The following is a list of notable people who have served on the staff of The Harvard Crimson, the student newspaper at Harvard University.
Authors, journalists, and writers
editEditors, journalists, and reporters
edit- Jonathan Alter, author covering U.S. Presidents[1]
- Joseph Alsop, political reporter[2]
- Cleveland Amory, writer and animal rights activist.[3][4] Amory is a former Crimson president.
- Nina Bernstein, Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter for The New York Times[5] reporter for The New York Times[6][7]
- William M. Beecher, Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter for The Boston Globe, The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and The Minnesota Star Tribune[8][9]
- Jess Bravin, Wall Street Journal reporter covering the Supreme Court of the United States[10][11][12]
- Bartle Bull, editor for Middle East Monitor and Prospect[13][14][15]
- David Burnham, reporter for The New York Times[16]
- Diane Cardwell, renewable energy reporter for The New York Times[17]
- Sewell Chan, journalist for The Los Angeles Times
- Susan Chira, Pulitzer Prize winner and former editor-in-chief of The Marshall Project.[18][19] Chira is a former Crimson president.
- Nicholas Ciarelli, founder and editor of Think Secret and founder of BookBub[20]
- Adam Clymer, author, journalist for The New York Times.[21] Clymer is a former Crimson president.
- Jonathan Cohn, author, journalist for HuffPost.[22] Cohn is a former Crimson president.
- Deborah Copaken, author and photojournalist[23][24][25][26]
- Sarah Crichton, writer and editor[27]
- William O. Dapping, reporter for The Citizen in Auburn, New York[28]
- Lynn Darling, reporter and editor at The Washington Post and Esquire[29][30][31]
- Esther Dyson, digital technology analyst, author[32]
- Daniel Ellsberg, author, released the Pentagon Papers[33][34]
- David Fahrenthold, Pulitzer Prize–winning political reporter for The New York Times.[35]
- James Fallows, journalist and speechwriter to Jimmy Carter.[32] Fallows is a former Crimson president.
- Susan Faludi, Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter and author[36]
- Christopher John Farley, culture writer for The Wall Street Journal[26][37]
- Sydney P. Freedberg, Pulitzer Prize winner and investigative reporter[38][39]
- Alix M. Freedman, reporter and editor with The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and Reuters.[40]
- Otto Fuerbringer, former editor of Time.[4][41] Fuerbringer is a former Crimson president.
- Susan Glasser, journalist at The New Yorker[42]
- George Goodman, a.k.a. "Adam Smith," hosted the Emmy award-winning program Adam Smith's Money World on PBS
- Garrett Graff, former editor of Politico magazine and the Washingtonian[43]
- Linda Greenhouse, journalist for The New York Times[44][45]
- Michael Grunwald, journalist at Politico Magazine
- Anemona Hartocollis, reporter for The New York Times[46]
- Laurie Hays, reporter and editor for The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg News[47]
- Rosalind S. Helderman, reporter with The New York Times[48][49]
- Hendrik Hertzberg, journalist for The New Yorker[50]
- Fred Hiatt, Pulitzer Prize winner and editor for The Washington Post[51][52]
- Harry Hurt III, writer, professional golfer, and biographer of Donald Trump[53][54]
- Peter Kaplan, former editor-in-chief of The New York Observer, current creative director of Condé Nast Traveler
- Mickey Kaus, journalist and political blogger[55]
- Sam Koppelman, journalist, founder of Hunterbrook[56]
- Charles Lane, former editor of The New Republic[57]
- Jennifer 8. Lee, former journalist for The New York Times[18][58][59]
- Anthony Lewis, Pulitzer Prize winner, author, and former columnist for The New York Times[60]
- Ivan Levingston, reporter for the Financial Times[61][62]
- Annie Lowrey, author and staff writer at The Atlantic.[63]
- Arthur Lubow, journalist
- J. Anthony Lukas, author and Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist[32]
- Michael M. Luo, executive editor of The New Yorker[64]
- Dylan Matthews, writer for Vox[65]
- Victor McElheny, science journalist and founder of the Knight Science Journalism program[66]
- Seth Mnookin, author of Hard News[67]
- Ivan Oransky, co-founder of Retraction Watch[68][69]
- Evan Osnos, journalist for The New Yorker[70]
