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Colleges ask students to leave campus amid COVID-19 outbreaks, but experts advise the opposite

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sshepard/iStockBy MEREDITH DELISO, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — As colleges deal with COVID-19 outbreaks, some are having their students leave campus — which medical authorities warn is the opposite of what they should be doing.

White House coronavirus response coordinator Dr. Deborah Birx over the weekend advised against residential students — infected with COVID-19 — isolating off campus.

“Please isolate at your college,” Birx said at a news conference. “Do not return home if you’re positive and spread the virus to your family, your aunts, your uncles, your grandparents.”

Birx repeated her warning in a weekly White House call with governors on Tuesday.

“It’s really important that you check in with your university presidents to make sure they also have an isolation and care plan for students who become positive, even if they have moved to online,” Birx said in audio obtained by ABC News.

“It’s really important that these students are continuously tested, isolated and cared for and don’t return to their multi-generational households where they could dramatically increase spread, particularly over the Labor Day weekend,” she continued.

Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation’s top infectious disease expert, also weighed in this week. On NBC’s Today show Wednesday morning, he didn’t mince words when he said sending students home after an outbreak is the “worst thing you could do.”

“Keep them at the university in a place that’s sequestered enough from the other students, but don’t have them go home because they could be spreading it in their home state,” he said.

In communications with students, though, some schools are recommending that students go home to isolate or quarantine.

In materials sent to students who are required to quarantine for 14 days, the University of Mississippi encouraged students “to consult with your family to consider your options for quarantine, including returning to your family residence.” It also advised students that options for isolation “involve temporary relocation to your family home or a designated isolation space on campus.”

“We know that returning home is not advisable for some students if they have a relative who is in a vulnerable group, while others prefer to go home if their situation allows for it,” university spokesman Rod Guajardo told ABC News.

The University of Mississippi has had nearly 350 confirmed cases of COVID-19 among students and employees on its Oxford campus since mid-August, when students began to move into the dorms. Currently, there are 295 active cases — all but nine among students — and 16 active outbreaks are in campus housing, according to data posted on the school’s website. Only 29 students with confirmed cases of COVID-19 are currently in designated isolation spaces.

Some schools have pivoted to virtual learning amid rising cases on campus. Last month, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill ended in-person undergraduate classes after reporting 130 new cases in students in a week. To further help de-densify the campus, undergraduate students living in campus housing could change their residential plans with no penalty.

This week, James Madison University in Harrisonburg, Virginia, became one of the latest schools to go virtual. President Jonathan Alger announced on Tuesday that learning will be primarily online through at least the end of the month due to a “rapid increase in the number of positive cases.” Since classes started on Aug. 24, JMU has had more than 600 confirmed cases, with a positivity rate of almost 17%, according to data on the school’s website. The school will consider a potential return to in-person learning as early as Oct. 5, later this month.

Students were asked to return home by Sept. 7, “in an effort to reduce the number of people on campus,” Alger said. Caitlyn Read, a university spokesperson, told ABC News the university is not sending students home who have COVID-19 and are in isolation, or those who have been in contact with a confirmed case and are quarantining, until they finish their prescribed time.

“We are also recommending that all students quarantine for 14 days when they return home to help reduce the likelihood of viral spread to new communities,” Read said.

JMU students have been encouraged to isolate or quarantine off campus. On its website, the school stated that “students that live both on and off campus are being asked to return home, to their families, if possible to isolate and/or quarantine.” The school currently has 601 active COVID-19 cases, with 89 students in isolation or quarantine beds on campus.

Space may be at a premium for schools isolating or quarantining students. One reason for going remote, Alger said, is the worry that space may run out. With 143 isolation and quarantine beds total, there were 54 available as of Wednesday. In addition to monitoring health trends over the next four weeks, the university will be looking into acquiring additional capacity should they need it in the future, Read said.

The University of Mississippi also is exploring acquiring more space for isolating and quarantining students, including local hotels and apartment complexes off campus. Its current isolation capacity is at nearly 75%.

“The numbers are fluctuating up and down every day, so our goal is to track and analyze the data available to us and then make decisions to help our students however we can,” Guajardo said.

