The Harvard Crimson - Volume CXLV, No. 6

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The University Daily, Est. 1873  | Volume CXLV, No. 6  |  Cambridge, Massachusetts  |  Thursday, Janruay 25, 2018

The Harvard Crimson The administration neglected to transparently communicate General Education updates. Editorial PAGE 6

Harvard Funds West Station

Men’s basketball gears up for first Ivy weekend road slate. sports PAGE 7 October 1, 2014

BU considers funding the remaining one-third of West Station costs, but the deal is never finalized.

March 23, 2015

November 16, 2017

By Truelian Lee and Jacqueline P. Patel Crimson Staff Writers

Harvard has pledged $50 million to fund West Station and promised up to $8 million to help construct another, interim transportation station in Allston. Harvard Executive Vice President Katherine N. Lapp announced the University’s new funding commitments in a letter sent to MassDOT Secretary Stephanie Pollack Wednesday morning. The $50 million number—roughly half the projected cost of the station— marks a significant increase from Harvard’s previous commitment to fund a third of the construction of West Station, a commuter rail station slated to be built on University-owned land in Allston. “Together, these contributions will enhance the significant public-private partnership between Harvard and the Commonwealth,” Lapp wrote in the letter. “These investments also

Five Massachusetts politicians called on Harvard to cover “almost the entire cost” of West Station.

January 18, 2018

The MBTA announced plans to build a commuter rail station in Allston called West Station and Harvard pledged to cover a third of the cost. Allston residents expressed frustration over MassDOT’s decision to delay construction of West Station for an indeterminate period of time.

January 24, 2018 Harvard increased its funding for West Station to $50 million, covering around half the cost of West Station.

See station Page 5

Student Group Updates Searchers By Caroline S. EnglemAyer Crimson Staff Writer

Members of a student committee helping guide Harvard’s search for its 29th president met “in person” with the official search committee last semester to discuss their findings, though the committee has yet to produce a final report. The main task of the committee, formed in Sept. 2017, is to “provide advice to the presidential search committee” and “assist in ensuring broad outreach to the wider Harvard community,” according to the University. The student committee spent all of last semester gathering student input on the search before presenting the findings of its research to the search committee, which comprises all twelve members of the Harvard Corporation as well as three members of the Board of Overseers. The search committee has been seeking the successor to University President Drew G. Faust since she announced over the summer she plans ­

See Search Page 5

diana c. perez—Crimson Designer

Protestors Ask Harvard To Divest From PR Debt By William L. Wang Crimson Staff Writer

Hundreds of protesters marched across campus Wednesday to urge Harvard to divest from the Boston-based Baupost Group unless the hedge fund cancels its holdings of Puerto Rican debt. The protest, organized by Harvard affiliates and local activist organizations, ispart of a series of protests calling for higher education institutions to divest from financial groups with significant Puerto Rico debt holdings. Rallies at Yale University, Columbia University, and the University of Phoenix are slated to take place within the next week. Armed with signs reading “Drop the Debt” and “Harvard Divest from Baupost,” protesters marched through Johnston Gate, walked past the School of Education, and concluded the march at Harvard Business School. Protesters called for the University to divest $2 billion from Baupost Group, which holds nearly $1 billion of Puerto Rico’s $70 billion debt. Cassandra Fradera, a former extension school student who spoke at the protest, told the gathered crowd that ­

Admins Say Gen Ed Needs More Time

Harvard needed to divest the University’s endowment in order to “align with its values.” “We are asking Harvard’s endowment, which has been undergoing changes in the recent years, to divest from Baupost unless it cancels its Puerto Rico holdings,” she said. “We need to restructure this debt to get the release that we need, and we need to start talking about Puerto Rico.” Last September, Category 5 hurricanes Irma and Maria slammed into Puerto Rico within the span of two weeks, shutting off water and electricity on the island and cutting off students’ hopes of contacting their families. Much of the protesters’ ire targeted Baupost CEO Seth A. Klarman, who graduated from the Business School in 1982 and founded Baupost Group with then-Business School professor William J. Poorvu soon after graduation. The Business School is currently constructing a new 1,000-seat convention center to be named for Klarman. Klarman previously drew condemnation from protesters at Baupost

See Divest Page 5

A protestor waves the Syrian national flag while carrying a sign for the “Stand With Puerto Rico” protest Wednesday afternoon. Krystal K. Phu — Crimson photographer

UC Pushes For MultiCultural Center

SEE PAGE 5

By Lucy Wang

By Jonah S. Berger

Crimson Staff Writer

Crimson Staff Writer

­

The delayed debut of the General Education program—announced Monday—is meant to give faculty more time to design new courses and take student feedback into account, director of the General Education program Stephanie Kenen said Wednesday. Dean of the College Rakesh Khurana announced in an email to undergraduates that the new system of requirements will be implemented in 2019 instead of 2018, as was originally planned. Kenen said designing the types of courses that achieve the goals of the new program is difficult and is taking the College longer than expected. “In order to design courses that really stand out, and make the intellectual

See Gen Ed Page 5 Inside this issue

Harvard Today 2

News 3

The Undergraduate Council and other student organizations have redoubled their efforts to create a multicultural center, reaching out to College administrators and scheduling a town hall about the issue this week. The increased push for the center follows a UC referendum last fall in which students voted in favor of the idea. Council President Catherine L. Zhang ’19 said in a Sunday interview that she has already begun working with administrators to lay the groundwork for a future multicultural center. “In our conversations with Dean Khurana, in our meeting with the OSL, even before the campaign happened and before we were elected, we were already having these conversations,” ­

Harvard Medical School

Editorial 6

The Gordon Hall of Medicine stands at the center of the Harvard Medical School’s quadrangle. Justin F. Gonzalez—Crimson photographer

Sports 7

Today’s Forecast

partly cloudy High: 28 Low: 16

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See UC Page 5

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