The Harvard Crimson - Volume CXLIX, No. 40

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The Harvard Crimson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY, EST. 1873

|

VOLUME CXLIX, NO. 40

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CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS

| MONDAY, MARCH 28, 2022

EDITORIAL PAGE 4

SPORTS PAGE 6

SPORTS PAGE 6

The death penalty is wrong. Every single time.

Liz Miclau, Felicia Pasadyn compete at D-I Swim & Dive Chempionships

Sophomore Wrestler Philip Conigliaro competed in the D-I championships

Students, Parents Rally for Ukraine By OMAR ABDEL HAQ and MILES J. HERSZENHORN CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

O ne month after Russia launched its invasion of Ukraine, more than one hundred demonstrators rallied in Harvard Yard on Saturday in support of Harvard students and scholars impacted by the war. Harvard students, parents, faculty members, and other supporters attended the protest, the second major rally on campus since the war began. Speakers took turns denouncing Russian President Vladimir Putin — whose invasion of Ukraine has left more than 1,100 civilians dead — and calling for the University to do more to help affected Harvard affiliates. “We’re here at the richest and most influential university in the history of the richest and most influential country,” Greg M. Epstein, president of the Harvard Chaplains, told the crowd. “Harvard University must do more to help these ­

students — these students and more. We must.” University President Lawrence S. Bacow condemned the invasion in a Feb. 28 event hosted by the Davis Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies and the Ukrainian Research Institute. “Harvard will continue to support in whatever ways we can members of our community who face grave uncertainty,” Bacow said. “We will continue to share knowledge of Ukraine and advance understanding of its culture, history, and language.” Andrew Berry, a lecturer on organismic and evolutionary biology who attended the rally, said he was concerned about student well-being. “If Ukrainian students, or affected students, are trying to get appointments with University mental health [services], for obvious reasons, and they’re having to wait and wait and wait — that’s crazy, and it’s such

SEE UKRAINE PAGE 3

Rally attendees gathered in Harvard Yard to show support for Ukraine. JULIAN J. GIORDANO—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

Michael A. Miccioli ‘22 displayed signs at the rally calling for no sanctions and the abolition of NATO. JULIAN J. GIORDANO—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

Taisa Kulyk ‘22 played the bandura at the Harvard for Ukraine rally on Saturday. JULIAN J. GIORDANO—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHERRAPHER

UC Removes Election Day Question Kewley to serve as CFA Director By MERT GEYIKTEPE and J. SELLERS HILL CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

On the eve of a referendum that will determine the Harvard Undergraduate Council’s future, the body held a meeting on Sunday that descended into disarray with arguments, interruptions, and a dramatic early exit by the UC’s president. In an eleventh hour twist, the council voted to remove a question about designating Election Day as a University holiday from the referendum ballot set to go to students on Monday. The meeting came less than 24 hours before the start of the controversial referendum, in which undergraduates will vote whether to dissolve the UC in favor of a new constitution that would form the “Harvard Undergraduate Association,” an alternative student government backed by the UC’s current president, Michael Y. Cheng ’22.

By JEREMIAH C. CURRAN CRIMSON STAFF WRITER

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Sunday’s Undergraduate Council meeting was marked by conflict.

J. SELLERS HILL—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER

SEE UC PAGE 5

Lisa J. Kewley will serve as the next director of Harvard’s Center for Astrophysics, a collaboration between the Harvard College Observatory and the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory. The CFA is composed of over 850 scientists, researchers, and staff and aims to answer questions about the makeup of the universe by developing tools that expand the capabilities of modern-day observatories. Kewley will head eight scientific divisions at nine of the CFA’s facilities and institutes in her new role, which begins July 1. She currently serves as the director of ASTRO 3D, a seven-year $40 million project that has brought together 300 astronomers to study the evolution of light, matter, and the elements. Kewley wrote in an email she ­

is looking forward to the future of the CFA and the creation of new telescopes and technologies. “The coming decade will be an extremely exciting time for astrophysics with the next generation space and ground based telescopes being built and coming on-line,” Kewley wrote. “The CFA has expertise across the full electromagnetic spectrum from the X-rays through to the radio and sub-mm, as well as a world-leading theory program.” Kewley described her intention to design a long-term plan to address astronomy’s “biggest questions” while also creating astronomy outreach programs for U.S. students. “I will bring together people from across the CFA to develop a 10-year scientific strategic plan which brings together the expertise across the CFA to an-