The difficulties that come with isolating and quarantining students — especially those from states on New York’s quarantine travel list — led to Columbia University’s decision to go virtual this fall.

In a letter to students last month, President Lee C. Bollinger noted that “while I have no doubt that we could ensure a safe quarantine period from a public health standpoint, two weeks is a long time to endure isolation, especially for students who will be leaving home for the first time.”

“Conditions for all students in quarantine will be austere, to say the least,” he added.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

David Blaine breaks YouTube viewership record with latest stunt

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David Becker/Getty Images for YouTube Originals(PAGE, Ariz.) — Magician David Blaine has made YouTube history after completing his first stunt in nearly a decade.  Hundreds of thousands turned into watch the daredevil soar over Arizona using only a bunch of balloons — yes, just like the animated Disney-Pixar film Up.

YouTube Originals aired David Blaine Ascension, a nearly three-hour long livestream where the 47-year-old used 52 helium balloons — 42 eight foot balloons and 10 smaller balloons — configured to carry his weight, which is 198 pounds.

Once Blaine went airborne, he soared as high as 25,000 feet — about 4.5 miles — where apparently oxygen levels at that height are half of that you breathe at sea level.

Fans were able to soak in the breathtaking views as Blaine ascended higher and higher thanks to the cameras equipped to his impressive balloon-carrying contraption.  However, they also watched in suspense when Blaine eventually had to let go and plummet back to earth. 

He safely planted his feet back on the ground after deploying his trusty parachute.  

Understandably, this stunt was a long time in the making due to the extreme danger Blaine willingly put himself through.  The magician said he trained for two years to complete his new trick — even securing a pilot’s license, a commercial balloon pilot’s license and skydiver certification to make sure he left no loose ends.

According to YouTube, the livestream broke all sorts of records on the site, such as becoming the most-watched YouTube Originals live event in website history.  At peak viewership, more than 770,000 people were watching at the same time.

So, what does Blaine have up his sleeve next?  Thanks to his YouTube channel, fans can now stay tuned.

By Megan Stone
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Life is "Getting Good" for Lauren Alaina, now that she's 'Getting Over Him' — and telling all

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Mercury NashvilleIf you’ve wanted to know about Lauren Alaina‘s love life, the “Getting Good” hitmaker is ready to open up on her new EP, Getting Over Him

This… is me remembering to love myself when someone else doesn’t…” she says candidly. “I went through two very public breakups. And that’s not really ideal, you know?”

In January of 2019, Lauren and Alex Hopkins called off their engagement, after dating since they were 17. By fall, another split followed, after a four-month relationship with comedian John Crist.

“I answered questions about the first one,” Lauren explains. “I answered nothing about the second one.”

“It was just like another thing that people are talking about,” she recalls. “Everybody had an opinion. And I really felt like no matter what I said, I wouldn’t say the right thing. And I was on national television, on Dancing with the Stars, and it was just not the best time to be going through a breakup.”

“So I decided to write about it,” Lauren continues. “And now I feel like I’m finally giving my opinion… I am really confident and… like, ‘Well, here’s my response. Thank you. Let the music speak for me.'”

Getting Over Him covers Lauren’s full range of emotions.

“I wrote a female empowerment song called ‘If I Was a Beer…'” she laughs. “But ‘What Do You Think Of’ is so sensitive and vulnerable… I felt like if I’m gonna name it Getting Over Him, I[‘ve] got to put all sides of the breakup in there.”

Ultimately, Lauren says taking the “Road Less Traveled” was worth it.

“It was a hard couple of years… But I would rather be alone and have this music than be in a bad relationship and not have it,” she reflects.

Getting Over Him comes out Friday.

By Stephen Hubbard
Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

Family calls for Rochester police to be charged after Black man dies during mental health emergency while in custody

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kali9/iStockBy IVAN PEREIRA, ABC News

The family of a Black man who died after Rochester, New York, police arrested him during a mental health emergency earlier this year is calling for charges after body camera footage showed officers pinning Daniel Prude on the ground and placing a bag over his head before he lost consciousness.

Officers responded to a 911 call made by Prude’s family on March 23 after they said he was going through a mental health issue. The body camera footage first obtained by the Democrat and Chronicle on Wednesday showed several officers approach Prude, 41, who was naked and kneeling on the cold street.

