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Inse- of this team, and I cannot believe Oakley Burt / Arts Editor curity has afflicted everyone; we we started out already doing things [email protected] do not know if our loved ones will no one thought could be possible. Parker Dunn / Asst. Arts Editor succumb to COVID-19, we may fear Nothing can take this team down. [email protected] losing our jobs or maybe we have no Local media has become more idea how our graduation plans will important than ever, as we are Mark Draper/ Photo Editor change before this is over. 2020 will charged with informing neighbors, [email protected] be remembered for many things, families, and communities with Sarah Mismash / Asst. Copy Chief and we are not even close to being news that could change people and [email protected] done with it. There is no end in students’ lives from one moment to sight. the next. The staff at the Chronicle As the new Editor-in-Chief I hopes to continue to provide you Cover by NEWS SPORTS ARTS OPINION proudly present this first issue of with the answers you need through Taylor Maguire COVID: the Football Season 2019-2020 Recap Letter From The the Daily Utah Chronicle under these uncertain times, and that this Graphic Designers Second wave Preview Editors Fall 2020 Arts the new leadership for the 2020- issue delivers on this promise. Taylor Maguire, Piper Armstrong Housing, The Preview Taking The Protest 2021 school year. These guys have Good, The Bad, The Fall Sports Preview To Your Neighbors managed to continue breaking news Guide to SLC Arts Corrections and Clarifications Ugly Porch stories and covering the changes Scene The policy of The Utah Chronicle is to correct any to sports and local art around us, error made as soon as possible. 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No person, without expressed permission of The Chronicle, may take more than one copy of any Chronicle issue. 01 News Openings 2020 02 News Openings 2020 COVID: the Second Wave and The World It Creates strength | connection | leadership for Emerging Adults safe ways to Story by Megan McKellar(Staff Writer) stay healthy ince its initial outbreak in Wuhan, China — the COVID-19 pandemic has the pandemic has brought into play, such as quarantine and the wearing of a begun to see the full extent of it,” Newell said. greatly impacted every aspect of life and will continue to do so for an mask. She said she sees wearing a mask as a way to show that she cares about Newell said that America has been drifting for Sindeterminate period of time. others. a long time in the direction of selfishness and cal- According to economics professor Marshall Steinbaum, the missteps taken “I have been trying to take this opportunity to be more aware of people out- lousness, and the idea that a national crisis has at the beginning of the outbreak will have long-lasting effects on the public, side of myself,” Bateman said. been used by leadership as a way to gain political such as failing to establish measures that would have enabled everyone to Lindsay Keegan, an infectious disease epidemiologist at the University of advantage instead of making sacrifices in the in- come out of lockdown while still prolonging the effort to contain the virus. Utah, said the likelihood of an outbreak in the fall depends on a number of terest of society as a whole is unprecedented. “So now we’re basically looking at an uncontained pandemic. Where every- factors. “I can’t think of an instance in American his- body going to work is exactly what spreads the virus, and yet people need to “We have had very few COVID-19 infections thus far and consequently we tory when a grave national peril was faced, and go to work in order to make a living. And those two things basically can’t be have very little population immunity. So it follows that as people begin mixing the ethic being expressed by the leadership of the reconciled,” Steinbaum said. more broadly, there will be a rise in infections. How we implement mixing country was not to bind up our wounds and help Steinbaum said the most important lesson learned about the economy is (classroom size, mask wearing, or other factors) can greatly impact how the each other, but instead finger pointing,” Newell that there needs to be a way to pay people not to go to the workplace to sup- fall looks with respect to COVID infections,” Keegan said. said. press the virus. According to the Utah Department of Health, as of July 12, the state of Utah Newell also sees positive changes being brought “The people who are required to go to work to make a living are the ones has 29,484 cases and 215 people who’ve passed away due to the virus. in society due to COVID-19, namely compassion who have been most susceptible. I think that tells us a lot about how the labor Professor Emeritus L. Jackson Newell, who teaches social ethics and educa- being awakened in people due to the fragility peo- market works — who has the ability to control where and how they work. Ver- tional leadership philosophy has over 60 years of teaching experience. Newell ple all feel about in their own health and lives. He sus who’s at somebody else’s discretion and can be made to enter an unsafe compared the United States’ response to the outbreak to previous crises that said the disproportionate economic effects and environment for themselves and their families, because the alternative is not the nation has navigated through. health effects across our population play into this being able to eat or to care for your family,” Steinbaum said. “Generally in times of crisis people pull together and we have in this cri- as well. According to Newell, it’s a sentiment that Steinbaum is concerned the pandemic will exacerbate bad trends in the sis the mind-boggling experience of responding to the epidemic in ways that hasn’t been felt in a long time. world of higher education, specifically the defunding of public institutions as divide people,” Newell said, referring to the politicization of wearing masks. “It’s truly exciting to me to think that, at least employment states need to cut their budgets. This could result in an increase in the cost According to the Center for Disease Control, it is estimated that about 500 since 1968, this is one of the most propitious years of higher education, which most students cannot meet other than through million people or one-third of the world’s population became infected with in American history. No matter what happens this opportunities student debt that takes a lifetime to pay off. the Spanish flu. fall, you’re going to be telling your grandchildren “That’s obviously something that’s already pretty much ongoing in the high- Newell drew several comparisons between COVID-19 and the 1918 Spanish about it, and dealing with the consequences of it, er education world — people need more and more degrees, those degrees are flu pandemic, during which his father was alive. whatever they are,” Newell said. more and more expensive … If states cut higher education budgets more be- “A more agricultural society then, many more people lived in rural areas [email protected] cause they have lost out on revenue due to the pandemic, then that’s going to and produced their own food, and even in cities people were not accustomed @meganbmckellar get even worse,” Steinbaum said. to restaurant dining, Starbucks sipping, and megastores. They adjusted more Rebecca Bateman, an undergraduate research assistant working to develop easily than we do, and they understood so much less about contagion that models about the pandemic, believes that the future of the virus is based on social distancing wasn’t a priority,” Newell said.
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