The Harvard Crimson - Volume CL, No. 11

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THE HARVARD CRIMSON

LAST WEEK

APRIL 14, 2023

FAS FACULTY

BOOKS

KENNEDY SCHOOL

SEAS Holds Annual BRIDGE Week

Nadifa Mohamed Discusses Identity

HKS Exploring MPP, MPA Merger

CELEBRATING DIVERSITY. Harvard’s School of Engineering and Applied Sciences held a series of events for an annual celebration of diversity in STEM last week. BRIDGE Week — which stands for Building Relationships, Increasing Diversity, and Growing Engineers — started in 2018 as a partnership between three organizations: the National Society of Black Engineers, Society of Women Engineers, and Society of Hispanic Professional Engineers. The program kicked off Monday with an alumni panel, which discussed diversity and inclusion and offered advice to attendees. BY MERT GEYIKTEPE—CRIMSON STAFF WRITER

NOVEL INSIGHTS. Somali novelist Nadifa Mohamed discussed her latest novel “The Fortune Men” at a Tuesday lecture in Sever Hall. Mohamed joined Harvard History professor Maya R. Jasanoff ’96 in a conversation hosted by the Mahindra Humanities Center as part of the “Writers Speak” series, which was co-sponsored by the History Seminar at the Center for European Studies. Mohamed’s 2010 debut novel “Black Mamba Boy” was awarded the Betty Trask Prize, and her novel “The Fortune Men” was a Booker Prize finalist. BY CHRISTINA M. STRACHN

COMBINING PROGRAMS. Harvard Kennedy School is in the “early stages of exploring” a plan to combine the Master of Public Policy and Master of Public Administration programs into an expanded degree program, HKS Dean Douglas W. Elmendorf announced in an email to students early last month. The merged MPP program would consist of a required core curriculum along with a set of elective classes, Elmendorf wrote in the email, dated March 1. The Kennedy School’s MPA program does not currently have a required core curriculum.

AND CAMILLA WU—CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

BY ASHER J. MONTGOMERY—CRIMSON STAFF WRITER

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The Week in Photos

AROUND THE IVIES DARTMOUTH ENDS COVID-19 VACCINATION REQUIREMENT

SCIENCE CENTER SUSPICIOUS PACKAGE. Harvard University Police Department and Cambridge Police Department responded to a report of a suspicious package in the Science Center plaza. The package was later deemed to be safe. FRANK S.

Dartmouth no longer mandates the COVID-19 vaccination, nor proof of exemption for students, faculty and staff as of Tuesday. According to The Dartmouth, the University still advises everyone to receive the US Center for Disease Control recommended COVID-19 vaccinations. The College will work with healthcare providers to continue to supply vaccines and inform the community of how to find vaccines.

ZHOU—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

THE DARTMOUTH

THC Read more at THECRIMSON.COM

INDIE-ROCK BAND COIN TO HEADLINE 2023 “SLOPE DAY” Cornell’s Slope Day Programming Board announced that the indie-rock band COIN will headline the college’s annual end-of-the-year celebration. The event, held this year on May 10, will also feature EDM duo Snakehips and hiphop duo Coco & Claire Claire. The news received mixed reviews from students. While the organization that plans the event takes student preferences into consideration, the budget limits performers they can realistically hire. THE CORNELL DAILY SUN

PENN WILL INCREASE POSTDOC STIPEND AFTER RESEARCHERS PUSH FOR GREATER BENEFITS The University of Pennsylvania will raise postdoctoral student stipends by 19% after fellows and researchers raised concerns about University benefits. On Tuesday, effective July 1st, the minimum postdoc stipend will be $65,000, an increase from this year’s $54,840. The increase was announced alongside changes to insurance benefits for postdocs that will feature three new options replacing the medical, dental and vision insurance.