Prude appears in the video to comply with the officers’ orders and questions as they placed him in handcuffs. He began to shout and spit at the officers who then placed a spit bag over his head, the video showed.

Three officers are then seen pushing Prude into the ground and pinning him while he continues to shout and spit and eventually vomit, according to the video and police report. Prude appears to go lifeless minutes later.

An ambulance is later seen arriving and a paramedic attempts to do CPR before Prude is put on a stretcher and driven away. Prude died a week later and the Monroe County medical examiner declared his death a homicide due to “complications of asphyxia,” according to the preliminary autopsy report.

Joe Prude, Daniel’s brother, called the incident “a full-fledged, ongoing cold-blooded murder,” during a news conference Wednesday and called for the officers to be charged for his death.

“I placed a phone call for my brother to get help, not for my brother to get lynched,” he said.

Joe Prude said that his brother was visiting from Chicago and was going through a mental health crisis. The police report said Joe Prude told officers his brother “was using drugs and was suicidal.”

Joe Prude said he admitted his brother to a hospital for help hours before the incident, but Daniel Prude was released after a short time. Joe Prude added he told officers that his brother was not a threat to anyone but himself and asked them not to kill him.

“They knew the mental distress he was in,” he told reporters.

During an earlier news conference, Rochester Police Chief La’Ron Singletary said Wednesday that the officers involved in the incident have not been suspended and denied allegations that his office was trying to cover it up.

“We took the investigation seriously since day one,” Singletary told reporters. “When the incident occurred on March 23 around 3 a.m. on Jefferson Avenue, that morning I ordered a criminal investigation and internal investigation.”

He said the investigation was transferred to the state attorney general’s office, which is the protocol in New York anytime a person is killed while in custody.

Rochester Mayor Lovely Warren called the video “disturbing” and said they are still waiting for Attorney General Letitia James’ office to give a report.

“I know they are working on it and I know that our law and police department have been working with them to move this along,” Warren said at the news conference.

James said in a statement that her office is actively investigating the incident.

“As with every investigation, we will follow the facts of this case and ensure a complete and thorough examination of all relevant parties. We will work tirelessly to provide the transparency and accountability that all our communities deserve,” she said in the statement.

Protesters demanded justice outside the Rochester police station Wednesday for Daniel Prude, who was killed two months before George Floyd died similarly during a filmed arrest in Minneapolis.

“Who do you serve, who do you protect?” the protesters shouted at the police.

Elliot Shields, the attorney representing the Prude family, said they intend to sue “everyone responsible for Daniel’s death.”

“I watched the video with them and it was one of the most difficult experiences of my life watching the family react to seeing their brother and son murdered by RPD while other officers, paramedics and EMTs and no one granted him any basic humanity,” he said at a news conference.

ABC News’ Rachel Katz and Cheryl Gendron contributed to this report.

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.

New York Mets legend Tom Seaver dies at 75 after battle with dementia

No Comments Sports News

manusapon kasosod/iStockBy MARK OSBORNE, ABC News

(NEW YORK) — The greatest pitcher in New York Mets history and one of the greatest in baseball history has died.

Tom Seaver, known as “Tom Terrific,” died Monday at the age of 75. He had battled dementia in recent years, according to the Baseball Hall of Fame.

“We are heartbroken to share that our beloved husband and father has passed away,” his wife Nancy Seaver and daughters, Sarah and Anne, said in a statement. “We send our love out to his fans, as we mourn his loss with you.”

Seaver was elected to the Hall of Fame in 1992, appearing on 425 of 430 ballots.

The flame-throwing righty won three Cy Young Awards (1969, 1973 and 1975) and went to the All-Star Game 12 times.

“I am deeply saddened by the death of Tom Seaver, one of the greatest pitchers of all-time,” MLB Commissioner Rob Manfred said in a statement. “Tom was a gentleman who represented the best of our National Pastime. He was synonymous with the New York Mets and their unforgettable 1969 season. After their improbable World Series Championship, Tom became a household name to baseball fans — a responsibility he carried out with distinction throughout his life.”

Copyright © 2020, ABC Audio. All rights reserved.