- Alexandra Petri, comedy writer for The Washington Post[71]
- Steven V. Roberts, former reporter for The New York Times, television journalist[72]
- Margot Roosevelt, labor reporter for the Los Angeles Times and great-granddaughter of Theodore Roosevelt[73]
- Scott Rosenberg, co-founder of Salon.com and editor at Axios[74]
- Yair Rosenberg, staff writer for The Atlantic[75]
- David Sanger, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist for The New York Times[76]
- Charlie Savage, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist for The New York Times[77]
- Raymond Sokolov, food critic for The Wall Street Journal[78]
- Michael Sragow, film critic[79][80]
- Richard Strout, journalist with The Christian Science Monitor and The New Republic[81]
- Steven C. Swett, reporter with The Baltimore Sun, The Wall Street Journal, and Valley News[82][83]
- William Roscoe Thayer, author, editor, and historian[81]
- Evan Thomas, associate managing editor of Newsweek[84]
- Craig Unger, author and journalist
- Amy Wilentz, journalist and contributing editor at The Nation[85]
- Graeme Wood, author and journalist at The Atlantic[86][87]
Columnists, critics, and opinion writers
edit- Steve Chapman, columnist, Chicago Tribune
- Noam Cohen, author and columnist for The New York Times[88][89]
- E. J. Dionne, columnist for The Washington Post[32]
- Ross Douthat, columnist for The New York Times[90]
- David Ignatius, columnist for The Washington Post[32]
- Nicholas D. Kristof, Pulitzer Prize–winning columnist for The New York Times[91]
- Frank Rich, columnist for The New York Times[92]
- Robert J. Samuelson, reporter and columnist[93][94][95]
- Stephen Stromberg, Washington Post editorial board[96]
Executives, founders, and publishers
edit- Ravi Agrawal, editor-in-chief of Foreign Policy[97][18]
- Alessandra Galloni, editor in chief of Reuters[98]
- Donald E. Graham, CEO and chairman of The Washington Post Co. Graham is a former Crimson president.[18][99]
- Sam Jacobs, editor-in-chief for Time[100][101]
- Boisfeuillet Jones Jr., publisher and CEO of The Washington Post.[99] Jones is a former Crimson president.
- Joseph Kahn, Executive Editor of The New York Times. Kahn is a former Crimson president.[18][102][103]
- Michael Kinsley, journalist, founding editor of Slate magazine[32]
- Wendy Lesser, founder of The Threepenny Review[104]
- Jessica Lessin, founder of The Information
- Eric Newcomer, tech journalist and founder of the publication Newcomer[105]
- Noah Oppenheim, president of NBC News[59][106]
- David Plotz, former CEO of Atlas Obscura and host of Slate Political Gabfest[107]
- Jack Rosenthal, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist for The New York Times and president of The New York Times Company Foundation[108][109]
- Robert Ellis Smith, journalist and creator of the Privacy Journal.[110] Smith is a former Crimson president.
- Ira Stoll, New York Sun executive. Stoll is a former Crimson president.
- Mark Whitaker, senior vice president of NBC News, former editor of Newsweek[111]
Foreign correspondents
edit- David Halberstam, Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter and author and author[32]
- Selig S. Harrison, reporter specializing in North Korea and East Asia[112][113][114]
- Javier Hernández, Tokyo bureau chief for The New York Times[115]
- Peter R. Kann, Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter for The Wall Street Journal[116][117]
- Philip Pan, journalist and author[118]
- Anton Troianovski, Moscow bureau chief for The New York Times[119]
- George Weller, novelist, playwright, Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist for The New York Times and The Chicago Daily News[4][120]
- Theodore H. White, prominent political and WWII journalist[2]
Authors and novelists
edit- Michael Crichton, author[121][122][123]
- John Putnam Demos, author and historian of the Salem witch trials[124]
- V.V. Ganeshananthan, author and journalist[125]
- James Gleick, author and historian of science[126][127]
- Henry James, writer and biographer[128]
- Myron Kaufmann, novelist and author of Remember Me to God[129][130][131]
- Charles Thornton Libby, author and historian[81]
- Michael Maccoby, New York Times best-selling author and psychoanalyst.[132][133] Maccoby is a former Crimson president.
