The Harvard Crimson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY, EST. 1873 | VOLUME CXLV, NO. 83 | CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS | MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 17, 2018
EDITORIAL PAGE 6
HARVARD-BRED PAGE 3
SPORTS PAGE 8
Gray: Some people are scared of snakes. I’m scared of rich people.
Quentin A. Palfrey ’96 cites Harvard role models as he runs for elected office.
Women’s soccer bested the Northeastern Huskies 2-0.
Hasty Pudding Theatricals Casts Six Women Harvard Seeks Midnight Decision Ends Student 200 Years of Male Casting Support By CAROLINE S. ENGELMAYER, CASSANDRA LUCA, and MICHAEL E. XIE
University asks judge to allow student, alumni testimony in court
CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
Hasty Pudding Theatricals has cast six women to perform in its 2019 show, completing a coed shift the group vowed last semester and ending an almost two-century period during which only men could act in Pudding productions. Celia K. Kenney ’20, Ellen L. Shaheen ’21, Annabel O’Hagan ’19, Laura S. Herman ’19, Shirley L. Chen ’22, and Ashley M. LaLonde ’20 were selected Sunday night as the first female Pudding cast members in Harvard history, according to an email obtained by The Crimson. This brings the Pudding’s cast — 12 in total this year, per the email — to gender parity. The precedent-breaking announcement came after a long day of auditions and callbacks. Casting deliberations stretched until almost midnight. Around 11:30 p.m. — soon after Pudding leaders informed the 12 chosen students of their selection via email — members of the company could be seen leaving the group’s longtime digs in Farkas Hall to head to the Pudding’s campus clubhouse. “We as an organization continue to be in awe of the level of talent of the students on Harvard’s campus, and we are so excited that for the first time in 175 productions, Harvard students of all genders will have the opportunity to showcase that talent on the Hasty Pudding stage,” Pudding President Grace C. Ramsey ‘19 wrote in an emailed statement early Monday morning. The six newly christened female cast members could not immediately be reached for comment.
SEE PUDDING PAGE 4
By DELANO R. FRANKLIN and SAMUEL W. ZWICKEL CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
The new cast of the Hasty Pudding celebrates on Dunster Street after a historic and precedent-breaking night. KAI R. MCNAMEE —CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
All-Male A Capella Group Din and Tonics Accepts A Woman By CAROLINE S. ENGELMAYER and MICHAEL E. XIE CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
Harvard’s historically all-male a capella group the Din and Tonics admitted its first female member on Saturday, according to a post on the group’s Facebook page. Karalyn E. Joseph ’21, a soprano in Harvard-Radcliffe Collegium Musicum, joined three other new inductees to the group, which describes itself on its website as the University’s “signature jazz a cappella group.” This move marks an aboutface from the group’s refusal roughly two years ago to offer a callback to a female auditioner despite her “phenomenal” performance,” as then-Dins President Jacques Berguig ‘18 told The Crimson at the time. Ber
Bacow Visits Home, Argues for Harvard By KRISTINE E. GUILLAUME and JAMIE D. HALPER CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
University President Lawrence S. Bacow returned to his home state of Michigan last week to tell residents: Harvard isn’t so bad. Bacow stopped through Detroit and Pontiac to make the case to locals that the University can positively impact their lives and neighborhoods. The trip, which came two months into Bacow’s fledgling presidency, falls at a moment when colleges and universities are facing a hostile political climate around the nation. When Bacow was appointed in February, he pledged to reach out to all parts of the country and address criticisms — some of which he called “fair” at the time — that Harvard caters to coastal elites. Accompanied by Bridget Terry Long, the new dean of Harvard’s Graduate School of Education, Bacow spoke to a group of high school students Thursday in Pontiac, Mich. He urged them to set ambitious goals and persevere in the face of adversity. “It gave me a chance to to encourage them to dream and to set their heights high and not to believe anybody who tells them that they can’t do anything or that something is beyond their INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Harvard Today 2
