Covid-19 Live Updates: Students left interference amid last-minute adjustments at U.S. universities.

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The state of North Carolina will change online education and other universities have warned young people when they return to class.

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Tony Awards directors will hold an online rite later this year to honor open programming before the coronavirus pandemic closed Broadway.

As academics return to U.S. campuses, some schools are already hastily rewriting their plans for the fall. The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Michigan and Drexel University will now keep the most of the fall online categories, and Notre Dame and the University of Pittsburgh are among those who have suspended the categories in person for the coming weeks.

Some of these schools have already experienced significant epidemics. The New York Times learned more than 17,000 cases of coronavirus at more than 650 U.S. schools and universities. To the pandemic.

Last-minute settings have left many academics pushed. Some had already moved to campus or signed rents for off-campus housing. Others said they would have to return to elegance when elegance resumed in person.

“I think I probably would have taken a year off, but just because it was all at the last minute, it’s hard to make plans,” said Karthik Jetty, a freshman at Stanford, where he plans to bring freshmen to campus were recently sunk.

Universities have been in favor of this for months, but some points are out of their control.

At Oberlin College, principals postponed the categories in person due to delays in virus testing. At Notre Dame, the giant epidemics attributed to student meetings led the school to suspend categories in person and limit student meetings. But a student newspaper in Notre Dame criticized the university’s arrangements in a front-page essay with the ruthless name “Don’t force us to write obituaries.”

And in Drexel, where the categories were transferred online, officials said decisions through local school districts to maintain categories would have made it difficult for college workers to come to campus with children.

“Despite all our preparation,” said John Fry, President of Drexel, “we have understood that our technique deserves to be evaluated continuously, taking into account new knowledge and conversion conditions.”

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