The Harvard Crimson - Volume CXLIX, No. 38

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The Harvard Crimson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY, EST. 1873

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VOLUME CXLIX, NO. 38 |

CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

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THURSDAY, MARCH 24, 2022

OP ED PAGE 4

SPORTS PAGE 6

SPORTS PAGE 6

We support the dissolution of the fragmented and outdated UC

For softball, spring break included a whirlwind ten games in nine days

Men’s ice hockey to face Minnesota State in first round of NCAA Tournament

Jackson Pledges to Recuse from SFFA Case Allston Group Critcizes Harvard By CARA J. CHANG and ISABELLA B. CHO CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson ’92 said Wednesday she would recuse herself from a case challenging affirmative action at Harvard if she is confirmed to the bench before the court takes it up this fall. Jackson, a graduate of Harvard College and Harvard Law School, will complete a six-year term on the Harvard Board of Overseers in the spring. Questioned about the potential conflict of interest on Wednesday, she said she would recuse herself from the marquee affirmative action case justices are set to hear in the fall challenging Harvard College’s race-conscious admissions policies. “If you’re confirmed, do you intend to recuse [yourself] from this lawsuit?” Senator Ted Cruz (R-Texas) asked. “That is my plan, senator,” Jackson said. In January, the Supreme Court agreed to take up a pair of lawsuits challenging race-conscious admissions processes at Harvard and the Universi­

ty of North Carolina that could determine the fate of affirmative action policies in American higher education. Jackson’s exchange with Cruz — which came during the third day of her marathon confirmation hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee — marked the first time she has publicly pledged to recuse herself from the case if confirmed. Experts are split over whether Jackson’s role on the board would warrant a recusal, with some saying her ties to Harvard — as a member of the Board of Overseers, an alumna, and a parent with a daughter in the College’s Class of 2026 — create a conflict of interest. Others argue that because she did not craft Harvard’s admissions policies, she would not have to recuse herself. As a lower court judge, Jackson recused herself in two other cases due to her role on Harvard’s governing board. New York University Law Professor Stephen Gillers said he was “surprised” by Jackson’s announcement. She likely felt the public would doubt her

SEE JACKSON PAGE 3

The Coalition for a Just Allston and Brighton condemned Harvard’s plans to expand By MICHAL GOLDSTEIN CRIMSON STAFF WRITER ­

and conclude by January. Renovations on Newell, home to the men’s crew teams, will start in September and are expected to finish by November 2023. Troville said the renovating team is planning to build energy-efficient air conditioning systems that use natural wind currents from the Charles River and install solar panels during upgrades to the buildings’ roofs. The renovations will also include an upgrade to LED lighting, among other changes. “Planned work, which is expected to commence later this year, includes interior renovations for new training facilities, locker rooms and bathrooms, significant interior and exterior accessibility improvements, the replacement of the terracotta roof tiles, masonry cleaning and repair, storm drainage improvements, and

The Coalition for a Just Allston and Brighton, a group of Allston-Brighton residents and non-profit organizations, led a protest condemning Harvard’s expansion plans in the Allston-Brighton neighborhood earlier this month. Boston City Councilor Elizabeth A. “Liz” Breadon and Massachusetts State Representatives Michael J. Moran and Kevin G. Honan attended the demonstration, which came amid heightened tensions between Allston-Brighton residents and Harvard regarding the University’s encroachment across the river. Shortly before, Harvard and CJAB each penned a letter to recently-elected Boston Mayor Michelle Wu ’07 painting starkly different pictures of the University’s expansion. The current state of Harvard’s relationship with Allston is the culmination of a long and complex history. In the late 1980s, Harvard began expanding its Allston campus, acquiring 52.6 acres of land in eight years through anonymous purchases made by the Beal Companies. In a letter to then-Harvard President Neil Rudestine, Boston’s mayor at the time, Thomas M. Menino, called Harvard’s acquisition strategy “the highest level of arrogance seen in our city in many years.’” As of this year, Harvard and its subsidiaries own roughly one third of the land in Allston. The wave of development includes the recently-completed $1 billion Science and Engineering Complex, more than two dozen properties on or around

SEE BOATHOUSES PAGE 3

SEE ALLSTON PAGE 5

Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson ‘92 testifies in front of the Senate Judiciary Committee during her confirmation hearing on Capitol Hill. AP PHOTO / ANDREW HARNIK

Boathouses to Undergo Changes By CARRIE HSU CRIMSON STAFF WRITER ­

The historic Weld boathouse, home to Radcliffe Women’s Crew, before its first major renovations to the interior and exterior since its construction in 1907. JULIAN J. GIORDANO—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

Harvard will commence renovations on its historic Weld and Newell Boathouses this year in what is planned to be the most significant update to the buildings since their construction more than a century ago. The University announced its plans for the project in the February release of its 2021 Town Gown report, which details the University’s sustainability, diversity, and infrastructure goals. The report revealed the renewal project would include extensive interior and exterior improvements, as well as new sustainability features. Senior Associate Athletics Director Timothy P. “Tim” Troville said the renovations to the Weld Boathouse, which houses the women’s teams, are expected to begin around June 1

IOP Panel Promotes Allen Reflects on Her Gubernatorial Campaign Changes for Equity By YUSUF S. MIAN and CHARLOTTE P. RITZ-JACK CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

By AIDA BARADARI and KATE DELVAL GONZALEZ CONTRIBUTING WRITERS

A panel of philanthropic leaders discussed efforts to promote racial justice in philanthropy at a virtual event hosted Wednesday by the Harvard Institute of Politics. The panel — titled “Advancing Racial Justice in Philanthropy: Aspiration or Reality?” — featured Libra Foundation Executive Director Crystal Hayling, Solidaire Network Executive Director Rajasvini Bhansali, and Borealis Philanthropy President Amoretta Morris. The panelists discussed the importance of philanthropy and called for change to promote equity. Bhansali, an advocate for grassroot-led social movements, said marginalized groups are often shut out of mainstream philanthropy. “When people of color, women of color, gender non-conforming people start to lead, there is a big dangerous feeling ­

