The Harvard Crimson - Volume CL, No. 28

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THE HARVARD CRIMSON THE UNIVERSITY DAILY, EST. 1873

| VOLUME CL, NO. 28 | CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

EDITORIAL

HKS

Winter is Coming. So Is Course Registration.

SPORTS

THEATER

Comedian Josh Caven With Ivy Title, Field ’24 is Bad at Sports, Hockey Begins NCAA Good on Teams Tournament Run PAGE 13

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FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 2023

For Some, ‘Crown Jewel’ HKS Class Leaves Scars

REGISTERING ASAP. Despite the benefits of early course registration, we take issue with the current implementation. We think course registration over winter break is more favorable timeline.

‘THE RAZOR’S EDGE.’ The Harvard Kennedy School’s Adaptive Leadership courses are internationally renowned as “life-changing.”. But some students said the class goes too far, leaving lasting emotional damage. SEE PAGE 6

SEE PAGE 10

PROTESTS

HBS Die-In Viral Video Prompts Backlash ALUMNI SPEAK OUT. Prominent Harvard affiliates condemned University leadership in two open letters alleging rising campus antisemitism, both citing a viral video from an Oct. 18 protest at HBS. SEE PAGE 8 TOBY R. MA — CRIMSON DESIGNER

CLAUDINE GAY

President Condemns Chant ‘HURTFUL PHRASES.’ In an emailed statement Thursday, University President Claudine Gay condemned the phrase ‘from the river to the sea’ as harmful and announced antisemitism training. SEE PAGE 4

STUDENT LIFE

College Ends ‘Linking’ for Housing Lottery MISSING LINKS. Harvard College will no longer allow “linking,” which let groups of students to guarantee upperclassman housing in the same campus neighborhood, as of the Class of 2027. SEE PAGE 5

ELECTION

CRIMSON LEADERSHIP

Cambridge Elects Nine Hill to Lead The City Councilors Crimson’s 151st Guard BY MUSKAAN ARSHAD, JINA H. CHOE, AND JACK R. TRAPANICK CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

T

he City of Cambridge released preliminary election results showing the election of all six incumbents in the running and three challengers to the Cambridge City Council at approximately 12:11 a.m. Wednesday morning. Former Councilor Jivan G. Sobrinho-Wheeler reclaimed his spot on the city’s legislative body after a narrow 2021 loss, while School Committee member Ayesha M. Wilson and Cambridge transit activist Joan F. Pickett won in their first bids for the office. The six incumbents reelected — in order of number-one ranked votes — are Mayor Sumbul Siddiqui and councilors Burhan Azeem, Marc C. McGovern, Patricia M. “Patty” Nolan ’80, Paul F. Toner, and E. Denise Simmons. All won by healthy margins, securing their spots prior to the final round of the ranked-choice count. The preliminary results do not include write-in, provisional, auxiliary, and overseas absentee ballots. The official results will not be declared until Nov. 17 per Massachusetts state law, after provisional and overseas absentee ballots are counted. The additional ballots are not likely to change the outcome of the race. The ninth-elected candidate, Pickett, prevailed over recent Harvard graduate Ayah A. Al-Zubi ’23, the next-closest candidate, by more than 500 votes before the city announced that Al-Zubi was defeated. If they hold, the results mark a centrist shift for the Council, which saw two of its

most progressive members, Quinton Y. Zondervan and Dennis J. Carlone, decline to seek reelection this year. Siddiqui again received the most first-ranked votes of any candidate in the preliminary count — which she accomplished in both 2019 and 2021 — despite late-breaking allegations of workplace toxicity and retaliation in Siddiqui’s office published in the Boston Globe. The 2023 Council election saw a slight increase in turnout from the 2019 and 2021 elections with 21,177 votes this year from roughly 20,000 votes in the previous two races. Across the city Tuesday, Cambridge voters turned out to the polls from Cambridge Rindge and Latin School to the Harvard Graduate School of Design’s Gund Hall, MIT’s Kresge Auditorium, and Cambridge City Hall itself. At the City Hall polling station, canvassers and candidates alike engaged passersby as voters filed in to vote. Dawn Feaster, who held a sign for Wilson, said she enjoyed being part of the election day excitement. “It’s my first time ever out here doing this, and it feels really good to help support the candidates that’s running,” she said. Vernon K. Walker, one of the candidates who ultimately did not win a seat, expressed excitement about the race early in the afternoon. “I’m ecstatic and jubilant about the direction that the Council could go in if we get progressives elected, and the energy on the ground is contagious,” Walker said as he approached Cambridge City Hall from Central Square. Dan Totten, who sought to fill the seat

SEE PAGE 12

BY CRIMSON NEWS STAFF

J. Sellers Hill ’25 will lead The Harvard Crimson’s 151st Guard, the newspaper’s president announced Sunday, kicking off the next 150 years of America’s oldest continuously published daily collegiate newspaper. Hill, an Integrative Biology concentrator on the pre-medical track from Wilmington, North Carolina, currently covers the Harvard College administration and co-leads The Crimson’s Audience Engagement Team. As a reporter, Hill chronicled a monthslong $30,000 dispute following a contentious leadership transition in a student group. Hill also covered the College’s student government, closely following the fall of the Undergraduate Council and the inaugural semester of its replacement, the Harvard Undergraduate Association. This semester, Hill has covered campus turmoil, including doxxing attacks against students following the onset of the Israel-Hamas war. A resident of Lowell House and member of The Crimson’s Multimedia Board, Hill will begin his tenure as The Crimson’s president on Jan. 1, 2024, following the conclusion of the paper’s sesquicenennial year. “The 151st Guard will take The Crimson to new heights,” Crimson President Cara J. Chang ’24 wrote in a statement. “They are uniquely qualified and positioned to take the newspaper into a digital-first future while preserving all that has made 14 Plympton St. special for 150 years.” Central administration reporter Miles J. Herszenhorn ’25 will oversee The Crim-

son’s coverage as its next managing editor, leading its newsroom and steering its magazine, arts, and sports sections as well as its blog. Herszenhorn, a joint concentrator in History and Literature and Slavic Languages and Literatures, hails from New York with stops in Washington, Moscow, and Brussels. Herszenhorn has reported on Harvard President Claudine Gay’s first semester in office, including early challenges from Washington and alumni. A Mets fan, he also covers baseball for the sports section and writes for the magazine. Herszenhorn, a resident of Pforzheimer House, has produced extensive reporting on the Harvard Kennedy School, breaking misinformation researcher Joan Donovan’s forced exit, investigating the school’s financial aid woes, and providing detailed coverage of the HKS student Rodrigo Ventocilla Ventosilla’s death in police custody while abroad in Indonesia. Dunster House resident Matthew M. Doctoroff ’25 will serve as The Crimson’s

SEE PAGE 9

J. Sellers Hill ’25 will serve as president of The Crimson’s 151st Guard. JOEY HUANG — CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER


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