Everything about The Harvard Crimson totally explained
The Harvard Crimson, the daily
student newspaper of
Harvard University, was founded in 1873. It is the only daily newspaper in
Cambridge, Massachusetts, and is run entirely by
Harvard College undergraduates. Many Crimson alumni have gone on to careers in journalism, and some have won
Pulitzer Prizes.
About The Crimson
Any student who volunteers and completes a series of requirements known as the "comp" is "elected" an "editor" of the newspaper. Thus, all staff members of
The Crimson—including writers, business staff, photographers, and graphic designers—are technically "editors." (If an editor makes news, he or she's referred to in the news article as a "Crimson editor," which, though important for transparency, also leads to odd attributions. A particularly laughable one might be something along the lines of a reference such as 'former President John F. Kennedy '40, who was also a Crimson editor, ended the Cuban Missile Crisis.') Editorial and financial decisions rest in a board of executives, collectively called a "guard," who are chosen for one-year terms each November by the outgoing guard. This process is referred to as the "turkey shoot" or the "shoot." The unsigned opinions of "The Crimson Staff" are decided at tri-weekly meetings that are open to any Crimson editor (except those editors who plan to write or edit a news story on the same topic in the future).
The Crimson is one of the few college newspapers in the U.S. that owns its own printing presses. At the beginning of
2004 The Crimson began publishing with a full-color front and back page, in conjunction with the launch of a major redesign. The Crimson also prints several other publications on its presses.
Many undergraduate editors call The Crimson "The Crime," a 1950s nickname that has gained currency in recent years.
The Crimson has a rivalry with the
Harvard Lampoon, which it refers to in print as a "semi-secret Sorrento Square social organization that used to occasionally publish a so-called humor magazine." The two organizations occupy buildings within less than one block of each other; interaction between their staff has included pranks, vandalism, and even romance.
Crimson alumni include Presidents
John F. Kennedy of the Class of
1940 (who served as a business editor) and
Franklin D. Roosevelt (who served as president of the newspaper), Class of
1904. Writer
Cleveland Amory was president of
The Crimson; when Katharine Hepburn's mother asked him what he planned to do after college, he says he replied teasingly that "once you'd been president of
The Harvard Crimson in your senior year at Harvard there was very little, in after life, for you."
Currently,
The Crimson publishes three weekly pullout sections in addition to its regular daily paper: A Sports section on Mondays, a magazine called
Fifteen Minutes on Thursdays, and an Arts section on Fridays.
The Crimson is a private corporation that's independent of the university. All decisions on the content and day-to-day operations of the newspaper are made by undergraduates. The student leaders of the newspaper employ several non-student staff, many of whom have stayed on for many years and have come to be thought of as family members by the students who run the paper.
History
Early years
The Harvard Crimson was one of many college newspapers founded shortly after the Civil War and describes itself as "the nation's oldest continuously published daily college newspaper," although this fact is hotly contested among other college newspapers.
The Crimson traces its origin to the first issue of
The Magenta, published
January 24,
1873 despite strong discouragement from the Dean. The faculty of the College had suspended the existence of several previous student newspapers, including the
Collegian, whose motto "Dulce et Periculum" ("sweet and dangerous") represented the precarious place of the student press at Harvard University in the late nineteenth century.
The Magenta's editors, undeterred, politely declined Dean Burney's advice and moved forward with a biweekly paper, "a thin layer of editorial content surrounded by an even thinner wrapper of advertising."
The paper changed its name to
The Crimson in
1875 when Harvard changed its official color by a vote of the student body—the announcement came with a full-page editorial announcing, "Magenta isn't now, and ... never has been, the right color of Harvard." This particular issue,
May 21,
1875, also included several reports on athletic events, a concert review, and a call for local shopkeepers to stock the exact shade of crimson ribbon, to avoid "startling variations in the colors worn by Harvard men at the races."
The Crimson included more substance in the 1880s, as the paper's editors were more eager to engage in a quality of journalism like that of muckraking big-city newspapers; it was at this time that the paper moved first from a biweekly to a weekly, and then to a daily in
1883.
Twentieth century
The paper flourished at the beginning of the twentieth century with the acquisition of its own (and current) building in
1915, the purchase of
Harvard Illustrated Magazine and the establishment of the editorial board in
1911. The
Illustrated's editors became
Crimson photographers, and thereby established the photographic board. The addition of this and the editorial board brought the paper to become, in essence, the modern
Crimson. The newspaper's president no longer authored editorials single-handedly, and the paper took stronger editorial positions.
