move them out of residence halls, to faculty members who were switching to online learning, to researchers and health care providers on the front lines of the pandemic. |
John W. Boyer, dean of the college at the University of Chicago, looked to his knowledge of history to find hope for the future. He invoked the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the early Nazi victories on the Eastern front in Europe — and the teachings of Thucydides, the ancient Greek historian. | John W. Boyer, dean of the college at the University of Chicago, looked to his knowledge of history to find hope for the future. He invoked the bombing of Pearl Harbor and the early Nazi victories on the Eastern front in Europe — and the teachings of Thucydides, the ancient Greek historian. |
The students’ education would help them weather this storm, he said: | The students’ education would help them weather this storm, he said: |
The chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, Carol Christ, brought up the 1985 Mexico City earthquake and Hurricane Katrina 20 years later. | The chancellor of the University of California, Berkeley, Carol Christ, brought up the 1985 Mexico City earthquake and Hurricane Katrina 20 years later. |