The University Daily, Est. 1873 | Volume CXLV No. 3 | Cambridge, Massachusetts | Monday, January 22, 2018
The Harvard Crimson “I experienced what I thought it must be like to be less advantaged for the first time in my life.” op-ed PAGE 6
Men’s hockey ties Clarkson following back-and-forth drama on the ice. SPORTS PAGE 4
Faust Writes to Congress on DACA
Stanford Provost Talks Pres Search
By CAROLINE S. ENGELMAYER and JAMIE D. HALPER
By IDIL Tuysuzoglu Crimson Staff Writer
Crimson Staff WriterS
University President Drew G. Faust sent a letter Thursday to House and Senate leadership asking for “immediate attention” to protections for undocumented youth as legislators debate that issue in an effort to stave off a government shutdown tomorrow. Democrats and some Republicans have indicated they will not vote for a bill that leaves out long-term protections for immigrants in the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals program, an Obama-era program that grants protected status to individuals brought illegally to the United States as minors. The Trump administration announced in September it would end DACA and imposed a March 5 deadline for legislative action. Faust’s letter, addressed to House Speaker Paul Ryan, House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, and Senate Minority Leader Charles Schumer says that—as time passes without a permanent solution for the program—“anxiety grows” for the thousands of people who rely on this program to remain in the United States. “On our campus and across the country, these are the students, innovators, professionals, small-business owners, and dedicated workers we see in our everyday lives, as well as the service members we depend on to protect us,” Faust wrote of DACA recipients. “Their contributions benefit us all.” A budget must be passed by midnight tonight to avoid a government shutdown. A temporary iteration of the budget was finalized in the House yesterday but still needs Senate approval. DACA is expected to be a significant obstacle to passing the budget, given Democrats may require its inclusion before they agree to the legislation. Though the legislators Faust addresses in her letter fall on opposite sides of the issue—McConnell and Ryan want to pass a spending bill without addressing DACA, while Pelosi and Schumer maintain they will not vote for a bill that leaves out DACA protections—Faust said she commended the legislators for their work so far. She also called on them to create a “compassionate and lasting path forward.” L ast week, the Ninth Circuit
See DACA Page 7
John Etchemendy, Provost of Stanford University and former candidate for Harvard’s presidency, offerred his opinion on the current search for Harvard’s 29th President. Idil Tuysuzoglu—Crimson photographer
By Simone C. Chu Crimson Staff Writer
On Saturday—one year after the inauguration of President Donald Trump— Cambridge Common flooded with men and women clad in pink hats as part of a nation-wide weekend of Women’s Marches. The 2018 Cambridge and Boston Women’s March marked the first anniversary of the Women’s March movement, born last year in protest of Trump’s election. By 1 p.m. Saturday, roughly 13,500 people had indicated on Facebook they planned to attend the march. The gathering took place in the 16-acre park across Mass. Ave. from Harvard Law School. The co-sponsors of Saturday’s march included activist groups like Boston Persists, Human Rights Festival, March Forward Massachusetts, and Massachusetts Peace Action.
See Women’s March Page 7
The Cambridge/Boston Women’s March drew thousands of women, men, and children to Cambridge Common in support of women’s rights Saturday afternoon. Amy Y. Li—Crimson photographer
Senator Warren Says She Is Endorsing Student Union By Shera S. AVI-YONAH Crimson Staff Writer
Massachusetts Senator and former Law School professor Elizabeth Warren endorsed Harvard’s graduate student union Friday, weeks ahead of an election that will determine whether eligible University teaching and research assistants may unionize. “For generations, graduate students have done hard work that keeps universities running. It’s past time for them to be treated with respect and past time for them to have their own elected representation in the decisions that affect their lives,” Warren wrote in an emailed statement to The Crimson Friday. “Grad students are organizing and I stand with them.” Warren’s statement follows a Jan. 9 Facebook post by the Harvard Graduate Students Union-United Auto Workers that shared photos of Warren and her signature on a pro-unionization petition. Warren, along with Mass. Senator Edward J. Markey, U.S. Representative Katherine M. Clark, and U.S. Representative Michael E. Capuano, previ
By JAMIE D. HALPER Crimson Staff Writer
Tamara E. Rogers ’74, the University’s vice president for alumni affairs and development and the force behind Harvard’s record-breaking capital campaign, will step down at the end of the calendar year. University President Drew G. Faust announced Rogers’ departure in an email to alumni Thursday. Rogers, who assumed the role in 2007, helped oversee the first University-wide capital campaign, which launched in Sept. 2013 and is set to conclude at the end of June. The campaign had raised over $8 billion as of June 2017. In an email to alumni and University affiliates, Faust thanked Rogers for her work and called her a “model steward”
See ROGERS Page 7
Harvard Today 2
See ETCHEMENDY Page 7
Marchers Protest Trump In Cambridge
Alumni Affairs VP Rogers to Step Down
Inside this issue
John W. Etchemendy, former Stanford University provost and a contender in Harvard’s last presidential search, knew how to ensure Stanford presidential search committees kept the names of candidates confidential. Etchemendy would sit down with searchers and relate the “horror story” of how, in a previous search at some unspecified university, one candidate—a sitting president at a different school—ended up losing his job after the shortlist of finalists leaked to a student newspaper. “That person, it turned out, did not get the job and was fired from his current position, because he showed a lack of loyalty to his current position,” Etchemendy said. “So that’s the kind of horror story in the back of your mind.”
Tennis Triumph
News 3
Logan Weber ‘20 celebrates after he and partner Kenny Tao ‘18 won their doubles match at SMU on Friday. Timothy R. O’Meara—Crimson photographer
Editorial 6
Sports 4
Today’s Forecast
Rainy High: 38 Low: 37
ously wrote a letter in May 2016 asking Harvard to voluntarily cooperate with the unionization effort. The Massachusetts senator’s endorsement comes as Harvard prepares to hold a second unionization election. The National Labor Relations Board on Jan. 11 certified the results of the University’s Nov. 2016 unionization election—which showed 1,526 votes against unionization and 1,396 in favor. Per a previous ruling, this finalized result means Harvard must hold a new election due to inconsistencies in the Nov. 2016 voter rolls. Harvard administrators were not immediately available for comment Sunday evening. Law School student and union organizer Rachel J. Sandalow-Ash ’15 said she thinks Warren’s message should encourage eligible students to vote in favor of unionization. “Her support is a sign that voting for the union is the right thing to do for people who believe in Senator Warren’s vision of an economy and a politics that works for everyone,”
See WARREN Page 7
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