The 1930s and 1940s were dark years for
The Crimson; reduced financial resources and competition from a publication established by ex-editors meant serious challenges to the paper's viability. In 1943, the banner on the paper read
Harvard Service News and the stories focused almost exclusively on Harvard's contribution to the war effort. Under the authority of so-called wartime administrative necessity, the Graduate Board, consisting of alumni who have final authority over the paper, didn't allow the
Service News to editorialize. Instead, the paper was administered during the war by a board of University administrators, alumni, and students.
In 1934 the Crimson defended a proposal by Hitler's press secretary,
Ernst F. Sedgwick Hanfstaengl to donate to Harvard a prize scholarship to enable a Harvard student to attend a Nazi university. The Harvard Corporation voted unanimously to refuse the offer, "We are unwilling to accept a gift from one who has been so closely identified with the leadership of a political party which has inflicted damage on the universities of Germany through measures which have struck at principles we believe to be fundamental to universities throughout the world." The Crimson defended it, "That political theories should prevent a Harvard student from enjoying an opportunity for research in one of the world's greatest cultural centers is most unfortunate and scarcely in line with the liberal traditions of which Harvard is pardonably proud."
Post-war growth
The paper went back to its civilian version in 1946, and as the Army and Navy moved out of Harvard,
The Crimson grew larger, more financially secure, more diversified, and more aware of the world outside the campus during the early Cold War era than its pre-WWII predecessor had been.
The paper, although financially independent and independent of editorial control by the Harvard University administration, was under the University's administrative control insofar as it was composed of university students who were subject to the university's rules.
Radcliffe women on staff were forced to follow curfews to which Harvard men were not subject, and that interfered greatly with the late hours required in producing a newspaper. Throughout the 1950s,
The Crimson and various university officials exchanged letters debating these restrictions.
Crimson editors pushed for later curfews for their female writers, who grew increasingly important in day-to-day operations. Under president
Phillip Cronin '53, women became staff members rather than Radcliffe correspondents.
Crimson writers were involved in national issues, especially when anti-
communist investigative committees came to Harvard. Future
Pulitzer prize-winning writer
Anthony Lukas' stories (most notably, an interview with
HUAC witness
Wendell Furry) were sometimes picked up by the
Associated Press. Not even a staff writer yet, Lukas had arrived at the university with
Joseph McCarthy's home number in his pocket. His father was an opponent of McCarthy's and a member of the
American Jewish Committee, the group that produced
Commentary magazine.
Modern-day paper
The Harvard Crimson, Inc. was incorporated as a nonprofit Massachusetts corporation in 1966; the incorporation was involuntarily revoked, then revived, in 1986.
In 1991, student reporters for
The Crimson were the first to break the news that Harvard had selected former Princeton Provost
Neil Leon Rudenstine to succeed
Derek Bok as President of the university. The reporters, who had learned of a secret meeting in New York, got their confirmation when they approached a surprised Rudenstine on his plane ride back to Boston. The story appeared in an extra bearing the
dateline "SOMEWHERE OVER NEW ENGLAND." Resourceful
Crimson editors repeated the scoop in 2001, beating out national media outlets to report that
Lawrence Summers would succeed Rudenstine, and again in 2007, being the first to report
Drew Gilpin Faust's ascension to the presidency.
(External Link
)
Throughout the 1990s, there was a great deal of focus on making the staff of the paper more inclusive and diverse. Over time, a diversity committee and a financial aid fund were both instituted to try to correct this problem. Today, some 40 editors participate in the financial aid program.
On January 12, 2004,
The Crimson printed its first color edition after obtaining and installing new Goss Community color presses. The date also marked the unveiling of a major redesign of the paper itself.
In 2004,
The Crimson filed a lawsuit against
Harvard University to force the Harvard University Police Department to release more complete records to the public. The case was heard before the
Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court in November 2005. In January 2006, the court decided the case in favor of the University.
In November 2005, the
Crimson had its records subpoenaed by
ConnectU, a firm suing
Facebook.com, its better known competitor.
The Crimson is currently challenging the subpoena, and it has said that it won't comply with ConnectU's demands for documents.
On April 23, 2006, after having received an anonymous tip,
The Crimson broke the story of plagiarism allegations surrounding Harvard student
Kaavya Viswanathan and her recently published book,
How Opal Mehta Got Kissed, Got Wild, and Got a Life.