- Michael Massing, MacArthur Fellow and author of books on the war on drugs and the Iraq War[134]
- Martin Mayer, novelist[135][136]
- Matthew Quirk, novelist[137][138]
- Michael E. Raynor, author of books on business management[139]
- Abraham Josephine Riesman, reporter and biographer[140][141]
- David Riesman, sociologist and author of The Lonely Crowd[142][143][144]
- Joel Townsley Rogers, science fiction writer[81]
- Bayard Tuckerman, biographer[81]
- Suzy Welch, business author and wife of General Electric CEO Jack Welch[145][146][147]
- Owen Wister, author of The Virginian[81] and "father of Western fiction"[148]
- Elizabeth Wurtzel, author[149]
Sports reporters
edit- Andrew Beyer, horse racing reporter and inventor of the Beyer Speed Figure[150][151]
- Jennifer Frey, sports reporter for The New York Times and The Washington Post[152]
- Gwen Knapp, sports reporter for The Philadelphia Inquirer, the San Francisco Examiner, the San Francisco Chronicle, and The New York Times[153][154][155]
- Jon Morosi, reporter with MLB Network and NHL Network[156][157]
- John Powers, Pulitzer Prize winner, sports reporter for The Boston Globe, and the "dean of Olympic journalists"[158][159][160]
- Pablo Torre, ESPN writer, television personality, podcast host[161][162][163]
Radio and television
edit- Michael Barone, television commentator, writer for The Washington Examiner, author[164]
- Irin Carmon, reporter for MSNBC[165]
- Jim Cramer, host of CNBC's Mad Money. Cramer is a former Crimson president.[166]
- Jennifer Griffin,Pentagon correspondent for Fox News[167][168][169]
- Mary Louise Kelly, co-host of NPR's All Things Considered[170]
- Melissa Lee, CNBC news anchor[171][172]
- Errol Louis, journalist and television show host[173]
- Abby Phillip, CNN news anchor[174]
- Katrina Szish, television personality[175]
- Jeffrey Toobin, senior legal analyst for CNN[91]
- Selina Wang, White House Correspondent for ABC News[176]
Academia
editAdministrators
edit- David Bosco, associate dean of the Hamilton Lugar School of Global and International Studies at Indiana University[177][178]
- James Bryant Conant, President of Harvard University from 1933 to 1953[142][179]
- William Emerson, first dean of the MIT School of Architecture[81]
- Mark Gearan, former Peace Corps director and president of the Harvard Kennedy School Institute of Politics[180]
- Carol J. Greenhouse, professor at Princeton University, sister of Linda Greenhouse[181]
- Nicholas Lemann, dean emeritus of the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.[182] Lemann is a former Crimson president.
- Alfred Henry Lloyd, philosopher and interim president at the University of Michigan[81]
- Jennifer Mnookin, incoming president of Columbia University[183]
- John U. Monro, dean of Harvard College[142][184]
- Joshua Sharfstein, vice dean at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health[185]
- Peter Tufano, former dean of the Saïd Business School[186]
Professors
editHumanities
edit- Stephen Barnett, legal scholar at University of California, Berkeley School of Law who opposed the Newspaper Preservation Act of 1970.[187] Barnett is a former Crimson president.
- Nancy Bauer, professor of philosophy at Tufts University and dean of the School of the Museum of Fine Arts at Tufts
- Marilyn Booth, professor at the University of Oxford[188]
- Randall Collins, sociologist and professor at the University of Pennsylvania[189]
- Geoffrey Cowan, professor at USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism[190]
- Jamal Greene, professor at Columbia Law School[191]
- Farah Griffin, professor of African-American literature at Columbia University[192][193]
- Benjamin W. Heineman Jr., writer, GE executive, and professor at Harvard Law School[194]
- James Hershberg, professor of international history specializing in the Cold War at George Washington University[195]
- Richard Hyland, professor at Rutgers Law School[196]
- Christopher Jencks, professor and social scientist[197]
- Thomas Samuel Kuhn, philosopher and historian of science
- Charles Kurzman, professor of Islamic studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill[198]
- Charles S. Maier, professor of history at Harvard University[199]
- F. Warren McFarlan, professor at Harvard Business School[200]
- John Ulric Nef, economic historian[81]
- Eric M. Nelson, professor of government at Harvard[201]
- Maurice Samuels, professor of French at Yale University and director of the Yale Program for the Study of Antisemitism[139]
- Martha A. Sandweiss, professor of history at Princeton University[202]
- M. E. Sarotte, historian and professor at Johns Hopkins University[26][24][203]
- Wendy Seltzer, professor and former board member of the World Wide Web Foundation[204][205]
- Daniel Sharfstein, professor at Vanderbilt University[206][207]
- Ganesh Sitaraman, professor at Vanderbilt University[208]
- Madhavi Sunder, professor at Georgetown University Law Center[209][210]
- Claude E. Welch Jr., political scientist at SUNY at Buffalo. Welch is a former Crimson president.