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

Harvard Today 2

of like, the structure has shifted,” Bhansali said. “In philanthropy now… communities are treated as proxies, as subcontractors, as ones that are going to enact our boardroom wisdom to some kind of strategy that helps us check a box,” she added. Hayling said philanthropy is an important mechanism for change. “It is organizing money to move it, to organize people,” she said. “Because ultimately, those are the folks that are going to beat the corporate money, the accumulated wealth, the exploitative wealth that’s in our communities.” She added it is important to “generate joy as we do work” to avoid burnout. “I kind of came into this work with the belief that social change work was about pushing through and grinding harder,” Hayling said. “And I’ve been taught by people in movement that that won’t work. That leads to burnout, and that leads to

SEE IOP PAGE 3

News 3

Editorial 4

Following her recent campaign for Governor of Massachusetts, Harvard Government professor Danielle S. Allen is set to return to as director of the Edmond J. Safra Center for Ethics for the 2022-2023 academic year. Allen looked back on her run for office and discussed her future at Harvard in an interview Wednesday, five weeks after suspending her campaign. She had stepped back from her roles on campus during the race to maintain a separation between her political work and the University. “It really meant I was sort of out of touch with people, and so it’s a real pleasure to reconnect and just honestly spend time hearing what people have been up to for the past few years,” Allen said. Allen said she is guided by her “life’s purpose” of furthering American democracy and saw running for office as the way to do so. “Across all my areas of work, you’ll see me doing the same thing,” she said. “You’ll see me working on democracy in ­

Sports 6

Harvard Government professor Danielle S. Allen launched her campaign for governor of Massachusetts last June. PHOTO COURTESY OF SHAWN MILLER VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS

scholarly terms, you’ll see me working on housing, you’ll see me working on justice reform, you’ll see me working on civic education.” However, asked whether she would seek political office again in the future, she said she will assess the direction her career must take as the needs of the na-

TODAY’S FORECAST

tion’s democracy change. “There’s a lot of work to do, and over time, I will be reconfiguring my portfolio to get that work done, depending on opportunities and depending on necessities,” she said. Asked about her bid for the Commonwealth’s highest office, Allen was pragmatic about

RAINY High: 45 Low: 42

the need for an early end to the campaign. “The simple fact of the matter is that in the early parts of the caucus process, we did not succeed in hitting our targets,” Allen said. “And the math was just such that there was not a

SEE ALLEN PAGE 3

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THE HARVARD CRIMSON |

MARCH 24, 2022

PAGE 2

HARVARD TODAY

For Lunch Pork Sausage Sub Rosemary Roasted Chicken Beyond Sausage

For Dinner Beef and Vegetable Stir-Fry Teriyaki Chicken Vegetable Potstickers

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Join the ClimateHack.AI initiative datathon where you connect with students passionate about artificial intelligence from all around the world. You’ll gain insight into cutting-edge machine learning techniques!

Ukraine Regains Territory From Russian Army

Ukraine recaptured the town of Makariv and other ground near the capital of Kyiv, and the Ukrainian army is making progress in pushing back Russian forces in the south. The United Kingdom Ministry of Defense reported that Russian troops are moving in from the north and south of Ukraine “envelop Ukrainian forces in the east of the country.”

EFoS: Psychology William James Hall 218, 2 p.m.-4:00 p.m.

FLP Present: Mindful Eating with Dr. Lilian Cheung Virtual 5 p.m.-6:00 p.m. Meet Dr. Lilian Cheung, a lecturer and the Director of Health Promotion & Communication at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health’s Department of Nutrition. Listen as she discusses her latest book, “Savor: Mindful Eating, Mindful Life,” that promotes healthy lifestyles for chronic disease prevention and control. Don’t forget to register in advance!efficiently and effectively.

Cloudy Skies over Harvard’s O’Donnell Field. JULIAN J. JIORDANO—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

AROUND THE IVIES CORNELL: Campus Moves To Yellow Alert 10 Days After Loosened Mask Requirements —THE CORNELL DAILY SUN COLUMBIA: Construction Smoke Forces Hundreds to Evacuate from McBain Hall —THE COLUMBIA SPECTATOR

BROWN: Professor Leah VanWey Appointed Dean of Faculty —THE BROWN DAILY HERALD PENN: Cheat Codes, Flo Milli Set to Headline 2022 Spring Fling Concert —THE DAILY PENNSYLVANIAN

Madeleine Albright, America’s first female Secretary of State, died from cancer at the age of 84. Albright served as former president Bill Clinton’s ambassador to the United Nations and as United States Secretary of State during Clinton’s second term. Clinton, President Joe Biden, and other influential political figures who worked alongside her have shared their tributes.

Omicron BA.2 Expected to be Dominant Variant in U.S., but May Not Cause Another Surge

The new subvariant of Covid-19, Omicron BA.2, has been found to be 80 percent faster than the original Omicron variant and is expected to become the most common variant in the United States. However, White House chief medical advisor Anthony Fauci said that while there will be an increase in Covid-19 case numbers, he does not expect another surge.

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Calling all first-years! Thinking of concentrating in Psychology? Join Professors Jill Hooley and Matthew Nock to discuss what a concentration in Psychology could look like.

Madeleine Albright Dies At 84

205 In Isolation

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285 1.71% 76%

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ON THIS DAY IN HISTORY House Food Fails in HUC Survey

A poll conducted by the Harvard Undergraduate Council found that only three percent of students found House food excellent. More than one-third of students found it poor. March 24, 1969

New Dorm for Freshmen To Go Up

Ward M. Canaday, Class of 1907, anonymously donated three million dollars to build a new freshman dorm. Canaday’s donation was the largest anonymous donation made to Harvard campus at this time. March 24, 1973

THE UNIVERSITY DAILY, EST. 1873

The Harvard Crimson Raquel Coronell Uribe ’22-’23 Associate Managing Editors Kelsey J. Griffin ’23 President Taylor C. Peterman ’23-’24 Jasper G. Goodman ’23 Associate Business Managers Managing Editor Taia M.Y. Cheng ’23-’24 Isabelle L. Guillaume ’24 Amy X. Zhou ’23 Business Manager Editorial Chairs Guillermo S. Hava ’23-24 Orlee G.S. Marini-Rapoport ’23-24

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Sports Chairs Alexandra N. Wilson ’23-’24 Griffin H. Wong ’24

Copyright 2022, The Harvard Crimson (USPS 236-560). No articles, editorials, cartoons or any part thereof appearing in The Crimson may be reproduced in any form without the express written permission of the President. The Associated Press holds the right to reprint any materials published in The Crimson. The Crimson is a non-profit, independent corporation, founded in 1873 and incorporated in 1967. Second-class postage paid in Boston, Massachusetts. Published Monday through Friday except holidays and during vacations, three times weekly during reading and exam periods by The Harvard Crimson Inc., 14 Plympton St., Cambridge, Mass. 02138 Weather icons made by Freepik, Yannick, Situ Herrera, OCHA, SimpleIcon, Catalin Fertu from flaticon.com is licensed by CC BY 3.0.

