Indy On Repeat: Summer 2023
Our favorite new releases, compiled for your listening pleasure.
This summer, we heard hyped releases from industry giants and excellent new songs from up-and-comers. In case you haven’t had time to catch up on all the fresh music during your internship or off-the-cuff Eurotrip, the Indy has compiled an authoritative list of this summer’s best songs for you. Put this playlist on as you […]
Amazon Essentials
What to bring to college and what to leave behind.
We have all seen the lists of college dorm room must-haves littering the web, but what do you actually need in order to thrive in your eight by eleven square foot luxury hotel room of a dorm? In all honesty, I have no idea, but here I present you with a few of our well-reasoned […]
Don’t Go Here, Go Here…
An extensive review of major decisions you will make eating out in Harvard Square.
EATING & WORKING: Don’t Go To Blackbird Doughnuts, Go To Flour Bakery + Cafe Before people get upset, we’re not saying that the Smith Center is not a good place to get some work done. We love the Smith Center. However, we think that Blackbird Doughnuts is forgettable and should be replaced. Blackbird Doughnuts has […]
How I (Ethically) Used ChatGPT Last Year
How students can use generative AI within Harvard’s guidelines.
This past July, Maya Bodnick ’26 wrote an article titled “ChatGPT Goes to Harvard” for former Indy member Matthew Yglesias’s ’03 Substack SlowBoring. Bodnick feed ChatGPT essay prompts from all eight of her classes and asked her professors and TAs to grade the resulting writing as they would any other student. At the end of […]
The Independent: A Counterpoint Written in History
A visual and oral reflection of the Independent’s role on campus.
“We’d have issues that had the [Students for a Democratic Society] in one article and the Young Republicans in another,” said James Vaseff, 1984 Harvard Graduate School of Design LOEB Fellow and early contributor to the Harvard Independent. Vaseff used photojournalism to further one of the Indy’s foremost missions: to deliberately provoke university-wide commentary and […]
The Urgency of Religious Illiteracy at Harvard
Healing global division starts with religious education.
Harvard prides itself on its liberal arts education model, which, according to its mission statement, “begin[s] in the classroom with exposure to new ideas” and “new ways of understanding.” Harvard executes this mission through the College Curriculum—up to 12 required courses that encourage students to engage with topics relevant to the human experience, such as […]
Hey Harvard, Just Smile and Wave
Harvard’s deceptive attempt to positively court public opinion.
In response to this summer’s Supreme Court decision rejecting race conscious admissions, Harvard has dutifully committed itself to image-building and damage control. From President Gay’s reassurance that Harvard will continue to commit itself to diversity to administrators affirming that Harvard must always be “a place whose doors remain open to those to whom they had […]
The “Right” Way to do Admissions
Lawsuit duo forces Harvard to reevaluate its admissions process from the ground up.
“Affirmative action for the privileged.” U.S. Representative Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez’s June 29th tweet following this June’s overturning of affirmative action by the Supreme Court brings up a both necessary and unprecedented question. Calling out Harvard’s legacy admissions process in her post, a practice which the Justice Department recently launched an investigation into, Cortez seemingly equates the […]
The Price of Practicality
How opportunity costs augment once you leave the Harvard bubble.
This summer, I interned at a bank. I lived with six MIT students: three incoming seniors (four, including myself), and three recent graduates. The majority of us worked in finance, whether it be for a summer internship or having a full-time job, and the final roommate was a software engineer. The difference between being a […]