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Pence to deliver in-person Air Force Academy commencement as much of US remains shutdown amid coronavirus concerns

Pence to deliver in-person Air Force Academy commencement as
much of US remains shutdown amid coronavirus concerns 1
The commencement ceremony, though, won’t look like it has in years past. According to the Air Force Academy, there will be no spectators, cadets will march in six feet apart and sit at least eight feet apart during the ceremony — as will the guests on the stage.
Pence had at one point planned a video announcement, but a spokesperson for the vice president said he decided to travel to Colorado Springs, Colorado, to deliver his remarks because the academy was forging ahead with an in-person ceremony.
The trip marks a rare public outing for a White House that has remained largely grounded in Washington, DC, with Pence and President Donald Trump skipping everything from campaign events to the weekend travel Trump frequently takes to visit his properties in West Palm Beach, Florida, and New Jersey in line with recommendations from federal health experts that Americans avoid all kinds of travel and gatherings larger than 10 to stem the spread of coronavirus.
KFILE: 'Nothing to worry about' and 'it's being contained': How Trump officials downplayed the coronavirus

When Trump and Pence have attended events at the White House, visitors have typically been spaced the recommended six feet apart. The White House also recently announced that anyone expected to come into close contact with the President and vice president would receive a rapid Covid-19 test, and all people entering the White House, including the press, have their temperatures taken.
Trump on Friday praised Pence’s decision to appear at the ceremony, while also announcing his own plans to speak at a West Point commencement next month.
“I think it’s great. If he’s going to make the commencement. So I hear they are going to have a very spread out crowd,” Trump said of Pence’s trip. “I will say they are going to be socially very good. They are going to be very far apart. That’s going to be interesting. I think of going to watch that one. No, they are going to have a good spread, good distance apart. I spoke to Mike about it.”
This year’s class includes 984 senior cadets who will be commissioned as second lieutenants, 90 of whom will serve in the Space Force, according to the academy. An Air Force Academy spokesperson told CNN that there are no cases of the novel coronavirus in the cadet wing.
“While the US Air Force Academy is an institution of higher education we are also a military installation, and unlike most students across the country, our cadets live here and have been in a mostly closed environment for the past 6 weeks,” the spokesperson told CNN. “We have gone to great lengths to keep our cadets healthy. … Because of these measures, we have no (Covid-19) cases in the cadet wing, which gives us confidence in moving forward with a greatly pared down version of our traditional graduation ceremony.”
The Air Force Academy spokesperson said cadets on Saturday will take their oaths knowing full well that many graduates around the country are not able to celebrate their milestones in the same way.
“It’s not the graduation ceremony the class of 2020 has dreamed about for four years,” they said, “but it will allow them to celebrate joining the ranks of the Air and Space Forces together as a class while maintaining the required distance and precautionary measures that have become part of all of our daily lives.”

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