SEE CHENG PAGE 3

The UC Referendum, Amherst Pres. Biddy Martin Comes to Harvard Explained By CARA J. CHANG and ISABELLA B. CHO CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS

By J. SELLERS HILL CRIMSON STAFF WRITER

Four months after taking over as president of the Harvard Undergraduate Council, Michael Y. Cheng ’22 will finally learn the fate of his marquee campaign promise: to replace the institution he now leads. Cheng and UC Vice President Emmett E. de Kanter ’24 unveiled the draft of a proposed new constitution in an email to undergraduates last week.If passed, the constitution would dismantle the UC’s existing structure and replace it with the “Harvard Undergraduate Association,” a body led by two co-presidents and made up of fewer elected members who would manage seven issue-focused teams. The College-wide referendum, set to run from Monday to Wednesday, will determine whether the UC will undergo a complete constitutional overhaul and be replaced by the HUA — or survive in its current state. ­

INSIDE THIS ISSUE

Harvard Today 2

Here’s what you need to know about the vote. How Would the Constitution Pass? Beginning on Monday at 12 p.m., undergraduates will cast their vote on two referendum questions, including a “yes” or “no” vote on the passage of the newly-proposed HUA constitution. In order for the HUA to pass, two-fifths of the student body must turn out to vote. Two-thirds of voters must vote “yes” on the new constitution. The other referendum question on the ballot asks undergraduates whether they approve of Harvard’s Covid-19 policies. What Happens if the Constitution Passes? If approved by voters, the HUA would be established by May 8,

SEE REFERENDUM PAGE 3

News 3

Editorial 4

A fter decades in higher education administration — including 11 years as Amherst College’s first female president and nearly four years on Harvard’s highest governing board — Carolyn A. “Biddy” Martin is set to return to the classroom at the Harvard Graduate School of Education. Martin will retire from Amherst at the end of the academic year. Within HGSE’s President-in-Residence program, she will serve as a mentor for graduate students and write case studies based on her experiences in higher education. She will join the program alongside Framingham State University President F. Javier Cevallos for the 2022-23 academic year. Martin said she is excited to connect with a cohort of students at Harvard. “I have not been able to teach while at Amherst,” she said. “I haven’t taught my own class, or really had a sustained relationship with a particular group of students in the classroom — and so yes, I’m really looking for­

Sports 6

ward to teaching.” Raised in rural Virginia, Martin studied English at the College of William and Mary before going on to earn her Ph.D. in German literature at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She was a faculty member at Cornell University for more than 20 years before serving as chancellor of the University of Wisconsin-Madison and provost of Cornell. In 2011, Martin became a historic first at Amherst as its first female and openly lesbian president, and in 2018, she joined the Harvard Corporation, the University’s highest governing body. Martin said she hopes to explore her intellectual interests with expanded flexibility at HGSE after leaving Amherst leadership. “I’ve been doing these kinds of jobs for so long, and working my whole life,” she said. “This gives me a way of creating time for more of a personal life, but also having the intellectual stimulation that I like to thrive on.” According to Judith Block McLaughlin, the program’s founder and a senior lecturer at

TODAY’S FORECAST

Carolyn A. “Biddy” Martin, the president of Amherst College, was elected to the Harvard Corporation in 2018. PHOTO COURTSEY AMHERST COLLEGE

the Education School, what began as individual invitations for retiring presidents to visit her classroom back in 2001 developed into the President-in-Residence program as it gained popularity among university leaders. McLaughlin described the program as a “win-win” for the presidents and graduate stu-

CLOUDY High: 32 Low: 20

dents. “It was a win for Graduate School of Education students to have a former president sit in their class and go to lunch with them, sit down and chat with them about their career interests and final paper topics,” she said. “It was equally a big

SEE MARTIN PAGE 3

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