Queens College students star in multilingual  
 video welcoming its incoming president 
 BY MARK HALLUM 
 With  the  Institute  for  
 Health Metrics and Evaluation, 
  which the White House  
 recognizes  as  the  primary  
 authority,  predicting  up  to  
 200,000 American lives lost to  
 COVID-19  by  October,  Governor  
 Andrew Cuomo is keeping  
 a strict hand on New York’s  
 reopening. 
 With  Monday  being  the  
 first day of Phase II reopening  
 for New York City and local  
 officials considering how  
 to  manage  restaurants  and  
 bars serving on sidewalks and  
 streets, Cuomo will come down  
 hard on businesses who don’t  
 manage social distancing and  
 masks among patrons through  
 two executive orders. 
 First,  establishments  that  
 disregard the measures to  
 prevent the spread could have  
 their liquor licenses suspended  
 in immediate terms by roving  
 State Liquor Authority inspectors. 
  Second, the governor will  
 grant business certain management  
 rights over sidewalks  
 directly in front of their watering  
 hole giving them the right  
 to uphold mask and distancing  
 requirements. 
 “People in New York City  
 and Long Island; compliance  
 matters. And it’s not just  
 moral, ethical, communal, it’s  
 legal,” Cuomo said. “The numbers  
 are  good  because  we’re  
 doing what we’re supposed to  
 do.” 
 Cuomo again called on the  
 city  government  to  step up  to  
 the plate to help enforce these  
 matters, which Mayor Bill de  
 Blasio  made  announcements  
 toward  this  Thursday  morning  
 as well. Starting Monday,  
 the city, under the guidance  
 of the Department of Transportation, 
  will allow seating  
 on adjacent curbs, sidewalks,  
 backyards, patios, and some of  
 the city’s open streets as outdoor  
 TIMESLEDGER   |22        QNS.COM   |   JUNE 26-JULY 2, 2020 
 seating space. 
 There will be a self-certification  
 process put in place by  
 DOT on the city’s website for  
 restaurants, which the local  
 government hopes will help  
 45,000 hospitality industry  
 workers employed. According  
 to de Blasio and DOT Commissioner  
 Polly Trottenberg,  
 restaurants  will  even  be  able  
 to  occupy  parking  spots,  of  
 which there are about 3 million  
 in the city. 
 Cuomo gave Mayor de Blasio  
 a stern warning earlier in  
 the week after crowds of people  
 already indulging in Phase  
 II  social  life  crowded  streets  
 in the East Village and Upper  
 East Side. Cuomo threatened  
 to put Manhattan and  
 the Hamptons under PAUSE  
 orders  again  if  the  city  did  
 not take control and if cases  
 spiked. 
 While  de  Blasio  pushed  
 back on Cuomo’s threat as an  
 attempt to punish businesses  
 just  trying  to  make  money,  
 today,  he  said  the  city  would  
 work  in  cooperation  with  the  
 State Liquor Authority. 
 Governor  Cuomo  says  the  
 abundance of caution toward  
 the reopening comes for the  
 contemporary  example  of  
 other states such as Arizona,  
 Texas and California which  
 he claims are seeing increased  
 cases  in  accordance  to  loose  
 restrictions. 
 Reach reporter Mark Hallum  
 by e-mail at mhallum@ 
 schnepsmedia.com or by phone  
 at (718) 260–4564. 
 BY CARLOTTA MOHAMED 
 Queens College is marking the start  
 of a new beginning as the school community  
 welcomes  its  incoming  President  
 Frank Wu, who will be be the first  
 Asian-American leader of a CUNY  
 college in the world’s most diverse borough  
 when he takes office on July 1. 
 Queens  College  students  delivered  
 a multilingual welcome to Wu in a  
 new video with a phrase similar to  
 “Welcome  to  Queens  College!”  in  17  
 languages.  
 In total, 83 languages are represented  
 on  campus  by  a  student  body  that  
 identifies  with  nearly  140  ancestries.  
 The languages spoken in the video are  
 American  Sign  Language,  Amharic,  
 Arabic,  Bukharian,  Chinese  (Mandarin), 
   English,  Fanti,  Farsi  (Persian),  
 Greek, Haitian Creole, Hebrew, Italian,  
 Korean, Portuguese, Russian, Spanish  
 and Urdu.  
 Wu, in turn, acknowledged the  
 challenges faced by the college, borough  
 and city during the COVID-19  
 pandemic, and pledged his support  
 going forward.  
 “I  know  that  I  will  be  serving  as  
 president during a very difficult time  
 in the history of our college community, 
  city, state and nation,” Wu said in  
 the video. “The pandemic has forced  
 Queens College to shift to remote  
 learning, created many financial difficulties, 
  and left us concerned about  
 the future. It has also caused profound  
 heartache, with valued members of the  
 Queens College community succumbing  
 to this terrible disease.”  
 “Difficult times often bring out  
 the best in people. I am enormously  
 impressed  with  the  resiliency  and  
 strength of Queens College and the  
 CUNY community,” Wu added. 
 Wu also thanked Interim President  
 William Tramontano, who began leading  
 the college in June 2019 after his  
 predecessor, Félix V. Matos Rodríguez,  
 was appointed chancellor of CUNY.  
 Wu calls leading Queens College, “a  
 dream job,” saying, “In fact, because  
 you were my only choice, this was the  
 only search I was in.”  
 Wu is an American-born son of Chinese  
 immigrants. He was a William L.  
 Prosser distinguished professor at the  
 University of California Hastings College  
 of  the Law. He was unanimously  
 appointed the 11th president of Queens  
 College by the City University of New  
 York’s board of trustees on March 30.  
 Wu received a BA from Johns  
 Hopkins University and a JD with  
 honors  from  the  University  of Michigan. 
   He  completed  the  Management  
 Development Program at the Harvard  
 Graduate School of Education.  
 The first Asian-American to serve  
 as Queens College president — and  
 the first Asian-American to serve as a  
 president of a CUNY college in Queens  
 County — Wu is well-known for breaking  
 barriers and creating opportunities  
 for student success.  
 He was the first Asian-American  
 on the faculty of the law school at historically  
 black Howard University, and  
 spent two years directing its law school  
 clinic. He spent a decade serving on  
 the board of Gallaudet University,  
 which offers higher education to deaf  
 and  hearing-impaired  students.  Prior  
 to  joining  UC  Hastings  as  chancellor  
 and  dean,  an  office  he  held  for  five  
 years, he was the dean of Wayne State  
 University  Law  School  in  Detroit;  he  
 was the first Asian-American in those  
 leadership roles. 
 Liquor licenses to be revoked for  
 businesses shrugging off masks  
 and distancing guidelines: Cuomo 
 
				
/QNS.COM
		/schnepsmedia.com