Harvard asked a federal judge Friday to allow a number of current students and alumni to testify in support of its race-conscious admissions policies in court as the University battles a four-year-old lawsuit alleging it discriminates against Asian-Amerian applicants. “Harvard recognizes that the proposed witnesses may provide testimony that would be of use to the Court about the salience of race in the witnesses’ lived experiences, including their time at Harvard,” lawyers for the University wrote in a court filing. Six alumni and eight current students had previously petitioned to participate in the suit when it goes to trial in a Boston courthouse — an event slated to take place Oct. 15. The petitioners requested time to give individual testimony, as well as make opening and closing statements. Of the potential witnesses, three students and three alumni asked to testify on behalf of a coalition of 25 student organizations. These groups — including the Asian American Association, the Black Students Association, and Fuerza Latina —filed a brief in Aug. 2018 arguing Harvard’s use of affirmative action is necessary to fulfill the University’s educational mission. Lawyers representing the organizations wrote in a Sept. 7 motion that the groups “have long been instrumental in Harvard’s realization of the educational benefits of diversity and
reach,” Bacow said in an interview Friday. “I actually told them that, if they think that’s the case, just tell them the president of Harvard told you that’s not true.” Bacow called the experience “moving” not just for him, but also for the students, who were nearly all black or Latinx. Bacow added Pontiac is the poorest city in the state of Michigan and that, for that reason, he felt it was “important” students hear his message from someone who grew up there. Bacow’s trip extended through Friday, when he traveled to Michigan’s largest city to speak at an event called “Detroit Homecoming.” Detroit “expats” congregated at the homcoming to reconnect with their hometown and to speak about issues facing the city and the rest of the state. Bacow participated in a panel alongside M. Roy Wilson, the president of Wayne State University — a large public research university located in Detroit. Bacow cited Wilson, who graduated from Harvard Medical School, as an example of a Harvard alumnus who is doing important work in parts of the country outside of New England. “I think it’s important that people understand that
SEE BACOW PAGE 5
News 4
Editorial 6
Annabel O’Hagan ‘19 celebrates after being named one of six female Pudding cast members. KAI R. MCNAMEE—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
guig explained the rejection by pointing to the group’s constitution, which at the time barred women from joining. The troupe has since updated its constitution to include a clause prohibiting discrimination on the basis of gender. The most recent edits to the constitution — available on an internal College website — date to Nov. 2017. “Membership in the Din & Tonics is open to all students currently enrolled in full time study in a degree granting faculty or school of Harvard University,” the organization’s constitution reads. “The group does not discriminate on the basis of race, creed, color, sex, gender identity, sexual orientation, national or ethnic origin, age, or physical disability.”
SEE DINS PAGE 4
SEE TESTIMONY PAGE 5
FOOTBALL
Sophomore running back Aaron Shampklin was electric in Saturday’s first quarter. TIMOTHY R. O’MEARA—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
Harvard Dominates in Home Opener, 36-14 By CADE PALMER CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
On the very first play of the 2018 season, things looked off to a foreboding start for Harvard football. As the pregame hype music died down and the Crimson’s kick sailed into the air for
Sports 7
the season’s inaugural kickoff, yellow flags immediately dirtied the field and the return was halted by whistles. Delay of game against Harvard. The defense was not nearly as unprepared for the start of regular season action. Four plays in and the San Diego To-
TODAY’S FORECAST
reros were ceding the ball to the Crimson for its first offensive drive, but the punt didn’t make to Harvard possession. Instead, it bounced off the back of senior Christian Houston and into the awaiting hands of the visiting team. San Diego resumed its drive at first-and-
PARTLY CLOUDY High: 83 Low: 68
goal at the Crimson eight-yard line. The Toreros quickly capitalized, though they only managed to tally three points due to a strong defensive stand near the goal line. It would seem, however, that
SEE FOOTBALL PAGE 8
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