- Barrett Wendell, English professor at Harvard and the University of Paris[81]
- David Yermack, professor of finance at New York University Stern School of Business[211][212]
Sciences
edit- Rediet Abebe, computer scientist, University of California, Berkeley[213]
- Joel E. Cohen, professor at Rockefeller University[214]
- Rupert Emerson, professor of political science at Harvard[81][142]
- Kristin Goss, professor of public policy at Duke University[215]
- Peter Kramer, psychiatrist, author[32]
- Bernardo L. Sabatini, professor at Harvard Medical School[216]
- Peter M. Shane, professor at Moritz College of Law[217]
- William Sydney Thayer, professor of medicine at Johns Hopkins School of Medicine[81]
Business
editCEOs and executives
edit- Steve Ballmer, former CEO of Microsoft and owner of the Los Angeles Clippers[218][219]
- John Cowles Sr., co-owner of the Cowles Media Company[81]
- Gardner Cowles Jr., co-owner of the Cowles Media Company[81]
- Robert Decherd, CEO of A. H. Belo Corporation. Decherd is a former Crimson president.[220][221]
- Richard Edelman, CEO of public relations firm Edelman[222][223]
- Andy Jassy, CEO of Amazon[224][225]
- J. Spencer Love, president and chairman of Burlington Industries and namesake of the Love School of Business at Elon University[81]
- Ben Sherwood, former president of Disney-ABC Television Group and ABC News[226][227][228]
- Walter H. Wheeler Jr., president of Pitney Bowes[81]
- Susan Wojcicki, CEO of YouTube[229]
- Jeff Zucker, president of CNN and former president and CEO of NBC Universal. Zucker is a former Crimson president.[230]
Founders
edit- Hayley Barna, co-founder of Birchbox[231]
- Nathan Blecharczyk, co-founder of Airbnb[232]
- Tyler Bosmeny, founder of Clever and visiting partner at Y Combinator[233]
- Charlie Cheever, co-founder of Quora[234]
- Parker Conrad, founder of Zenefits and Rippling[235][236][237]
- Jennifer Hyman, co-founder of Rent The Runway[236][238]
Finance
edit- Amos Tuck French, banker[81]
- Albert Hamilton Gordon, owner of Kidder Peabody[81][239]
- Matthew Granade, senior executive at Bridgewater and Point72[240][241]
- Alfred Winslow Jones, "the father of the hedge fund industry"[81][242]
- Thomas W. Lamont, former Chairman of J.P. Morgan & Co.[243]
- Thomas H. Lee, founder of Thomas H. Lee Partners and an early pioneer of leveraged buyouts[244]
- James S. Marcus, investment banker and philanthropist[245]
- David Rockefeller, chairman of Chase Manhattan Bank and member of the Rockefeller family[2][142]
- Philip Roosevelt, author, investment banker, and member of the Roosevelt family[81]
- Walter E. Sachs, partner at Goldman Sachs and part of the Goldman–Sachs family[81]
- Frederick M. Warburg, partner of Kuhn, Loeb & Co.[246]
- James Warburg, banker and member of the Warburg family[81]
- Byron Wien, prominent investor with Morgan Stanley and Blackstone[247]
Film and television
edit- Paul Attanasio, two-time Academy Award nominee for Best Adapted Screenplay[248]
- Eli Attie, speechwriter and screenwriter[249]
- Michael Colton, screenwriter of Home Economics and A Futile and Stupid Gesture[250]
- Richard Connell, author, screenwriter, and 1941 Oscar nominee[81][251]
- Ethan Drogin, writer for Suits and Lie to Me[252]
- Jeffrey D. Dunn, former CEO of Sesame Workshop[253]
- David Frankel, filmmaker[254]
- Lauren Greenfield, documentary filmmaker[255][256]
- Herbert Dudley Hale Jr., documentary filmmaker for the State Department and U.S. military[81]
- Colin Jost, comedian and writer for Saturday Night Live[257]
- Bruce L. Paisner, CEO of International Academy of Television Arts and Sciences[258][259]
- Peter Sagal, host of NPR's Wait Wait... Don't Tell Me![24][260]
- Nell Scovell, creator of Sabrina the Teenage Witch and co-author of Lean In[261][262]
- Whit Stillman, filmmaker[263]
Government and politics
edit
Presidents of the United States of America
edit- John F. Kennedy, 35th President of the United States[2][264][265]
- Franklin D. Roosevelt, 32nd President of the United States. Roosevelt is a former Crimson president.[265][266][267][268][269]
Cabinet Secretaries
edit- Robert Bacon, Secretary of State during the Theodore Roosevelt administration[81]
- Antony Blinken, Secretary of State during the Biden administration[18][270][271]
- Pete Buttigieg, former Mayor of South Bend, Indiana and 2020 presidential candidate[272]
- Merrick Garland, United States Attorney General during the Biden administration, former Circuit Judge and former Supreme Court nominee[273]
