Close Menu
Firearms Forever
  • Home
  • News
  • Guns & Gears
  • Reviews
  • Videos
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Business

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest firearm, hunting, military, and defense news to your inbox.

Popular
Trump touts UK trade deal as boosting US agriculture, beef producers

Trump touts UK trade deal as boosting US agriculture, beef producers

May 9, 2025
State trooper points to possible weapon in John O’Keefe death – and it’s not Karen Read’s car

State trooper points to possible weapon in John O’Keefe death – and it’s not Karen Read’s car

May 9, 2025
Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’

Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’

May 9, 2025
Google signs deal with nuclear developer for a trio of advanced energy projects

Google signs deal with nuclear developer for a trio of advanced energy projects

May 9, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Breaking
  • Trump touts UK trade deal as boosting US agriculture, beef producers
  • State trooper points to possible weapon in John O’Keefe death – and it’s not Karen Read’s car
  • Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’
  • Google signs deal with nuclear developer for a trio of advanced energy projects
  • Letitia James town hall derailed by Trump supporter’s question: ‘Will you apologize?’
  • George Pickens looking ahead after Steelers trade him to Cowboys: ‘I’m glad to be here in Dallas’
  • Apple warns court ruling in App Store case may cost ‘substantial sums annually’
  • Amtrak bilked out of $12M by at least 119 employees, doctors in fraud scheme; many still on the job: report
Friday, May 9
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram LinkedIn
Firearms Forever
  • Home
  • News
  • Guns & Gears
  • Reviews
  • Videos
  • Prepping & Survival
  • Business
Subscribe
Firearms Forever
You are at:Home » Lawsuit reveals how colleges really talk about rich applicants
Business

Lawsuit reveals how colleges really talk about rich applicants

Tim HuntBy Tim HuntMay 7, 2025No Comments4 Mins Read0 Views
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr WhatsApp
Lawsuit reveals how colleges really talk about rich applicants
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

A lawsuit alleging universities colluded to determine students’ financial-aid packages provides a glimpse into the ways top schools assess children of privilege differently from the rest of the applicant pool.

At Georgetown University, a former president selected students for a special admission list by consulting their parents’ donation history, not their transcript, according to the suit. At Massachusetts Institute of Technology, a board member got the school to admit two applicants who were children of a wealthy former business colleague, the suit alleges. And at Notre Dame, an enrollment official in charge of a special applicant list wrote to others, “Sure hope the wealthy next year raise a few more smart kids!,” according to the suit.

The motion, filed Tuesday in Illinois federal court, is the latest salvo in a lawsuit that began in January 2022. The plaintiffs, former students, initially accused more than a dozen elite universities with price fixing. Twelve schools have since settled. The motion on Tuesday seeks class-action status for the case against the remaining five schools: MIT, Notre Dame, University of Pennsylvania, Georgetown and Cornell University.

COLLEGES THAT PROVIDE MOST VALUE FOR 2025

For families embroiled in the college-application process and facing ever steeper odds to win entry to elite schools, the records feed suspicions that colleges have different standards for children of means.

At Notre Dame, the university’s Institutional Risk and Compliance Committee said the admission of so many children of major donors represented a major risk to the institution’s brand should it become public, according to the motion. In 2020, the school admitted 86 applicants who were connected to large donors, or about 4% of the incoming class. Within that group, 76% of those donor admissions needed special consideration to get in, the motion said.

Speaking about the class of 2016, Donald Bishop, then the associate vice president for undergraduate enrollment, noted a decline of 30 top academic students at the same time the donor list was used.

WANT AN AI CAREER? THESE COLLEGES OFFER DEGREES FOR THE BEST CHANCE

“We allowed their high gifting or potential gifting to influence our choices more this year than last year,” Bishop said in a 2012 email provided in the lawsuit.

Spokespeople for Georgetown, Notre Dame and MIT said that the schools plan to fight the suit in court and that their students all earned their places. A Notre Dame spokesman said the school is confident “every student admitted to Notre Dame is fully qualified and ready to succeed.”

Georgetown College Campus

It is a precarious time for elite universities, which have become the targets of growing public frustration. President-elect Trump has threatened to investigate internal university operations and tax the endowments of elite schools.

