The Harvard Crimson THE UNIVERSITY DAILY, EST. 1873 | VOLUME CXLVII, NO. 17 | CAMBRIDGE, MASSACHUSETTS | FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 2020
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EDITORIAL PAGE 4
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The Committee on Student Life considered Kirkland shield changes
Harvard should adopt sensitive approaches to land ownership
In Photos: Men’s Hockey battled for consolation at the Beanpot
Activists Occupy University Hall By ELLEN M. BURSTEIN CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
Protesters from Divest Harvard occupied University Hall Thursday afternoon as part of a rally held in celebration of the National Day of Divestment. Protesters remained in the building for an hour. In a closing statement, Divest Harvard member Joseph Winters announced that the University faces a deadline of Earth Day — April 22 — to divest from the fossil fuel industry. Divestment organizers said they would continue to advocate daily for their cause. “Every day until then and every single day after, if you do not listen, we’ll keep coming back to make our call: disclose, divest, or this movement will not rest!” Winters said. Inside the administrative building, organizers handed out packets with poems about di-
vestment and statements from Harvard faculty in support of their cause. “When our air is under attack, what do we do? Stand up, fight back,” the group chanted. “Harvard, step off it, put people over profit,” they added. Protesters took turns reading statements from the packet, including a statement of support from Philosophy Department Chair Edward J. Hall and a poem entitled “Earthrise” by inaugural U.S. youth poet laureate Amanda S. C. Gorman ’20. University spokesperson Jason A. Newton declined to comment on the protest, referring comment made by University President Lawrence S. Bacow at a faculty meeting earlier this week. “I am confident that the Corporation will give it the thought and consideration it deserves,”
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Medical Faculty Vote to Divest By JAMIE S. BIKALES and MICHELLE G. KURILLA CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
Some Harvard undergraduates with food allergies and intolerances said they struggle to navigate on-campus dining, citing issues with incomplete labeling and cross-contamination in the dining halls, as well as accommodation protocols they believe are inadequate. Affected students added that they have faced health risks as a result of eating in the dining halls, despite progress they say Harvard has made. Kayla M. Manning ’22, who has celiac disease, recalled becoming incapacitated at the beginning of her first year at the College because flour was not included on the ingredients list for the rice pilaf in Annenberg Hall, the freshman dining facility. “That incident really scared me. And so it made me extra aware of all of the foods that I was putting in my body because, again, I hated my first few weeks at Harvard, to spend them sick like I did,” she said. “It’s not just like my stomach hurts. It affects my whole body.
Amplifying faculty calls for fossil fuel divestment, Harvard Medical School professors overwhelmingly passed a resolution Wednesday urging the University to divest its endowment from the fossil fuel industry. The Medical School’s Faculty Council voted 23-5 to call upon the Harvard Corporation to remove “all direct investments and commingled assets” from companies that make the majority of their profits from fossil fuels, according to a copy of the Council’s resolution provided by Medical School professor James M. Recht. A separate resolution passed by the same vote urged Dean George Q. Daley to make a similar demand. Medical School spokesperson Laura DeCoste wrote in an email that Daley would be unavailable to comment until Friday. Harvard spokesperson Jonathan L. Swain confirmed in an email that University President Lawrence S. Bacow would share the Council’s resolution with the Harvard Corporation. The Medical School’s vote comes one week after Harvard’s Faculty of Arts and Sciences overwhelmingly passed a similar resolution calling for divestment. After a nearly four-monthlong debate in faculty meetings over the proper role of the University in combating climate change, 179 faculty members supported the motion, while 20 opposed. Bacow pledged in comments after the vote to share the FAS resolution with the Corporation. While both faculty bodies threw their support behind divestment, only the Corporation — the University’s highest governing body — can decide whether or not to divest from fossil fuels. In a press release, Divest Harvard — a student group demanding the University divest from fossil fuels — wrote that the passed resolution
SEE ALLERGY PAGE 9
SEE DIVEST PAGE 9
Fossil Fuel Divest Harvard occupied University Hall on Thursday afternoon, singing and chanting in support of divestment by Earth Day 2020. JENNY M. LU—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
Affiliates Students Decry HUDS Diet Accomodations Petition Arandi’s Re-entry By JULIET E. ISSELBACHER and AMANDA Y. SU CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
More than 1,000 people signed a petition for the return of an Iranian Divinity School student denied entry into the United States By LUKE A. WILLIAMS and MATTEO N. WONG CRIMSON STAFF WRITERS
More than 1,000 people have signed a petition published by Harvard College Act on a Dream demanding the safe re-entry of Reihana Emami Arandi, an Iranian citizen admitted to Harvard Divinity School in 2019 but deported from Logan International Airport in September. Arandi’s lawyers said she faced three months of vetting and security checks following her admission to Harvard. Upon arriving on September 18, Customs and Border Protection agents allegedly detained and interrogated her for over eight hours. They issued Arandi an expedited removal order, forcing her to return to Iran and banning her from entering the U.S. for an additional five years, according to her lawyers. CBP issued the removal order on grounds of “immigrant intent” — citing a belief that Arandi planned to permanently reside in the United States. Jason M. Corral, one of Arandi’s lawyers, previously said he sees no rational basis on which CBP could have determined immigrant intent. Harvard Immigration and Refugee Clinic director Sabrineh Ardalan and Cambridge lawyer Susan B. Church also represent Arandi. Arandi’s lawyers filed a civil rights complaint with the Department of Homeland Security’s civil rights office on January 30. Published over a week ago, the petition demands that CBP “rescind its 5-year ban on Reihana and allow her to return to the U.S. immediately so that she can continue her studies at Harvard University.” It also calls on Harvard and members of Congress to support and speak out in solidarity with Arandi. In an emailed statement provided by Corral, Arandi wrote
SEE ARANDI PAGE 3 INSIDE THIS ISSUE
Harvard Today 2
Annenberg Hall serves as Harvard University Dining Services’ designated dining facility for the College’s firstyear students. JENNY M. LU—CRIMSON PHOTOGRAPHER
Cambridge Councilors Endorse Sen. Ed Markey By JASPER G. GOODMAN CRIMSON STAFF WRITER
Six members of the Cambridge City Council endorsed incumbent United States Senator Edward J. Markey (D-Mass.) in his primary election campaign against U.S. Representative Joseph P. Kennedy III (D-Mass) Thursday. Vice Mayor Alanna M. Mallon and Councilors Dennis J. Carlone, Marc C. McGovern, Patricia M. Nolan ’80, Jivan G. Sobrinho-Wheeler, and Quinton Y. Zondervan announced their decision to back Markey in a campaign press release. “Although I understand that there are times when a new voice is necessary, this is not one of those times,” McGovern said in an interview. “Ed is extremely effective, he is progressive, he fights for and stands for issues that I care about, and he gets things done.” Nolan, who is serving her first term on the City Council, said she was persuaded to back
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Markey by his “leadership” on climate change issues. Markey is a co-sponsor of the Green New Deal — a resolution that he introduced last year with U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) aimed at curbing carbon emissions. “I 1,000 percent could not be more thrilled that he is a co-sponsor of the Green New Deal and has been pushing the kind of change that we need at the national level, not just these past couple years, but for a decade in the area of addressing our climate crisis,” Nolan said. At a Cambridge Democrats event last month that both Senate candidates attended, Kennedy took aim at Markey’s 2002 vote in favor of the Iraq War — a vote Markey said he regrets. Nolan, who attended the event — held at Cambridge Rindge and Latin School — said the distinction was not enough for her to stop supporting Markey.
SEE MARKEY PAGE 3
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