- Gina Raimondo, former Governor of Rhode Island and Secretary of Commerce during the Biden administration[274]
- Caspar Weinberger, United States Secretary of Defense under President Ronald Reagan[275][276]
Governors
editMembers of Congress
edit- Henry Alden Clark, Representative from Pennsylvania.[81] Clark was a co-founder of The Crimson.[277]
- Richard Blumenthal, Senator from Connecticut[278][279]
- Robert J. Bulkley, Senator from Ohio[81]
- Tom Cotton, Senator from Arkansas[280][281]
- Augustus P. Gardner, Representative from Massachusetts[81]
- Bill Green, Representative from New York[282][283]
- Alanson B. Houghton, Representative from New York and U.S. ambassador to Germany and the United Kingdom[81]
- W. Kingsland Macy, Representative from New York[81]
- Chris Pappas, Representative from New Hampshire[284][285]
- Elise Stefanik, Representative from New York[286]
- Samuel Winslow, Representative from Massachusetts[81]
Ambassadors
edit- Dan Baer, United States Ambassador to the OSCE and executive director of the Colorado Department of Higher Education[287]
- Donald Blinken, United States ambassador to Hungary and co-founder of Warburg Pincus[288][289]
- David Gray, United States ambassador to Ireland[81]
- Joseph Grew, United States Ambassador to Japan from 1932 until December 8, 1941[4][81]
- Caroline Kennedy, U.S. ambassador to Australia and daughter of U.S. President John F. Kennedy[290]
- Lithgow Osborne, United States Ambassador to Norway[81]
- David Scheffer, United States Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues[291][292]
- Frederic Jesup Stimson, writer and United States Ambassador to Argentina[81]
- Henry Serrano Villard, United States ambassador to Senegal and Mauritania[81]
Government officials
edit- Daniel Benjamin, Coordinator for Counterterrorism at the State Department[293][294]
- Amanda Bennett, Pulitzer Prize–winning reporter and editor, CEO of the United States Agency for Global Media during the Biden administration[295][296]
- Christopher Blazejewski, Speaker of the Rhode Island House of Representatives[297]
- Matt Blumenthal, member of the Connecticut House of Representatives[298]
- Mike Bonin, member of the Los Angeles City Council[299]
- Daniel J. Boorstin, author, writer, and Librarian of Congress[300]
- Jon Finer, deputy national security advisor in the Biden administration[301]
- James Glassman, journalist, diplomat, and director of the George W. Bush Institute[302][303]
- Herbert P. Gleason, Boston's chief legal counsel[304][305]
- C. Boyden Gray, Committee for Justice chairman and White House Counsel to President George H. W. Bush[306]
- Adam S. Hickey, former Deputy Assistant Attorney General[18][307]
- Gilbert B. Kaplan, Under Secretary of Commerce for International Trade[308]
- Herbert Putnam, Librarian of Congress from 1899 to 1939[81]
- Josiah Quincy VI, mayor of Boston[81]
- Alastair Rellie, MI6 director
- Andrew Samwick, chief economist of the Council of Economic Advisers during the George W. Bush administration and professor at Dartmouth College[309]
- Peter Shapiro, youngest-ever person elected to the New Jersey General Assembly[310][311]
- Arthur Sweetser, journalist and diplomat[81]
- Adam Yarmolinsky, staffer in the Kennedy, Lyndon Johnson, and Carter administrations[312][313]
Political operatives and organizers
edit- Blair Clark, manager of Eugene McCarthy's 1968 presidential campaign. Clark is a former Crimson president.[142][314]
- Brian Fallon, press secretary for Hillary Clinton in 2016 and communications director for Kamala Harris in 2024[315][316]
- Peter Ferrara, policy analyst with The Heartland Institute and climate change denialist[317][318]
- Frederick Vanderbilt Field, socialist activist[319]
- Powers Hapgood, Socialist Party leader[81]
- Corliss Lamont, founder of the National Council of American–Soviet Friendship[81]
- Grover Norquist, president of Americans for Tax Reform[320]
- Mark Penn, chief political strategist for Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign[321]
- Kathie Sarachild, radical feminist[322][323][324]
- Douglas Schoen, political consultant and pundit[325][326]
- Paul Sweezy, Marxist economist and funder of the Monthly Review[327]
- Fairfax Henry Wheelan, San Francisco political reformer[81]
Law
editFederal and state judges
edit- David J. Barron, circuit judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit.[328][329] Barron is a former Crimson president.