Notable past senior members
- George Abrams, lawyer and businessman (External Link
)
- Daniel Altman, author and journalist
- Cleveland Amory, writer (External Link
)
- Steve Ballmer, CEO of Microsoft (External Link
)
- Michael Barone, television commentator, senior writer for U.S. News & World Report, author (External Link
)
- Daniel J. Boorstin, American author and writer and Librarian of Congress (External Link
)
- Robert O. Boorstin, writer and political advisor (External Link
)
- Sewell Chan, journalist for The New York Times
- Susan Chira, author, foreign editor of The New York Times (External Link
)
- Nicholas Ciarelli, founder and editor of Think Secret (External Link
)
- Blair Clark, manager of Eugene McCarthy's 1968 presidential campaign (External Link
)
- Adam Clymer, author, journalist for The New York Times (External Link
)
- Jonathan Cohn, author, journalist for The New Republic (External Link
)
- Richard Connell, author (External Link
)
- Jim Cramer, host of CNBC's Mad Money(External Link
)
- Michael Crichton, author (External Link
)
- E.J. Dionne, Jr., columnist for The Washington Post (External Link
)
- Esther Dyson, digital technology analyst, author (External Link
)
- Daniel Ellsberg, released the Pentagon Papers (External Link
)
- James Fallows, journalist (External Link
)
- Susan Faludi, author (External Link
)
- David Frankel, filmmaker (External Link
)
- Mark Gearan, former Peace Corps director (External Link
)
- George Goodman, a.k.a. "Adam Smith," hosted the Emmy award-winning program Adam Smith's Money World on PBS (External Link
)
- Donald Graham, CEO and chairman of The Washington Post Co. (External Link
)
- C. Boyden Gray, Committee for Justice chairman and White House Counsel to President George H. W. Bush (External Link
)
- Linda Greenhouse, journalist for The New York Times (External Link
)
- David Halberstam, author (External Link
)
- Hendrik Hertzberg, journalist for The New Yorker (External Link
)
- David Ignatius, columnist for The Washington Post (External Link
)
- Boisfeuillet Jones, Jr., publisher and CEO of The Washington Post (External Link
)
- Peter Kaplan, editor of "The New York Observer" (External Link
)
- Caroline Kennedy, daughter of U.S. President John F. Kennedy (External Link
)
- John F. Kennedy, 35th President of the United States (External Link
)
- Mickey Kaus, journalist and political blogger (External Link
)
- Michael Kinsley, journalist, founding editor of Slate magazine (External Link
)
- Peter Kramer, psychiatrist, author (External Link
)
- Nicholas D. Kristof, columnist for The New York Times (External Link
)
- Thomas Samuel Kuhn, philosopher and historian of science
- Charles Lane, former editor of The New Republic (External Link
)
- Jennifer 8. Lee, journalist for The New York Times (External Link
)
- Nicholas Lemann, dean of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism (External Link
)
- Anthony Lewis, author and former columnist for The New York Times (External Link
)
- J. Anthony Lukas, author and Pulitzer prize-winning journalist (External Link
)
- Charles S. Maier, professor of history at Harvard (External Link
)
- Bill McKibben, environmentalist, author (External Link
)
- Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform (External Link
)
- Mark Penn, chief political strategist for Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign (External Link
)
- Frank Rich, columnist for The New York Times (External Link
)
- Steven V. Roberts, television journalist (External Link
)
- Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd President of the United States (External Link
)
- Scott A. Rosenberg, co-founder of Salon.com (External Link
)
- Jack Rosenthal, journalist for The New York Times and president of The New York Times Company Foundation
(External Link
)
- David Sanger, journalist for The New York Times (External Link
)
- Whit Stillman, filmmaker (External Link
)
- Paul Sweezy, Marxist economist and funder of the Monthly Review (External Link
)
- Evan Thomas, associate managing editor of Newsweek (External Link
)
- Jeffrey Toobin, senior legal analyst for CNN (External Link
)
- Andrew Weil, alternative medicine advocate (External Link
)
- George Weller, novelist, playwright, Pulitzer prize winning journalist for The New York Times and The Chicago Daily News(External Link
)
- Caspar Weinberger, United States Secretary of Defense under President Ronald Reagan (External Link
)
- Mark Whitaker, Senior Vice President of NBC News, former editor of Newsweek (External Link
)
- Elizabeth Wurtzel, author (External Link
)
- Jeff Zucker, president and CEO of NBC Universal (External Link
)
- Robert Ellis Smith, noted journalist and creator of the Privacy Journal(External Link
)
Further Information
Get more info on 'The Harvard Crimson'.
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