JUSTICE FOR FAISAL. Protestors gathered in front of Cambridge City Hall on Monday in protest of the police killing of Sayed Faisal in January of this year. The demonstration, part of a picket from Monday to Friday in front of the building, marked the latest in a series of protests calling for “Justice for Faisal.” The week also included an open mic, iftar, and poster-making session. BY RYAN H. DOAN-NGUYEN­—

NIGHT LIGHTS. The arrival of spring brought with it serene nights along the river. The Weeks Bridge cast light across the Charles. BY SOPHIA C. SCOTT—

BEHIND THE BROADCAST. The Harvard Athletics Department broadcasts home games for 40 of their 42 varsity sports teams. BY SOPHIA C. SCOTT—CRIMSON

CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

PHOTOGRAPHER

THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

YALE WILL OFFER FIRST INDIGENOUS LANGUAGE COURSE IN FALL 2023 This upcoming fall, Yale will offer a course in Cherokee language and culture that will fulfill the language distributional requirement, the first Indigenous language course to do so in the college’s history. The college offered Indigenous languages informally through the Native American Cultural Center for over seven years prior to this decision, the Yale Daily News reported Wednesday. A Cherokee language instructor from the University of Oklahoma Patrick DelPercio will join the University’s faculty to teach the new lecture course. THE YALE DAILY NEWS

HUCTW PICKETING. Members of the Harvard Union of Clerical and Technical Workers picketed outside of Massachusetts Hall on Wednesday. The union frequently holds pickets in Harvard Yard. HUCTW is Harvard’s largest labor union and includes roughly 5,000 employees working across the University. BY LUCY VUONG—CON-

PRITZKER. Billionaire Illinois Governor J.B. Pritzker spoke at the Institute of Politics, where he discussed the influence of big money on politics. BY ADDISON

SCOOTER BAN. Harvard undergraduates expressed frustration with recent enforcement of the University’s micromobility policy, which does not allow electric scooters to be parked inside University buildings. BY CLAIRE YUAN—CRIMSON

TRIBUTING PHOTOGRAPHER

Y. LIU—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

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Articles inside

Harvard Wraps Campaign

6min
pages 16-17

IAN MILLER ON ZOOS, CLIMATE CHANGE, AND THE QUAD

3min
pages 14-16

FIFTEEN QUESTIONS

2min
page 14

In comes “OUT,” an original student musical directed by Kalos K. Chu ’23 and presented by the Harvard College Asian Student Arts Project that incorporates the ingredients which make musicals brilliant without sacrificing sincerity, writes contributing writer Benji L. Pearson. Based on the book of the same name by Chu, music by Ian Chan ’23, and lyrics by JuHye Mun ’23, “OUT” has its main characters perform stunning three-part harmonies in one moment, before play-tripping and laughing at jokes meant as much for each other as they are for the audience in the next. In its short run time at the Agassiz Theatre from April 7 through April 9, “OUT” promises to deliver on the aspects of musical theater that fans enjoy while also telling a story that feels incredibly real.

3min
page 13

BOOKS

4min
page 13

MINA LE YOUTUBE’S FASHION MAVEN

7min
page 12

American Repertory Theater Arrives

2min
page 11

Protesters Decry Cambridge Police Killing of Sayed Faisal in Weeklong Picket at City Hall

3min
page 11

Residents Rally for City Green New Deal

2min
page 11

To the Class of 2027: What the Numbers Don’t Tell You

7min
pages 10-11

What Happens to a Dream Interrupted?

3min
page 9

This Was an Appropriate Police Response

2min
page 9

Swatting and the Systemic Effects of Policing on Campus

3min
page 9

Petition Seeks to Designate Election Day as a University Holiday

2min
page 8

House Renewal Over Budget and Delayed

5min
page 8

Science Center Plaza Evacuated for Suspicious Package

4min
pages 7-8

Behind the Broadcasting of Harvard Varsity Sports Games

1min
page 7

Student Lament Scooter Restrictions

2min
page 7

How the ‘Harvard Plan’ Shaped College Admissions

8min
page 6

Harvard Freshman Competes on ‘Wheel of Fortune’ College Week

1min
page 5

Affiliates Slam Griffin Donation Over Gov. DeSantis Support

3min
page 5

College Committee Talks Campus Culture

2min
page 5

More than 70 Faculty Form Council on Academic Freedom, Co-Led by Pinker

6min
page 4

Harvard DSO to Audit Orgs, Months After HUFPI Dispute

2min
page 4

breaking news

3min
pages 2-3

Students Evacuate After Suspicious Package

1min
pages 1-2

Harvard Affiliates Slam GSAS Renaming

2min
page 1

HLS Professor Jody Freeman Faces Calls to Step Down from ConocoPhillips Board

1min
page 1
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