- Theodore D. Chuang, judge on the United States District Court for the District of Maryland[330][331][332]
- Paul A. Engelmayer, circuit judge on the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York[333]
- Michael E. Farbiarz, judge on the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey[334][335]
- Melissa Hart, justice on the Colorado Supreme Court[336]
- Leondra Kruger, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of California[337]
- Patti B. Saris, judge on the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts[338][339][340]
- Hiller B. Zobel, Associate Justice of the Massachusetts Superior Court[341][342]
Attorneys
edit- Francis R. Appleton, prominent 19th-century attorney[81]
- Arthur A. Ballantine, attorney and first-ever solicitor for the IRS[81]
- David Bruck, capital defense attorney
- Garrett Epps, author and law school professor. Epps is a former Crimson president.
- Albert M. Kales, originator of the Missouri Plan[81]
- David Lat, founder of Above the Law[343][344][345]
- Shannon Liss-Riordan, labor attorney and candidate for the 2020 United States Senate election in Massachusetts[346]
- Nicole Seligman, attorney for Bill Clinton during his impeachment trial and director for OpenAI[347]
- Peter Y. Solmssen, general counsel of Siemens[348]
- Samuel D. Warren II, co-founder of Nutter McClennen & Fish with Louis Brandeis[81][349]
Military
edit- Frederick Hobbes Allen, lieutenant commander in the Naval Reserve Flying Corps during World War I[81][350]
- J. Sinclair Armstrong, chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission and Assistant Secretary of the Navy[351][352]
- Winthrop Astor Chanler, Rough Rider and World War I veteran[81]
- Woodbury Kane, Rough Rider[81][350]
- Hanford MacNider, lieutenant general in the U.S. Army, World War I and World War II veteran, United States ambassador to Canada[81][353][354]
- Charles Coudert Nast, major general in the U.S. Army[81]
Music and art
edit- George Biddle, painter and muralist[81]
- Jacob Brackman, lyricist and musical collaborator with Carly Simon[355][356]
- Archibald Brown, architect and competitor in the architecture event at the 1936 Summer Olympics[81]
- John Alden Carpenter, composer[81]
- Peter Engel, origami artist[357]
- Ellen Harvey, conceptual artist[358]
- James Loeb, art collector[81]
- Stephen O. Saxe, graphic designer and historian of printing[359][360]
- Edward Perry Warren, art collector[81]
Science and medicine
edit- Wilder Dwight Bancroft, chemist[81]
- Peter Breggin, psychiatrist, author, and ADHD critic[361][362]
- Francis P. Farquhar, mountaineer and environmentalist[81]
- Jerome Davis Greene, diplomat, planner of the Harvard Tercentenary celebration, and co-founder of the American Sexual Health Association[81]
- Roger Sherman Greene II, U.S. diplomat and medical administrator in China[81]
- Michael J. Halberstam, cardiologist and author, brother of David Halberstam[363][364]
- Rustin McIntosh, pediatrician[81]
- Bill McKibben, environmentalist, author. McKibben is a former Crimson president.[365]
- William Pao, oncologist, professor at Vanderbilt University Medical Center, former executive at Pfizer[366]
- Jay Varma, epidemiologist who led New York City's response to the COVID-19 pandemic[367][368]
- Andrew Weil, alternative medicine advocate[369]
Sports
edit- Edward Bowditch, two-time college football All-American[81]
- Jon Ledecky, owner of the New York Islanders[370][371][372]
- Frank A. Mason, football head coach at Harvard and Ole Miss[81]
- Richard Sears, seven-time US Open men's singles champion, including the first-ever US Open, and six-time US Open men's doubles champion[81]
- David Stearns, general manager of the New York Mets[373]
- Howard Taylor, 1889 US Open men's doubles champion[81]
Theology and religion