CORRECTIONS The Harvard Crimson is committed to accuracy in its reporting. Factual errors are corrected promptly on this page. Readers with information about errors are asked to e-mail the managing editor at managingeditor@thecrimson.com.


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THE HARVARD CRIMSON |

MARCH 24, 2022

BOATHOUSES FROM PAGE 1

IOP FROM PAGE 1

Boathouses to be Renovated

Panel Promotes Racial Justice

replacement of the existing ramps and docks which have reached the end of their useful life,” Harvard spokesperson Amy Kamosa wrote in an email. Plans for the renovations started in 2013 and went through several revisions following feedback from the Athletics department, alumni, and coaches, Troville said. The project was brought to the Harvard Corporation for approval after a fundraising initiative collected the necessary funds to complete the updates. Liz O’Leary, head coach of the women’s heavyweight crew team, attributed the success of the fundraising efforts to philanthropy from alumni, parents, and friends of Harvard and Radcliffe rowing.

“It’s been recognized that both the boathouses, Newell and Weld, need love and attention,” she said. Troville added that the pandemic caused “minor delays” but ultimately allowed the timeframe of the construction projects to “tighten up” from two calendar years to 18 months. He admitted the rowing teams will be “slightly inconvenienced” by the projects. During construction, the teams will have to rely on temporary docks and available parts of the boathouses. “There’ll be some minor changes,” Troville said. “But I think it’ll be short in duration.” He reassured that the boathouses will “maintain the charm and character” of their

current appearance with the addition of new amenities, such as hot water in their showers and functional plumbing. “The University’s renewal of the Weld and Newell Boathouses will address much needed repair and restoration of these historic and iconic buildings,” Kamosa wrote. “Both projects are being carefully planned to ensure that Harvard’s rowing programs have uninterrupted water access during construction, and renewed facilities will enable equitable usage.” O’Leary said her team would “find another home” while the boathouses undergo renovations. She was optimistic that the team would adapt to any disruptions caused by the con-

JACKSON FROM PAGE 1

struction. “You turn it into a positive, and you think about how you’re going on a little adventure here — we’re going to go row out of a different boathouse,” O’Leary said. “Things will be different, but that’s okay.” Troville said the Athletics department is eager to renovate the iconic, century-old boathouses. “I think when you think of springtime, you think of the crew boats rowing on the Charles,” he said. “And so we’re very excited to be able to renovate these buildings and make sure that they last another 75 to 100 years.” Troville added. carrie.hsu@thecrimson.com

bitterness, and it leads to fighting.” In an interview, Morris said higher education institutions have a responsibility “to equip people with the skills to be antiracist actors.” “When I think about what the responsibility is for the higher education institutions, I am thinking about the responsibility to equip every single student with the skills to understand how structural racism shows up in our society, in our communities, in policies, and in institutions,” she said. “I absolutely believe that change is possible in this sec-

tor,” she added of philanthropy. “And I absolutely believe that change is possible in the world.” In an interview, Morris offered an optimistic view of the future of philanthropy. “As long as we are connected and in community, and not feeling like the change can be made alone or by ourselves, but that the power of movement— the power of transformation— comes in community, and it comes when we’re working together,” she said. “So my advice to people is to join an organization, get to work, and stay hopeful.”

ALLEN FROM PAGE 1

Jackson Says She Would Not Danielle Allen Reflects on Rule on SFFA v. Harvard Case Gubernatorial Campaign impartiality in the case, he said Gabe Roth, executive director of watchdog group Fix the Court, said he was surprised by how swiftly the matter was dealt with in the hearing. He added that she made “the right call” in pledging not to rule on the case. “It tamps down any speculation,” he said. “It’s one thing that’s not hanging over her head and isn’t hanging out there in terms of more questions and news stories.” Stetson Law professor Louis J. Virelli III said the issue displayed “the heightened role that recusal is playing in the selection process.” “It’s evidence that recusal is here to stay as an issue in at least public perception of the court

and its conduct,” Virelli said. Experts agreed Jackson’s recusal is likely to have little impact on the outcome of the case, given the court’s six-justice conservative majority. If confirmed, Jackson would replace Justice Stephen G. Breyer, who was appointed in 1994 by President Bill Clinton. The court will hear the Harvard lawsuit, brought by the anti-affirmative action group Students for Fair Admissions, jointly alongside a similar suit filed against UNC. During Wednesday’s hearing, Jackson did not specify whether she would rule on the UNC case. “Any conflicts of interest present in the Harvard case are not present in the North Caroli-

na case,” Virelli said. Harvard Law School professor Noah R. Feldman said the court will likely decide the cases separately so Jackson can participate in the UNC case. “Ordinarily, the justices will go to efforts to enable justices to participate in cases that they are permitted to participate in,” he said. “These cases were separately litigated, and there’s no need to join them. It’s up to the discretion of the court to decide whether cases are going to be joined or not joined.” “If it did not happen, that would be an unprecedented example of a lack of collegiality,” Feldman added. cara.chang@thecrimson.com isabella.cho@thecrimson.com

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path to continue pursuing.” She said Massachusetts “has room for improvement,” reiterating her previous claims that the state’s primary system shuts out non-traditional candidates. “As it happens, we have the most restrictive ballot access process in the country,” she said. “And it’s time for us to see that and say that and figure out how we can live up to our own standards for an inclusive 21st century democracy.” Even as she leaves politics and returns to academia, Allen said she will continue working on the same issues she did as a candidate, only from a different angle. She said she sees her role at the Safra Center as another way to help improve the health

of American democracy.

