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- <text id=92TT1597>
- <title>
- July 20, 1992: Welcome to the Donors Club
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- July 20, 1992 Olympic Special
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- EDUCATION, Page 72
- Welcome to the Donors Club
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A businessman pledges a gift of $100 million, and an ecstatic
- college offers to change its name to his
- </p>
- <p>By JESSE BIRNBAUM -- With reporting by Elizabeth Rudulph/New York
- and Lisa H. Towle/Raleigh
- </p>
- <p> When a wealthy man insists on flogging his fortune at his
- fellows, it is not nice to refuse. For example, it would be
- exceedingly rude for Americans to deny a billionaire simply
- because he wants to buy the presidency for $100 million and
- occupy what would thenceforth be known as the Ross Perot
- Memorial White House.
- </p>
- <p> The trustees of sleepy little Glassboro State College in
- southern New Jersey are certainly not rude. Overwhelmed by a
- munificent $100 million pledge from a local businessman named
- Henry Rowan, the trustees last week not only voted to take the
- money but, in an expression of gratitude bordering on the
- fulsome, also decided to rename the school Rowan College of New
- Jersey. A self-effacing manufacturer of industrial furnaces who
- attended Williams College and graduated from the Massachusetts
- Institute of Technology, Rowan declared himself flattered by the
- gesture. He had not asked for the name change; it was simply
- their way of saying thanks.
- </p>
- <p> Coincidentally, last week another sleepy little
- institution, Harvard Law School, displayed good manners by
- accepting a somewhat less spectacular but still welcome $3
- million from alumnus Reginald F. Lewis, boss of the biggest
- black-owned business in the U.S. -- the food conglomerate TLC
- Beatrice International Inc. Even though the gift is the largest
- individual donation to the law school ever, there was no rush
- to dub the place the Reginald F. Lewis School of Law (not for
- $3 million, anyway); instead, the school's international law
- center will be named in his honor.
- </p>
- <p> These donations were a decided blessing, especially at a
- time when colleges everywhere are hungering for money and
- government support is drying up. As a result, fund raisers have
- been compelled more and more to rely on big-bucks givers like
- Robert W. Woodruff -- former Coca-Cola chairman, whose $105
- million gift to Georgia's Emory University in 1979 stands as the
- biggest single donation to any private college (Rowan's is the
- largest gift to a public college) -- or Stanford University
- alums David Packard and his wife Lucile, who gave their school
- $70 million in 1986 for a children's medical center.
- </p>
- <p> But it is one thing to give a philanthropist a building
- and quite something else to give him a whole college. The Rowan
- gift in fact did not gladden everybody at Glassboro. At least
- one alumnus has threatened to go to court, charging that the
- trustees, in a fit of non campus mentis, have simply sold the
- college to Rowan. That complaint may not be fair, but it does
- raise the question of what it takes to buy into an institution
- of learning nowadays. If Glassboro can be bought, as it were,
- for $100 million, you can probably get Yale for $109 million.
- </p>
- <p> Schools were cheaper in the old days. In 1639 a Puritan
- preacher gave half his estate and $400 worth of books to a
- nameless nine-student school; the place was named for the donor:
- John Harvard.
- </p>
- <p> No one person can buy a great university, of course, but
- a few paltry million can get you some little pieces. Bill Cosby
- and his wife Camille donated $20 million to Atlanta's Spelman
- College, a private liberal arts school for black women; most of
- the money was allocated to the Camille Olivia Hanks Cosby
- Academic Center. In 1985 the W.M. Keck Foundation gave $70
- million to Caltech, which now has a telescope called Keck I and,
- for $72 million more, will soon have Keck II. Publishing magnate
- Walter Annenberg has the University of Pennsylvania School for
- Communication named after him ($75 million), though what he got
- for his generous $50 million gift to the United Negro College
- Fund was a very nice quilt.
- </p>
- <p> Even a piece of college furniture has a price tag, for
- folks with big hearts but small bank accounts. A check for
- $10,000 will buy a carrel in the refurbished University of
- California, Berkeley, law library at Boalt Hall, which will open
- in 1994. A Princeton University giver can get his or her name
- engraved on the back of a chapel pew for $5,000. At Spelman,
- $10,000 to $15,000 will pay for a decorative fountain. The
- University of Houston's College of Optometry sells cushioned
- seats and desks at $300 a pop for its continuing-education
- courses.
- </p>
- <p> Fifteen hundred dollars will buy a teakwood bench for the
- Sarah P. Duke Gardens at Duke University. If a donor cannot
- afford the million dollars to endow an academic chair, it is
- conceivable that some college somewhere will give him a
- cafeteria chair for a few bucks.
- </p>
- <p> What bothers colleges most is prospective givers who make
- impossible demands. Donors have been known to lobby for a spot
- for a son on the university football team in exchange for a
- contribution. Not long ago, a wealthy man offered the University
- of Miami a mere $2 million in exchange for a new building to be
- named for him, a lifetime appointment to the faculty and regular
- round-trip airfares to Miami. The university declined.
- </p>
- <p> To be sure, Henry Rowan has stipulations too. He wants the
- college to build an engineering school and to guarantee free
- tuition to the children of his company's employees. It will not
- be difficult to honor those requests at Rowan College.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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