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Students and Faculty at Temple University Protest In-Person Classes on First Day

Students and Faculty at Temple University Protest In-Person Classes on First Day

“This last weekend was really honestly terrifying and we don’t know what the rest of school year is going to look like, but if it’s any predictor, it’s going to be bad”

Who is forcing these students to attend? Who is forcing the faculty to work there?

ABC 6 in Philadelphia reports:

‘It’s going to be bad’: Temple University students, faculty protest in-person classes

Temple University opened campus for its first day of fall semester classes on Monday, but not without protest from some students and faculty members.

The Temple Association of University Professionals gathered a group of students and staff to demand the Board of Trustees to switch to online classes only.

One student said based on what she saw over the weekend, with several off-campus parties, she does not feel safe.

“This last weekend was really honestly terrifying and we don’t know what the rest of school year is going to look like, but if it’s any predictor, it’s going to be bad,” said Teresa Swartley, a senior.

While the group was protesting for online classes, all online classes Monday morning at Temple had to be canceled, after the video conferencing platform Zoom experienced a nationwide outage.

Zoom said it resolved the issue, but not before schools and universities across the country had to cancel a slew of classes for the day.

A Temple spokesman said he’s glad the university has an in-person option, otherwise no one would have had class this morning.

Spokesman Ray Betzner says Temple has safety measures it developed with the city to make campus life safe. Only about a third of students are actually on campus, classrooms are spread out, and it has an entire residence hall that will be for students who need to quarantine.

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Comments

Some of these sissy colleges need to bring in some binary men with a binary set to put things in order.

One student said based on what she saw over the weekend, with several off-campus parties, she does not feel safe.

Why? The risk to 20-somethings is essentially zero.

This has the makings of a new Twilight Zone movie. Like the show, 99% of the problem is between the ears.