Across all my areas of work, you’ll see me doing the same thing. You’ll see me working on democracy in scholarly terms. Danielle S. Allen Government professor

“We’re very proud of the work that we do at the Safra Center, making sure that questions of ethics are at the table for every kind of policy making

conversation,” she said. As she comes back to Harvard, Allen already has a plan for the shape her work will take. Aside from her work with the Safra Center, she will teach a class at the Harvard Kennedy School next spring titled “Justice By The Means of Democracy” — a phrase she consistently used in the interview to describe her life’s purpose. “There’s a heck of a lot of work to do helping people really sort of deeply understand what it means to put questions of ethics and core values — human dignity — at the center of policymaking,” she said. yusuf.mian@thecrimson.com charlotte.ritz-jack@thecrimson.com


THE HARVARD CRIMSON |

MARCH 24, 2022

PAGE 4

EDITORIAL OP-ED

OP-ED

Vote Yes for Change: A New ActionOriented Student Association

HUDM: Harvard University Dining Monopoly

By LYLENA D. ESTABINE, SHRUTI GAUTAM, and BEN A. RAY

T

he Harvard Undergraduate Council was originally established, as many things are at Harvard, through a committee process approved by the administration and instituted through faculty legislation in 1982. While a referendum was held for students to vote on the UC’s creation, it was bankrolled by an administration-funded publicity drive. In the 40 years since then, it has achieved progress in some areas. In recent years, however, the UC has been the source of more grief and embarrassment than school pride. Frustrations with the system have been widely felt throughout the student body, with only 17 percent of Harvard seniors approving of their UC President and Vice-President in 2021. These frustrations are enhanced by the fact that the UC is funded by part of the $200 student activities fee undergraduates pay each year. The UC has also faced financial scrutiny; Risk Management and Audit Services have been called in to conduct a thorough investigation of the organization’s methods and monetary decisions after an overwhelmingly large amount of financial allegations during the previous UC election. Though there have been a few victories over the years, overall the UC has failed the student body. Its flawed, inherently confrontational structure — one previously created by administrators — has made it difficult for the UC to organize students and make long-lasting change. Generating sustainable solutions is not a core aspect of the current, and outdated, UC model. But students are not complacent – they want an improved system. That is one of the reasons they gave the UC a “vote of no confidence” and elected the current president and vice-president in last November’s UC presidential election. It was from this same desire for change that a group of students assembled to write a new constitution. This group of students were tasked with one key question: if we were to cre-

ate an inclusive, open, and effective student government at Harvard today, what would it look like? Twice a week for several months, these students — firstyears and upperclassmen, international and domestic students, athletes and non-athletes, and students from a diverse array cultural backgrounds — debated and discussed topics ranging from the high-level goals of a body to the nitty gritty details of club financing and elections. Talking with students, UC members, professors, and other organizations around Harvard’s campus, they created an innovative new system for student advocacy: the Harvard Undergraduate Association.

care about issues would be able to meet with administrators through the HUA’s connections, allowing for the new student association to give a platform to more students, rather than the current structure of speaking for those who can speak for themselves. The new structure would allow any student to partake in the student association’s work in an open, transparent, and student-centric model. The HUA is designed to promote student body participation — this would make strong and successful advocacy possible. Volunteer participation would also be a constant litmus test of the efficacy of the organization, aiming to bolster legitimacy and have a group that truly represents the student body’s voice. If this new constitution is ratified, the HUA will immediately launch specific measures that are in alignment with its values. Students will be partially refunded with the current withheld UC funds. Club applications and funding will be streamlined and more flexible, allowing for clubs to start during different times of the academic year and funding processes to be tailored to clubs’ needs. Also, by integrating specific teams into the structure of the HUA, a multitude of issues can get deserving attention, unlike the current model that pushes different issues to the back for the sake of parliamentary procedures. Harvard is one of the premier institutions of higher learning in the world. Why shouldn’t our student association represent the caliber of students we have? As a volunteer-driven student association, the HUA will differ from the UC with the student body’s direct participation, becoming the first student association at Harvard created entirely by students for students. We support the new constitution and a dissolution of the fragmented and outdated UC.

We support the new constitution and a dissolution of the fragmented and outdated UC The HUA constitution is modeled after highly successful student associations worldwide, specifically the University of Sheffield’s that has an approval rating of over 90 percent. Rather than electing all of its members, membership of the HUA would be open to anyone who would like to join. This larger body of members would then be organized into teams — such as academics, residential life, or well-being — that focus on tackling key issues at Harvard. Annual school-wide elections would be used to determine the officers who would lead each of these teams, and two co-presidents who would ensure the student association continues to represent students’ needs. Electing officers for a particular team would lead to campaigns that are both policy-focused and practically more achievable. Tools such as referenda, sortition, and digital democracy would be used to ensure accountability and democratic legitimacy when the HUA would make policy decisions. The HUA would take direct action as a student advocacy group. Students who

— LyLena D. Estabine ’24 is a Sociology concentrator in Lowell House. Shruti Gautam ’25 lives in Hurlbut Hall. Ben A. Ray ’24 is an Applied Mathematics concentrator in Mather House.