edit- Walter Russell Bowie, Episcopalian priest[81][374][375]
- Franklin Elmer Ellsworth Hamilton, Methodist bishop[81][376]
- James Huntington, founder of the Anglican Order of the Holy Cross.[81] Huntington was a co-founder of The Crimson.[377]
- Clifford Phelps Morehouse, editor of The Living Church magazine[81][378]
- Remsen Brinckerhoff Ogilby, Episcopalian priest and president of Trinity College[81][379]
Recent Harvard Crimson leadership
edit| Year | Board | President | Managing Editor | Associate Managing Editor | Business Manager |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2026 | 153 | E. Matteo Diaz | Dhruv T. Patel | Laurel M. Shugart
Cam N. Srivastava |
L.P. Chavez Lopez-Ibañez |
| 2025 | 152 | McKenna E. McKrell | Tilly R. Robinson | Sally E. Edwards
Cam E. Kettles |
Jack D. Jassy |
| 2024 | 151 | J. Sellers Hill | Miles J. Herszenhorn | Elias J. Schisgall
Claire Yuan |
Matthew M. Doctoroff |
| 2023 | 150 | Cara J. Chang | Brandon L. Kingdollar | Leah J. Teichholtz
Meimei Xu |
Cynthia V. Lu |
| 2022 | 149 | Raquel Coronell Uribe | Jasper G. Goodman | Kelsey J. Griffin
Taylor C. Peterman |
Amy X. Zhou |
| 2021 | 148 | Amanda Y. Su | James S. Bikales | Sydnie M. Cobb
Ema R. Schumer |
Melissa H. Du |
| 2020 | 147 | Aidan F. Ryan | Shera S. Avi-Yonah | Alexandra A. Chaidez
Molly C. McCafferty |
Emily M. Lu |
| 2019 | 146 | Kristine E. Guillaume | Angela N. Fu | Jamie D. Halper | Charlie B. Zhu |
| 2018 | 145 | Derek G. Xiao | Hannah Natanson | Mia C. Karr
Claire E. Parker |
Nathan Y. Lee |
| 2017 | 144 | Derek K. Choi | Andrew M. Duehren | Jalin P. Cunningham
Daphne C. Thompson |
Christopher J. Huh |
| 2016 | 143 | Mariel A. Klein | Meg P. Bernhard | Noah J. Delwiche | Leia N. Wedlund |
| 2015 | 142 | Steven S. Lee | Madeline R. Conway | Matthew Q. Clarida
Steven R. Watros |
Juliet A. Nelson |
| 2014 | 141 | Samuel Y. Weinstock | Nicholas P. Fandos | Nikita Kansra | Joseph R. Botros |
| 2013 | 140 | Robert S. Samuels | Rebecca D. Robbins | Hana N. Rouse
Justin C. Worland |
Andrew F. Creamer |
| 2012 | 139 | E. Benjamin Samuels | Julie M. Zauzmer | Gautam S. Kumar
Zoe A. Y. Weinberg |
J. Sebastian Garcia |
| 2011 | 138 | Naveen N. Srivatsa | Elias J. Groll | Eric P. Newcomer
Noah S. Rayman |
Martin C. Ye |
| 2010 | 137 | Peter F. Zhu | Esther I. Yi | Lauren D. Kiel
June Q. Wu |
Julian L. Bouma |
| 2009 | 136 | Maxwell L. Child | Clifford M. Marks | Aditi Balakrishna
Christian B. Flow |
Steven J. Stelmach |
| 2008 | 135 | Malcom A. Glenn | Paras D. Bhayani | Laurence H. M. Holland | Gideon L. Lowin |
| 2007 | 134 | Kristina M. Moore | Javier C. Hernández | Evan H. Jacobs | Roger R. Lee |
| 2006 | 133 | William C. Marra | Zachary M. Seward | May Habib
Daniel J. Hemel |
Nicholas A. Molina |
| 2005 | 132 | Lauren A. E. Schuker | Stephen M. Marks | Katharine A. Kaplan
Rebecca D. O'Brien |
Gregory B. Michnikov
Evan M. Vittor |
| 2004 | 131 | Ericka K. Jalli | Elisabeth S. Theodore | Jenifer L. Steinhardt | Ashley B. T. Ma |
| 2003 | 130 | Amit R. Paley | David H. Gellis | Kate L. Rakoczy | Brian W. Dillard |
| 2002 | 129 | Imtiyaz H. Delawala | Daniela J. Lamas | Juliet J. Chung
Daniel P. Mosteller |
K. Babi Das
Oliver J. Bell Rudrabishek Sahay |
| 2001 | 128 | C. Matthew MacInnis | V. V. Ganeshananthan | V. V. Ganeshananthan | Fiona C. Chin |
| 2000 | 127 | Alan E. Wirzbicki | Rosalind S. Helderman | Marc J. Ambinder
Jenny E. Heller |
Adam S. Cohen |
| 1999 | 126 | Joshua H. Simon | Georgia N. Alexakis | David A. Fahrenthold | James L. Hegyi |
| 1998 | 125 | Matthew W. Granade | Andrew S. Chang | Justin S. Funches | |
| 1997 | 124 | Joshua J. Schanker | Valerie J. MacMillan
Andrew A. Green |
Matthew L. Kramer | |
| 1996 | 123 | Todd F. Braunstein | Douglas M. Pravda | Jonathan N. Axelrod
