THE HARVARD CRIMSON THE UNIVERSITY DAILY, EST. 1873
| VOLUME CL, NO. 31
DSO
HEARING
| CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS
MEN’S ICE HOCKEY
ARTS
‘Under Control/Utter Harvard Limps Into Chaos’ Review: ‘Wait, Break With Shutout Is This Play About Us?’ Losses PAGE 13
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FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2023
Dean Dunne Discusses $200 Student Activities Fee BUDGET CUTS. Dean of Students Thomas Dunne said the office is looking to examine the history and purpose of the Student Activities Fee as an increasing number of students opt out of the annual cost. SEE PAGE 5
Gay Testifies Before Congress on Antisemitism
PROTESTS
Pro-Palestine Activism Now Led by New Groups UNRECOGNIZED. The Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity Committee has taken a back seat on organizing in recent weeks, with unrecognized activism groups taking center stage. SEE PAGE 8
EDITORIAL
AP or the (Other) Devil We Know TESTING. Though we recognize that the College Board and its offerings are flawed, we still see value in a rigorous curricular option for high-school students administered by a non-governmental body. SEE PAGE 11
METRO
PRESIDENT CLAUDINE GAY appeared before Congress on Tuesday for a nearly six-hour testimony about antisemitism on college campuses. Here are the major takeaways, controversies, and responses from the hearing. SEE PAGE 6 TOBY R. MA — CRIMSON DESIGNER
DOXXING
Doxxed Students Call for Support from Harvard BY JOYCE E. KIM AND ASHER J. MONTGOMERY CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
I
n the two months since the release of a controversial Harvard student group statement the day of the deadly Oct. 7 attack on Israel by Hamas, dozens of members of co-signing groups have experienced doxxing attacks, rescinded job offers, and safety concerns. The statement, which was penned by the Harvard Undergraduate Palestine Solidarity Committee and originally cosigned by more than 30 other groups, held Israel “entirely responsible” for the violence. Even as groups have withdrawn their endorsements, students said doxxing attacks have persisted — and escalated. Several Cambridge residents told The Crimson that last month they received
HMS
AND AMMY M. YUAN CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
PHASE A of construction on Harvard’s Enterprise Research Campus began in June, but some Allston residents have criticized disruptions due to the construction and a lack of communication. SEE PAGE 12
Over the past two months, The Crimson interviewed seven students in groups that signed onto the controversial statement who described facing hateful, pervasive, and aggressive doxxing. Despite efforts by the University to support these students, all seven said they have felt a lack of institutional support and have turned to guidance from other students. These students were granted anonymity for this article due to ongoing safety concerns. In a video message published Oct. 12, University President Claudine Gay said Harvard “rejects the harassment or intimidation of individuals based on their beliefs.” “Our University rejects hate — hate of Jews, hate of Muslims, hate of any group of people based on their faith, their national origin, or any aspect of their identity,” Gay said. “Our University rejects the harassment or intimidation of individu-
als based on their beliefs.” ‘Terrifying’ Beginning on Oct. 7 — the date of the attack on Israel and the PSC statement — some students affiliated with organizations that co-signed the statement said they began receiving death threats in their inboxes and across social media platforms. Students found their photos and personal information — including full names, class years, extracurricular activities, past employment, and hometowns — plastered on websites and social media accounts characterizing them as “terrorist sympathizers” and antisemites. The doxxing attacks came in the wake of national backlash — including from prominent alumni, federal lawmakers, and professors — that condemned the PSC
SEE PAGE 4
DONOVAN
External Panel Reviews Donovan Alleges Project Anatomical Gift Program Ended Due to Meta Ties BY JADE LOZADA
Allstonians Criticize Impact of ERC Work
unsigned mailers with no return address that doxxed 26 students allegedly affiliated with nine of the co-signing organizations. The mailers were postmarked from Salt Lake City. At least six of the nine groups — which were described by the letter as “organizations who excused the worst slaughter of Jews since the Holocaust” — had withdrawn their endorsements in October. Harvard spokesperson Jason A. Newton wrote in a statement last week that the University and the Harvard University Police Department are aware of the letters and are “continuing to monitor the matter.” The mailed letters follow a pattern of doxxing campaigns, from a truck that displayed the names and faces of students whose groups signed the statement to personalized website domains that condemned individual students.
An external panel released recommendations for changes to Harvard Medical School’s Anatomical Gift Program Thursday morning, nearly six months after its morgue manager was accused of stealing organs and other parts of cadavers donated for medical research. The panel’s 24-page report, completed Nov. 22, did not include factual findings about the thefts themselves, instead issuing recommendations for updating AGP’s operations, hiring processes, staffing structures, and cadaver tracking systems. The panel also advised AGP to develop standardized, centralized policies and procedures for the morgue and update existing ones. In June, former HMS morgue manager Cedric Lodge was indicted on counts of conspiracy and aiding and abetting the interstate transportation of stolen goods. Lodge pleaded not guilty in June. Class action lawsuits from family members of cadaver donors against the University
soon followed, as did further prosecution of the alleged human remains trafficking network that sent parts of the cadavers across the country. In an email to HMS and School of Dental Medicine affiliates, University Provost Alan M. Garber ’76 and HMS Dean George Q. Daley ’82 said that HMS Dean for Medical Education Bernard S. Chang ’93 will chair a task force dedicated to reviewing and creating an implementation plan for the recommendations made by the panel. “We take our responsibility for oversight of the Anatomical Gift Program seriously,” the administrators wrote. “We owe it to our community, and especially to our anatomical donors and their loved ones, to ensure that Harvard is worthy of those who, through selfless generosity, have chosen and will in the future choose to advance medical education and research.” The panel, whose report was initially scheduled to release at the end of the summer, consisted of three members from outside the University — Sally S. Aiken, the retired chief medical examiner of Spokane County; Robert J. McKeon,
SEE PAGE 9
BY ASHER J. MONTGOMERY CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
Misinformation expert Joan M. Donovan called for an investigation into the Harvard Kennedy School, alleging that the school terminated her project at the school and pressured her to leave under the influence of donors with ties to Meta. In a 248-page disclosure by nonprofit legal group Whistleblower Aid last week, Donovan alleged that Kennedy School Dean Douglas W. Elmendorf targeted Donovan and her team “to protect the interests of high value donors with obvious and direct ties to Meta/Facebook.” The Kennedy School leadership aimed to “diminish — if not destroy — their research and public engagement despite the ample funding raised by Dr. Donovan, which still resides in Harvard University’s bank account,” the disclosure alleged. Donovan’s attorneys at Whistleblower Aid, Andrew P. Bakaj and Kyle Gardiner, submitted the disclosure, dated Nov. 28, to Harvard President Claudine Gay, University Vice President and General Counsel Diane E. Lopez, Secretary of Education
Miguel A. Cardona, and the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office. University spokesperson Jason A. Newton confirmed that Gay received the disclosure but did not comment further. HKS spokesperson James F. Smith wrote in a statement that the disclosure’s claims of “unfair treatment and donor interference are false.” Meta and the Massachusetts Attorney General’s office did not immediately respond to a request for comment. The U.S. Department of Education declined to comment, stating that the Office for Civil Rights does not confirm complaints. Donovan’s forced exit from the Kennedy School, first reported by The Crimson, came after the school informed her last fall that it would be “winding down” the Technology and Social Change project at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy that she helmed by summer 2024 — a decision that prompted more than 100 Harvard affiliates to call for Elmendorf’s resignation. Smith told The Crimson in February that the decision was made because the
SEE PAGE 5