Submit an Op-Ed Today! The Crimson @thecrimson

COLUMN

Black is Beautiful: The Legacy of Kwame Brathwaite Onyx E. Ewa ALL BLACK EVERYTHING

M

y first exposure to Kwame Brathwaite’s work was in 2019 at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston as part of an exhibit titled “Icons of Style: A Century of Fashion Photography.” A black wall was printed with the words “Black Is Beautiful,” occupying the entire space from floor-toceiling. Before attending this exhibit, I had known nothing about the photographer, but the striking photographs (and the impact of the slogan I had heard hundreds of times before) prompted an ongoing interest in his work. This past summer, I went to the Blanton Museum of Art in Austin, Texas to see “Black Is Beautiful: The Photography of Kwame Brathwaite,” and I was incredibly moved by the glamour and depth of his work. The exhibit tells the story of Brathwaite’s illustrious career through his depictions of the Black art and jazz scene in Harlem. Images of Muhammad Ali, Nina Simone,Miles Davis, and countless others dress the walls. Though he photographed some of the most influential Black artists, musicians, and cultural figures of the 1950s and 1960s, and though he is credited with popularizing the phrase “Black is Beautiful,” Kwame Brathwaite remained largely unknown until the past decade. His work experienced a resurgence due to his own retellings of his life, in addition to the work of the brilliant Black cultural scholar Tanisha C. Ford, who wrote the catalog for the current “Black is Beautiful” traveling exhibit. Brathwaite and his brother, Elombe Brath, founded the African Jazz Art Society and Studios in 1956. The organization was a collective of photogra-

phers, musicians, fashion designers, dancers, artists, and writers that centered its values around Pan-African politics. This group would lead to the start of Brathwaite’s photography career. He later worked with members of AJASS to found Grandassa Models, a group of diverse Black women models who aimed to both contest the images of white models featured in mainstream U.S. publications, and also to contest the exclusion of dark-skinned, natural-haired models in Black-owned publications like Ebony Magazine as well. AJASS and the Grandassa Models produced a series of fashion shows, the first of which was titled “Naturally ’62: The Original African Coiffure and Fashion Extravaganza Designed to Restore Our Racial Pride and Standards.” In addition to celebrating Black women’s beauty, the Grandassa Models also hoped to change Black American perceptions of Africa as being primitive by wearing African and African-inspired clothes and hairstyles that demonstrated Africa’s vibrance and cosmopolitanism. While most of Brathwaite’s earlier photographs had been in black-and-white, he decided to shoot some of the Naturally shows in color to better display the range of shades of Black skin and the vibrant colors of the garments. Brathwaite’s work is an indispensable visual contribution to the “Black is Beautiful” ideology. His images and his work with AJASS and Grandassa produced a shift in mainstream perceptions of what constitutes Blackness. More Black women began to embrace natural hair as a result of his artistic advocacy and his undeniably beautiful portraits of natural-haired Black women. His vision led to increased diversity of models in Black publications, and

eventually in mainstream U.S. and global publications as well. As an avid consumer of fashion magazines, the diversity in beauty that I see (in part due to Brathwaite’s advocacy) is incredibly impactful.

Brathwaite’s work is an indispensable visual contribution. Seeing people like myself represented in glossy pages reminds me of my own beauty, and it builds a relationship between myself and the media I consume. One of my favorite images of Brathwaite’s is part of a past exhibit called “Changing Times” at the Phillip Martin Gallery in Los Angeles. In the photograph, a Black woman with an afro is placed against a black-gray background, in sharp relief against the diffuse light that illuminates her face. She is twisted so that her back faces the camera, and we see her face at an angle. There are flecks of gold glitter that seem to be emanating from her figure, and she leans into herself, eyes closed, lips parted, head slightly back, and she seems to be ascending—to where, we’re unsure. This image, to me, so clearly displays the magical empowerment that comes along with the ability to recognize the inherent beauty and power we all hold. The woman in the image seems to be in her own elegant, soft, world, untroubled by the world’s piercing eyes. —Onyx E. Ewa ’24 is an Art, Film, and Visual Studies concentrator in Winthrop House. Their column “All Black Everything” appears on alternate Thursdays.

By KANISHKA J. REDDY

H

arvard must reevaluate its undergraduate dining program. The College’s single, unlimited dining plan is restrictive, inflexible, and unreasonable — in terms of both organization and price. The pandemic has highlighted these shortcomings of undergraduate dining at Harvard, while at the same time presenting an opportunity to implement positive changes. Of the 98 percent of undergraduate students who live on campus, all must subscribe to the $7,236 mandatory meal plan. In a standard school year, this amounts to a minimum of about $33.50 a day — students who get to school later or whose finals end earlier could end up paying more than $36. This dining program is nothing short of an exploitative monopoly. Because an off-campus community is lacking, freshmen are ordinarily required to live on campus, and social life is centered around the on-campus experience. Students have no choice but to pay.

The College’s single, unlimited dining plan is restrictive, inflexible, and unreasonable — in terms of both organization and price. The College says it requires the unlimited meal plan to foster a central community experience within each House. But community through dining can be nurtured without charging for 21 meals a week — especially since many students don’t sit for every meal in the dining hall anyways. In the mornings, many students stop by only for a quick bite at breakfast or skip the meal altogether. According to Harvard University Dining Services, only 40 percent of students attend breakfast. Similarly, during lunchtime, returning to their own house isn’t possible for all students. Students with tight schedules and those who live in the Quad or in houses with shorter lunch windows might have no other choice than to eat out. And for dinner, students often want to catch up with friends. Even if they want to use a meal swipe, interhouse dining is restrictive, and some houses ban first-years entirely. The rigid dining plan can force bonding with friends outside your house to happen outside of campus altogether — and cost money. Because Harvard operates what is effectively a monopoly on dining, there is little students can do to control their dining experience. Students have been left at the College’s often nonsensical whims during the pandemic. During the 2020 fall semester, when the per diem rate was as high as $42 because of reduced time on campus, dining halls operated with a limited menu. Hot food was not served until mid-October. Breakfast was served cold throughout the semester. Moreover, food could not be eaten in the dining hall, so many meals were taken in students’ suites (or worse, singles). Besides the pandemic, other atypical situations have left many Harvard students hungry and out of home. Last fall, Adams House dining hall was closed for two weeks because of a fruit fly infestation. There’s no saying what dining restrictions the future may hold, either. During the first two weeks of this semester, all dining halls were available only for grab-and-go as students traveled back to campus. New variants or other unexpected circumstances could send students back to grab-and-go meals, while restaurants around campus remain open.