Some of the anger directed at the nation’s most prestigious schools comes from perceived hypocrisy.

Elite universities often present themselves as meritocracies that admit the best and brightest. The motion filed Tuesday, which draws from years of speeches at exclusive gatherings, depositions and internal university reports, shows officials bowing to financial pressures to admit wealthy students over potentially more qualified candidates.

AMERICANS’ CONFIDENCE IN HIGHER EDUCATION DROPS 21 POINTS SINCE 2015

Discovery in a separate court case about race-based preferences in college admissions revealed Harvard University had a “Z list,” a route through which weaker, but wealthy or connected, applicants could gain admission.

building at Harvard University

Over the past few years, several schools, including Amherst College, have gotten rid of legacy admission. Additionally, several states, including California, have banned the practice.

Inside the suit

Tuesday’s filing seeks class-action certification and asks for $685 million in damages. If awarded, that figure would triple to more than $2 billion under U.S. antitrust laws. Ten schools, including Dartmouth College, Northwestern University and Rice University, have settled for a total of $284 million, and two more have settled for amounts that haven’t been disclosed.

Dartmouth

The lawsuit also includes testimony from Sara Harberson, Penn’s associate dean of admission from 1999 to 2008, who was deposed for the case in October 2023. She said that the school had a “bona fide special interest” tag for students from families who were big donors or knew someone on the board of trustees.

Those students were assured of admission.

If the school was over-enrolled, they were protected, regardless of their academic record. “You had absolutely no power as an admissions officer,” Harberson said in her deposition.

A spokesman for Penn said it sees no merit in the lawsuit.  

“The actual evidence in the case makes clear that Penn does not favor in admissions students whose families have made or pledged donations to Penn, whatever the amount,” said the spokesman.

At Georgetown, a former president selected students for an annual president’s list after reviewing information about the parents’ donation history and capacity, but without reviewing the applicant’s transcript, teacher recommendations or personal essays. Atop the list he often wrote “Please Admit,” according to the motion.

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleCostly Theater or Civil Rights Crisis?
Next Article Fox News Sports Huddle Newsletter: DOGE committee members spar during women’s sports hearing

Related Article

Trump touts UK trade deal as boosting US agriculture, beef producers

Trump touts UK trade deal as boosting US agriculture, beef producers

May 9, 2025
Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’

Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’

May 9, 2025
Google signs deal with nuclear developer for a trio of advanced energy projects

Google signs deal with nuclear developer for a trio of advanced energy projects

May 9, 2025
Apple warns court ruling in App Store case may cost ‘substantial sums annually’

Apple warns court ruling in App Store case may cost ‘substantial sums annually’

May 9, 2025
Mortgage rates hold steady, Freddie Mac says

Mortgage rates hold steady, Freddie Mac says

May 9, 2025
Trump considers tax hike on Americans making .5 million or more per year

Trump considers tax hike on Americans making $2.5 million or more per year

May 8, 2025
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • Pinterest
Don't Miss
State trooper points to possible weapon in John O’Keefe death – and it’s not Karen Read’s car

State trooper points to possible weapon in John O’Keefe death – and it’s not Karen Read’s car

Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’

Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’

Google signs deal with nuclear developer for a trio of advanced energy projects

Google signs deal with nuclear developer for a trio of advanced energy projects

Letitia James town hall derailed by Trump supporter’s question: ‘Will you apologize?’

Letitia James town hall derailed by Trump supporter’s question: ‘Will you apologize?’

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest firearm, hunting, military, and defense news to your inbox.

About
About

Firearms Forever is one of the biggest news portals dedicated to firearm, hunting, military, and defense news, using news from the most trusted source.

We're social, connect with us:

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube LinkedIn
Popular Posts
Trump touts UK trade deal as boosting US agriculture, beef producers

Trump touts UK trade deal as boosting US agriculture, beef producers

May 9, 2025
State trooper points to possible weapon in John O’Keefe death – and it’s not Karen Read’s car

State trooper points to possible weapon in John O’Keefe death – and it’s not Karen Read’s car

May 9, 2025
Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’

Uber CEO steps up return-to-office mandate: ‘It is what it is’

May 9, 2025

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest firearm, hunting, military, and defense news to your inbox.

Copyright © 2025. All rights reserved.
  • About
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.