Elizabeth T. Bangs Marios V. Broustas |
Daniel C. Allen |
| 1995 | 122 | Andrew L. Wright | Sarah E. Scrogin | Tara H. Arden-Smith | Jane C. Chen |
| 1994 | 121 | Marion B. Gammill | Joe Mathews | Melissa Lee
Anna D. Wilde |
Young Il Kim |
| 1993 | 120 | Ira E. Stoll | Gady A. Epstein | D. Richard de Silva | Young Jin Lee |
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But even while at Harvard, Bernstein admits, she was "attracted to journalism." As a student, she worked on The Crimson photo board, "perhaps as a way of sneaking on without yet fully coming to terms with wanting to be a reporter."
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I also wrote for the town newspaper, covering high school sports, and for the school paper. Later, I wrote for the college newspaper, the Harvard Crimson.
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My first news story overseas submitted to the Harvard Crimson was the day Mandela walked out of prison in Cape Town after years of imprisonment on Robben Island.
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Lee graduated with honors from Harvard College with a bachelor of arts in government. She also served as Assistant Managing Editor of the Harvard Crimson.
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But two days later, on Dec. 2, Connolly and then-Crimson Business Manager Peter Tufano '79 published a nearly 1,600-word dissent, arguing that the majority's decision was "the type of thinking that could easily be translated into a means of censoring unpopular beliefs, without having to face the rigorous test of proving a specific, correctable injustice."
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As an undergraduate she was a reporter for the Harvard Crimson and was also active in several black organization
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After receiving his undergraduate degree in 1903 he returned for a year of graduate work; more important, he became editor of Harvard's student newspaper, the Crimson.
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He later attended the Groton School in Massachusetts. He attended Harvard, where he was editor of the school's newspaper, the Crimson.
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As Herb had been editor of the Harvard Crimson (the student newspaper), he was put in charge of publicity.
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He graduated from Harvard College, where he was editorial director of the Harvard Crimson.
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At Radcliffe College, she served as The Crimson's only female editor, writing opinion pieces that one student organizer credited as "the first appearance of the anti-war movement at Harvard."
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A writer, whose name and was Kathie Amatniek and later became Kathy Sarachild, was writing about Vietnam for the Harvard Crimson.
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In his ruling, Chuang, a former Crimson Sports editor, sided with the more than two dozen former USAID affiliates who filed suit in February over his involvement.
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Shannon E. Liss-Riordan '90, the attorney for the case and a former Crimson editor, claims that the workers' services are performed "in the employer's usual course of business," which would qualify the workers as employees under Massachusetts state law.
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While at Harvard, he co-founded with his roommate Henry (Harry) Merwin the Harvard Magenta (now the Crimson), became its editor, and by his senior year was the president of the Episcopalian group on campus, the St. Paul Society.
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