Students should not be forced to either dine in their own houses or effectively pay a fee each time they venture outside their house to grab a meal with friends. Creating community is not a sufficient reason to require a universal, complete meal plan at today’s Harvard, where pandemic-related disruptions have laid bare the monopolistic nature of the College’s dining program. A more flexible plan, where students are given a required floor fee of 10 or so weekly meals, would allow students greater freedom while still encouraging bonding within their house or Annenberg, the freshman dining hall. Alternatively, if such a program proved too volatile, the College could offer those living on campus the same arrangement they do to off-campus students: a choice between plans of five, 10, or all 21 meals per week. Moreover, when students who receive financial aid eat out, they could be reimbursed at a rate tied to their level of aid and the cost of a meal swipe. Students of all financial backgrounds would then be free to choose when, where, and how their money would be spent. While we should all be grateful for the hard work and enthusiasm of our HUDS employees, students should not be forced to either dine in their own houses or effectively pay a fee each time they venture outside their house to grab a meal with friends. The dining program is unnecessary to its goal of fostering community at Harvard and monopolistic in nature. It must go. —Kanishka J. Reddy ’24, a Crimson Editorial editor, is a Government concentrator in Adams House.


PAGE 5

THE HARVARD CRIMSON |

MARCH 24, 2022

ALLSTON FROM PAGE 1

Allston Residents Critique Harvard Developments Western Avenue, and the proposed Enterprise Research Campus, which has been the subject of growing criticisms by Allston residents. Developed by Tishman Speyer, the ERC, if approved, would be home to a hotel and conference center, a restaurant, housing units, public open space, retail use, and research-focused office and lab space. On Feb. 23, University Vice President Katherine N. Lapp sent a six-page letter to Wu, Breadon, Moran, Honan, and the Harvard-Allston Task Force, detailing Harvard and Tishman Speyer’s commitment to the Allston-Brighton neighborhood through the ERC. “Harvard’s long-term goal for the ERC and the Beacon Park Yard is to transform these obsolete and largely impermeable industrial properties into new, vibrant, equitable and welcoming districts that will complement and enrich the Allston-Brighton community,” Lapp wrote. She went on to enumerate a set of University commitments to engage Allston residents and provide open space, affordable housing, workforce development, and transportation through the ERC development. CJAB’s own letter to Wu — a 19-page manifesto outlining a set of demands for Harvard’s developments in Allston — calls on the University to better fulfill such promises. “[CJAB] fears the replication of the Seaport in Allston-Brighton, with all its attendant issues — unaffordable, exclusionary housing; lack of opportunity for local business; horrendous traffic congestion; and lack of resilience in the face of our ongoing climate crisis,” the letter reads. “We fear that Harvard will perpetuate Boston’s existing economic and racial segregation in the construction of this new

neighborhood.” A major point of contention between the two letters is the University’s provision of affordable housing and greenspace in its developments. In the letter, Lapp affirms Harvard’s commitment to ensure that 20 percent of ERC housing units be income-restricted. Meanwhile, the CJAB letter calls on Harvard to guarantee that 33 percent of the housing units in its Allston-Brighton residential developments be income-restricted. Harvard’s letter also maintains that the ERC will include “parks, plazas, greenways and streetscapes” and commits 20 percent of the total developable land area to publicly accessible open space. The letter boasts the ERC’s proposed “Greenway,” a large area of open space leading through the ERC to the Charles River. But the CJAB letter urges Harvard to grant the “permanent easement of rights” of the ERC’s Greenway to the City of Boston, which would ensure that the greenspace will not be built upon in the future. In a footnote in her letter, Lapp said the imposition of easements would be “unnecessary” and “extremely burdensome.” In an emailed statement, a spokesperson for the Boston Mayor’s Office affirmed Wu’s commitment to engaging and protecting the interests of Allston residents. “Mayor Wu is committed to listening to and incorporating the input of community members into current and future projects, to ensure development in the Allston area helps build a successful urban neighborhood for people who call the Allston community home,” the statement reads. Roughly 150 people attended CJAB’s March 15 rally, including representatives from 34

The Enterprise Research Campus in Allston is a University development that seeks to serve as a venue for collaboration between Harvard-affiliated research projects and research companies. SANTIAGO A. SALDIVAR—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

groups, according to Breadon, who said she was “very encouraged” by the movement. “I really feel we’re sending a message to Harvard that it’s really important that they engage with the community and the co-creators of a resilient, inclusive and equitable neighborhood,” Breadon said. Kevin M. Carragee, an organizer for CJAB, said Harvard’s expansion has implications for affordable housing in the neighborhood. “The housing crisis in the city of Boston is influenced by a whole set of actors, very complex actors,” Carragee said. “But does Harvard play a contribut-

HUPD Closes Investigation into Racism Against Cheng By J. SELLERS HILL CRIMSON STAFF WRITER

The Harvard University Police Department closed its investigation into a racist attack against Undergraduate Council President Michael Y. Cheng ’22 that took place in Quincy House last month. After two signs calling Cheng a racist anti-Asian slur and bearing the phrase “SAVE THE UC” were discovered on Cheng’s door, HUPD began investigating the incident as a “bias-related suspicious act.” In a pair of emails to The Crimson Wednesday, HUPD spokesperson Steven G. Catalano confirmed the investigation had concluded. He did not disclose if a perpetrator had been identified.

“The investigation is closed,” Catalano wrote. Asked for clarification on the results of the inquiry, he wrote, “It was closed at the conclusion of the investigation.” Overwhelming support for Cheng poured in following the attack last month. Quincy House Faculty Deans Eric Beerbohm and Leslie J. Duhaylongsod penned a statement of support, and the Harvard-Radcliffe Asian American Women’s Association authored a letter of solidarity, which was co-signed by 24 student groups. Cheng was elected UC president in November following a campaign that promised to “defund” the body and rewrite its constitution. His inauguration, and several UC meetings since, have been marred by conflict.

ing role to the housing crisis in the city and in this neighborhood? The answer is yes: by its expansive purchases of land, by its land banking, and by its failure to house more of its graduate students.” “The coalition has no problem with the ERC being transformative for Harvard and Tishman,” he added. “We have a problem that their proposal right now is not transformative for the Allston-Brighton community.” University spokesperson Brigid O’Rourke wrote in an emailed statement that the school is “grateful” for feedback from residents and elected

officials, reiterating Harvard’s pledges to the neighborhood. “As noted in the letter from February 23, we’re proud to have refined and extended our commitments in planning, zoning, and community needs, as well as significant contributions to affordable housing and homeownership; sustainability, resilience, and open space; mobility and transportation; and in workforce development focused on jobs for residents, particularly in emerging life science and technology fields,” she wrote. But Carragee argued that Harvard’s development model contradicts its “social justice

mission.” “I’ve read President Bacow’s evocative speeches and statements and other Harvard administrators’ about the social justice mission of Harvard and how Harvard takes it so seriously. The coalition takes it seriously, too. Live up to the standard that you defined, not that we’re assigning to you,” he said. “Words matter. Commitments matter.” “The Harvard administration should know that we’re willing to run a marathon on this,” he added. “And we’re in shape to do it.” michal.goldstein@thecrimson.com

