The Harvard Crimson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY, EST. 1873
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VOLUME CXLIX, NO. 35 |
CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS
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MONDAY, MARCH 21, 2022
EDITORIAL PAGE 6
SPORTS PAGE 7
SPORTS PAGE 8
Harvard must be more proactive in its advocacy for Ukraine
Baseball goes 2-2 against Cal. Polytechnic Institute
Men’s ice hockey clinches ECAC championship with overtime win
Number of HMC Stock Holdings Slowly Rises Jackson Hearings to Begin Monday By ERIC YAN and DEKYI T. TSOTSONG CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
The number of stocks in the Harvard endowment has slowly crept back up in recent years after the Harvard Management Company sold off the vast majority of its public holdings when N.P. “Narv” Narvekar took over as its CEO. When Narvekar arrived at HMC — which manages Harvard’s investments — in December 2016, the University’s endowment directly owned 79 public securities, making up roughly 2 percent of its total portfolio. The school sold off most of its stocks over the following year, bringing the total number of public holdings in the endowment down to just 10 by December 2017, when they made up 0.3 percent of the endowment’s total. But following the initial selloff, the endowment has begun to invest in the public market more, according to a Crimson analysis. As of December 2021, HMC directly owned 46 stocks, again making up just over 2 percent of the endowment. Narvekar took over as head of the endowment as Harvard’s
Judge Ketanji Brown Jackson ’92 is expected to face questions over her Harvard governance role. By CARA J. CHANG and ISABELLA B. CHO CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
SEE STOCKS PAGE 3
ERIC YAN — FLOURISH CHART
Locals Rally to Support Ukraine By KATHERINE M. BURSTEIN
Brent Renaud
CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
Roughly 200 people gathered at Harvard Square’s Sanctuary Theater on Sunday to watch Cambridge for Ukraine, a performance and fundraising event organized by Jose Mateo Ballet Theatre Dance for World Community. Cambridge Mayor Sumbul Siddiqui addressed the audience, alongside Harvard’s Ukrainian Research Institute publications manager Oleh Kotsyuba, University of Massachusetts professor Darren Kew, and activist Brian Corr. The performances featured numerous types of dancing as well as St. Andrew’s Ukrainian Orthodox Church Choir. José Mateo Ballet Theatre organized the event in partnership with ArtsBoston, Cambridge Arts, Cambridge Community Foundation, Cambridge Community Television, and the Harvard Square Business Association. Corr — who is involved with the ballet theatre — said the idea for the event came just two weeks ago, during one of the theatre’s community dance programs. “It just so happened that one of the two main dancers is a native of Ukraine,” he said. “We have come together to support the people of Ukraine – to stand in solidarity, to gather together for peace, to use the arts for healing.” In her remarks, Siddiqui reflected on Cambridge’s diverse history. “Cambridge is a very welcoming and global city — it’s long been home to immigrants from all over the world, home to a culture of protest and outspokenness,” she said. “It’s one of the many things that make me a proud Cantibridgian.” The event followed a public art demonstration by local artists Ross Miller and Yolanda Ye Yang. Miller and Yang wrapped the Charles Sumner statue on Massachusetts Avenue in a tarp
SEE UKRAINE PAGE 3 INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Harvard Today 2
Supreme Court nominee Ketanji Brown Jackson ’92 is expected to face questions from Republican senators at confirmation hearings this week over her post on Harvard’s Board of Overseers, a potential conflict of interest in the challenge to affirmative action at Harvard that the court is set to hear in the fall. If confirmed, Jackson will be the first Black woman, the first former public defender, and the 18th Harvard Law School graduate to serve on the Supreme Court. She currently serves as a federal appellate judge on the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. Since 2016, she has also served on the Harvard Board of Overseers, the University’s second-highest governing body. Her term is set to expire later this spring. The Senate Judiciary Committee, composed of 10 Democrats and 10 Republicans, will hold her confirmation hearings beginning Monday. Each senator on the committee will get time to question Jackson on Tuesday and Wednesday before the committee hears from other witnesses and legal experts on Thursday. With the Supreme Court set to hear a pair of challenges to race-conscious admissions policies at Harvard and the University of North Carolina in the fall, GOP senators will likely question Jackson about whether her role on the Board of Overseers would warrant a recusal in the cases, experts anticipate. Senator Thom Tillis (R-N.C.) told the Washington Post he plans ask Jackson if she would recuse herself in the Harvard case. Experts are divided on whether Jackson’s time in Harvard governance warrants a recusal from the case. Because there is no evidence that Jackson was involved in crafting Harvard’s admissions policies, New York University
1971-2022
Filmmaker Brent Renaud, killed in Ukraine last week, remembered as ‘kind,’ ‘relentless’ By LEAH J. TEICHHOLTZ CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
PHOTO COURTESY JEFF NEWTON
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cclaimed filmmaker and former Nieman Foundation fellow Brent A. Renaud was killed on March 13 by Russian forces in Irpin, a suburb of Kyiv, while filming Ukrainian refugees fleeing from the war. Renaud, age 50, was an American journalist who produced award-winning documentaries with his brother Craig. The Renaud brothers’ work often spotlighted the costs of conflict and included coverage of the ISIS in-
vasion of Iraq and cartel violence in Mexico. Other work tackled drug addiction in New York and Arkansas and homelessness in New Orleans. Renaud spent the 2018-2019 school year at Harvard through the Nieman Fellowship, which gives journalists the opportunity to audit classes, attend workshops, and forge relationships with other fellows. During the fellowship, Renaud studied the ways mental illness affects poverty and violence in America.
SEE RENAUD PAGE 4
SEE JACKSON PAGE 3
Prof. Sheila Jasanoff Wins Holberg Prize By MILES J. HERSZENHORN CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
Harvard Kennedy School professor Sheila S. Jasanoff ’64 received the 2022 Holberg Prize — dubbed the Nobel Prize for social science and humanities — for her prolific academic efforts in the field of science and technology studies. A recipient of three Harvard degrees and a prolific writer, Jasanoff has authored or edited 18 books and penned more than 130 chapters and articles over the course of her career. For her work, Jasanoff has been described as a “pioneer” of science and technology studies, per a press release announcing the prize on March 14.
News 3
Editorial 6
“The most basic question I have tried to address is what difference it makes that we humans live in scientifically and technologically advanced societies,” Jasanoff wrote of her work in the press release. “This is fundamentally a question about the meaning of science and technology in the everyday lives of individuals, social groups, and nations.” The Holberg Prize — funded by the Norwegian government — will be presented to Jasanoff during a ceremony at the University of Bergen in Norway on June 9. She will receive a sum of approximately $675,000 as part of the award.
SEE JASANOFF PAGE 3
Sports 7
Sheila Jasanoff, a professor of science and technology studies at the Harvard Kennedy School, was awarded the Holberg Prize for 2022. PHOTO COURTESY SHEILA JASANOFF / JEAN BAPTISTE PARIS VIA WIKIMEDIA COMMONS
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