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Harvard Admissions Trial Could Affect Donations — But Experts Are Divided Over How

Harvard's long-serving Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons '67 (far right) exits the courthouse during the admissions trial.
Harvard's long-serving Dean of Admissions and Financial Aid William R. Fitzsimmons '67 (far right) exits the courthouse during the admissions trial. By Caleb D. Schwartz
By Eli W. Burnes and Andrew J. Zucker, Crimson Staff Writers

Higher education fundraising experts are divided over whether the Harvard admissions lawsuit will impact donations — though some big-ticket donors say the litigation won’t change their giving patterns.

Harvard’s high-profile admissions trial wrapped up in a Boston federal courtroom Friday after 15 days of argument. The trial was the latest development in a four-year-old lawsuit filed by anti-affirmative action advocacy group Students for Fair Admissions, which alleges Harvard discriminates against Asian-American applicants.

Whichever way Judge Allison D. Burroughs rules, the losing party plans to appeal the verdict — likely all the way to the Supreme Court. With conservative Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh now on the bench, experts predict the court could strike down affirmative action in college admissions entirely.

The lawsuit has revealed many once-hidden details about how Harvard admits students. Among other revelations, documents released in court showed that the University gives significant admissions preferences to children of wealthy donors. These applicants — whom the College places into two selective groups dubbed the “dean’s list” and “director’s list” — see an acceptance rate nine times higher than the overall rate.

University President Lawrence S. Bacow said in an interview last week he could not quantify the donations Harvard receives from alumni whose children benefited from these admissions preferences.

“I honestly don’t know the answer to that and, even if I did, I probably couldn’t say it right now given that the case is in trial,” he said.

Asked whether Harvard has seen an uptick in donations in light of this revelation, University President Lawrence S. Bacow again declined to comment.

“I couldn’t tell you,” he said.

Bacow said that he does not receive frequent updates on donations.

“It’s not as if we monitor donations on daily basis,” he said. “I don’t get a daily report. Or a weekly report. Or a monthly report.”

Higher education expert Thomas D. Parker '64 said elite universities have always given children from wealthy backgrounds an edge in their admissions processes — partly to sustain their donor base.

“There’s a reason that Harvard is one of the best places in the world and that's because it has a lot of money. And one of the reasons it has a lot of money is that it has been very very successful at private fundraising,” he said. “And part of that success has to do with not just admitting legacies, but admitting rich people.”

“These aren’t revelations that are coming out of this,” he added, referring to the lawsuit.

Robert Moore, an executive at the Council for Advancement and Support of Education, said it is too early to predict the effect the lawsuit may have on giving. He also said he is unsure how Harvard’s development team will talk about the lawsuit with donors.

“We also don’t know in the end what the Harvard development staff is going to do as they start to talk to donors,” he said. “It’s a dimensional relationship that is developed over some years.”

Moore pointed to other schools involved in controversies that have bounced back from negative perceptions — though he noted he “cannot project” if the same will hold true for Harvard.

“If you think about alumni, alumni know the institution and they know its faults,” he said. “And maybe a controversy like this brings some of those faults to the fore, but they also know with greater depth the real qualities of the institution. And if they believe in the institution, then what they will want to know is how is the institution responding to this challenge.”

Parker raised the point that a Supreme Court ruling striking down Harvard’s race-conscious admissions policy may actually boost donations if Harvard opts to defy the ruling and keep its admissions process, risking federal funding.

Parker speculated that this string of events might motivate donors to give to the University to offset the loss of federal funds. But, he added, it would be tricky to make up the hundreds of millions of dollars per year Harvard receives from the government.

Michael T. Kerr '81, a former co-chair of the Harvard College Fund Executive Committee, said he anticipated the lawsuit will have no effect on current donors, since many of the alumni support the school’s efforts to diversify its student population.

“I don’t think it’s going to affect as things stand now,” Kerr said. “I don’t think the school’s relationship with its alumni will be affected by the trial, because I think most of the alumni I know broadly, broadly support having a diverse student body.”

Asked whether the lawsuit against Harvard would change his giving to the University, Paul A. Buttenwieser ’60, a former Crimson editor and a former member of the Board of Overseers, answered “not at all.” Buttenwieser also said other donors have told him they plan to stick to their current patterns of giving.

“Everybody I have talked to feels that Harvard’s admissions policy is great, Dean Fitzsimmons... [has] brought about much more diversity than Harvard has ever known, all the donors I know are very much in favor of diversity and we see this lawsuit as a challenge to diversity,” Buttenwieser said.

—Staff writer Eli W. Burnes can be reached at eli.burnes@thecrimson.com.

—Staff writer Andrew J. Zucker can be reached at andrew.zucker@thecrimson. com. Follow him on Twitter @AndrewJZucker.

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