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In a UC meeting the week of the attack, Cheng rejected a statement of solidarity by the Council, calling it hypocritical. Cheng speculated that the perpetrator was a UC member. In a statement Wednesday, Cheng expressed his gratitude to HUPD investigators. “I really appreciate the professionalism, dedication, and attention to detail of Captain Negron and Detective Surette,” Cheng wrote. “The fact that Captain Negron and Detective Surette spent weeks tirelessly searching for the truth, which still is our highest aspiration at our university, reinforces my faith in humanity,” he added. sellers.hill@thecrimson.com

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SPORTS

WEEKLY RECAP

SCORES

MEN’S SWIM & DIVE NCAA CHAMPIONSHIPS T-11TH ___________________________________________________________

MEN’S TENNIS VS. SAN DIEGO L, 4-3 _________________________________________________________

MEN’S LACROSSE VS. NO. 13 BOSTON UNIVERSITY W, 13-10 ___________________________________________________________

MEN’S VOLLEYBALL VS. SACRED HEART W, 3-1 ___________________________________________________________

BASEBALL AT UCLA L, 3-2 ___________________________________________________________

WOMEN’S TENNIS VS. NO. 69 BYU W, 4-2 ___________________________________________________________

SOFTBALL AT YALE L, 4-3 ___________________________________________________________

MEN’S ICE HOCKEY

Crimson to Take on Mavericks in NCAA First Round By BRIDGET T. SANDS and AARON B. SHUCHMAN CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

Mere days after upsetting No. 6 Quinnipiac in the ECAC Tournament championship game, the Harvard men’s ice hockey team is set to take on an even tougher challenge in the Albany Regional’s No. 1 seed Minnesota State Mavericks. The game will be played at 12 pm on March 24 at MVP Arena in Albany, N.Y, and it will be the first-ever meeting between the two programs. “We have a really talented team. We can get up and down the ice with anybody,” claimed head coach Ted Donato ’91. “We have some really good players that can play against anybody, they’ve shown that on the world stage…We’re not going in thinking that we have to pull a rabbit out of our hands. We’re gonna go in and put our best game forward and go in and try to earn a victory.” “It started even before this weekend- the resiliency of this group and the calmness under pressure when we do go down a goal or something happens that isn’t in our favor and we kind of have to fight through that to get a few more goals than we thought we needed,” added senior forward and captain Casey Dornbach. “This has been the tightest knit group and the best group that I’ve been a part of since being here at Harvard. We have a lot of guys that want to get better, that want to do something special.” The Mavericks, members of the Central Collegiate Hockey Association (CCHA), spent the majority of the regular season on top of the NCAA rankings before being supplanted by the Michigan Wolverines in the NCAA tournament seeding. After finishing the regular season with a 35-5-0 record, Minnesota State defeated the St. Thomas Tommies, the Northern Michigan Wildcats, ­

and then the Bemidji State Beavers to win the Mason Cup, the CCHA’s postseason championship. The Mavericks are elite on both ends of the ice, ranking second in the nation with 4.17 goals per game and 1.27 goalsagainst per game. Leading the Mavericks on the ice are forward Nathan Smith and goaltender Dryden McKay, both finalists for the 2022 Hobey Baker Award, which is given to the top player in college hockey. Smith, a prospect for the National Hockey League (NHL)’s Arizona Coyotes, has recorded 49 points (18 goals, 31 assists) in 34 games played this season, which is second in the country behind University of Denver forward Bobby Brink. McKay, a two-time All-American and previous Hobey Baker finalist, has recorded a 1.27 goals-against average and .934 save percentage, both of which are in the top five nationally. Despite playing in the CCHA, a weaker conference where only two other teams had winning records, the Mavericks recorded several wins against top competition, defeating then-No.1 ranked University of Massachusetts-Amherst in October, while splitting a series with then-No.2 ranked St. Cloud State later that month. Minnesota State also defeated then-No. 10 Providence before losing to then-No.3 Michigan. “We know they’re an older team and they [have] a lot of offense too so we’re going to have to be firing on all cylinders,” Minnesota native Dornbach claimed. “Being that it’s a team from Minnesota, [I] kind of know a little bit about some of their players, they got some good players, but we do too and I think it will be a great matchup.” “They’re an older, more experienced team with really strong [defensive]-core, they get some top scores up front, they have two lines that do a

GIBSON THE GREAT Goaltender Mitchell Gibson engages in a physical battle in front of the net with a Yale attacker in a 2-0 victory over the Bulldogs on Feb. 11. His heroics helped Harvard emerge with an ECAC Championship and NCAA Tournament bid. JULIAN J. GIORDANO—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

lot of scoring,” Donato noted. “They’re one of the top teams in the country, offensively. They’re one of the top teams in the country, defensively. So they pose a lot of challenges. And, you know, for us, you know, we’ll have to be at our best.” The Crimson enter the NCAA tournament on a 12-22 run, which began with a late January road trip to Colgate and Cornell in upstate New York. Despite finishing in a disappointing tie for third place at the 2022 Beanpot Tournament, Harvard went on a strong run through the ECAC tournament, defeating RPI two games to one in a dramatic series before beating Clarkson 5-3 in the semifinals and upsetting Quinnipiac 3-2 in overtime in the championship. The 2022 tournament is the Crimson’s seventh appearance

under the leadership of Donato, who has coached the team since the 2004-2005 season. Leading the Crimson in scoring is first-year forward Matthew Coronato, a prospect of the Calgary Flames and a member of Team USA at the 2021 World Junior Championships, who has recorded 35 points (18 goals, 17 assists) in his first season in Cambridge. Coronato also scored the game-winning goal in overtime to defeat Quinnipiac in the ECAC Tournament championship game on Saturday night. Right behind Coronato in scoring are junior forward and captain Nick Abruzzese, a Toronto Maple Leafs prospect and U.S. Olympian, who has recorded 32 points (9 goals, 23 assists), and junior defenseman Henry Thrun, an Anaheim Ducks prospect who has tallied 32

points (7 goals, 25 assists) this season. In net, Harvard is backstopped by junior goaltender Mitchell Gibson, who has recorded a 2.10 goals-against average and a .919 save percentage this season. Gibson was particularly strong in the ECAC championship, making a career-high 47 saves on 49 shots to keep the Crimson alive in a game where they were outshot 49-17. “Mitch is an amazing goalie who is only getting better. He’s heating up and had some huge games for us, this weekend being huge for him and huge for us,” reflected Dornbach on Gibson’s championship-winning performance. “We’re gonna need him back there and we have full trust in him to do just that.” As a team, Harvard averages 3.32 goals per game while al-

lowing 2.29, both of which are 11th in the country. “We certainly recognize that we [have] some real talent, we [have] some real character, and we [have] really good players… Quite frankly, we just haven’t played that many games together as a group, not only kind of in entirety, but even specifically just, you know, this year,” Donato said. “We had, I think, 17 guys go through Covid in like a three week period…We still have our best hockey ahead of us, and I think we’re starting to hit that stride. We find ways to win.” The game will be streamed on ESPNU at noon on Thursday. Updates will also be posted on Twitter by @THCSports, as well as the team’s account @ HarvardMHockey. bridget.sands@thecrimson.com aaron.shuchman@thecrimson.com

SOFTBALL

Harvard Takes Spring Break Slate Coast-to-Coast By LUCY CONNOR and ELIZABETH K. PACHUS CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

Ten games, nine days, two coasts, and one Ivy League rivalry later, Harvard softball had a whirlwind of a spring break. Jetting off to California to start a non-stop onslaught of competition, Harvard (8-11, 2-1 Ivy) competed in the UCR/CBU Classic against the University of North Dakota (10-22), California Baptist University (1816), and Saint Mary’s College ­

(11-10). Opening with a double header at John C. Funk Stadium on March 11, the Crimson prevailed against the University of North Dakota with a 3-0 win, but later fell 4-3 to California Baptist University. Harvard’s pitching squad was essential for the early win, with sophomore pitcher Anna Reed earning her and Harvard’s first shutout of the season in the 3-0 win over the Fighting Hawks. Her standout performance

earned the team another accolade in the league, as she was recognized as the Ivy League Pitcher of the Week. “It felt good,” Reed said. “I wanted to go in and play how I know I can play.” Coming off of a challenging set of games in Alabama the week prior, Reed returned with a vengeance to the mound and credited Harvard’s strong defense to her success. “Our defense is really amazing,” Reed commented. “They’re a lot of fun to have be-

hind me, and I know they’re going to get it done.” Along with a strong defensive showing, Harvard’s offense was quick to attack against California Baptist, with junior centerfielder/utility Megan Welsh scoring her first home run of the season to open scoring for the Crimson. “Once the opportunity strikes for some offense to step in, and somebody gets a clutch hit or some smart base running happens, then we’re able to pull through and get some wins,’’

QUEST TO REPEAT Harvard won the Ivy League in 2019 (pictured celebrating the clinching victory over Columbia above) and earned an automatic bid to the NCAA Tournament. QUINN G. PERINI—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

Welsh commented. “Definitely was a big job for our pitchers, and they really stepped up their full ability.” Harvard ended the UCR/ CBU Classic in a pair of games against Saint Mary’s, winning the first game on a ground out 3-2. Harvard’s offensive attack was thwarted in the second game, however, and the Crimson fell to the Gaels 7-5. The games didn’t end there, and softball faced some of its toughest competition yet against experienced Loyola Marymount University. Harvard suffered a twin pair of losses in five innings, 10-0, and 10-2, respectively. “LMU is pretty tough, definitely going to be one of the best teams we face all season,” Reed admitted. After an exhausting schedule in California, the team finally returned to the east coast for their first big tilt in the Ivy League, against longtime rival Yale (3-10, 1-2 Ivy) in New Haven, Conn. Showing up ready to win, Harvard did just that, besting the Bulldogs twice in one day, with 3-1 and 1-0 wins in the afternoon on March 18. “The strong competition that we faced in California definitely prepared us for Ivy League play,” Welsh remarked. “It was good for us to elevate our game and head into Yale with that mindset of being greedy and really trying to play the same at a faster pace and control the game.” The only run scored in the second matchup occurred after junior outfielder/infielder Trina Hoang stole second base. Hoang subsequently scored on a fly out by Welsh. The final game of spring break posed a tough loss for the

Crimson, despite a late game offensive push. Down four runs in the 5th inning, junior Teagan Shaw’s home run changed the pace of the game for Harvard. RBIs from sophomore pitcher/ infielder Madi Mays and junior catcher Allison Heffley continued Harvard’s offensive push. But even with a valiant comeback effort, Harvard could not pull off a clean sweep of Yale, ending in a final score of 4-3. This marked Shaw’s third home run of the season, causing her to inch past senior infielder Morgan Melito and Heffley to lead the team standings. May notched her first RBI of the season, and Melito’s RBI kept her leading the team with 11 to date. The team is acutely aware of its play in the Ivy Conference, as it remains in the hunt to regain its championship status from the 2019 and 2020 seasons. “In the Ivy League games, every game matters, whether it’s a win or a loss, that’s how it happens,” said Welsh, who was a first-year on the 2019 Ivy Championship team. After being on the road for a majority of the season, the Crimson is eager to return to home field advantage this weekend. It hosts the Princeton Tigers (8-9, 3-0 Ivy) back at Soldiers Field at 12:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 26. This will mark its first home game since 2019, and the stands should be filled with Harvard fans and parents alike, as it coincides with the College’s junior parents’ weekend.“ We’re excited to continue what we played on Friday and move forward into next weekend,“ Reed said. “Just keep it going.” lucy.connor@thecrimson.com elizabeth.pachus@thecrimson.com


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