When the shit bucket drops, it splashes everywhere. |
Harvard may not the the only school that the Zhaos bribed their way into. |
STA? |
There’s no doubt this con artist dad fabricated everything about his grubby kids. |
Why do you have to make your point by being so insulting? It reflects poorly on you and drags down the whole forum. I bet people avoid you IRL. |
You just insulted someone. |
My HHI is several times that, and my DH and I still take our ethics over any of this bull - no private tutors, no extra time, no payments to anyone, no fancy internships. We know people who run in these circles, and we are still shocked. But we were both raised solidly middle class, so we are new money, too. |
You mean STA. |
Link to proof? Or are you just spitballing here? |
Do you want an award? It must suck to be your kid with you looking down on everyone and probably your own nonmiddle class kids too |
No, read the section at the end of the article. The dad donated $1 million to a fencing foundation. That foundation in turn donated $100K to a charity newly created by the Harvard fencing coach. The dad's older son was subsequently admitted to Harvard. The Harvard fencing coach's charity only lasted a couple of years after the donation, which could suggest that it was set up for the sole purpose of laundering money. |
GDS has spent years promoting some unique connection. |
Why didn't Harvard FIRE the coach? |
A few comments:
No one is guaranteed Harvard admission just because they had high scores, excellent grades and went to a rigorous school. Mr. Zhao surely knows this (and was likely the motivation for his actions). The only guarantee is getting a "likely letter." The younger Zhao was in no way a lock, and previous posters who believe that he would have gotten in anyway have not been through the process to know that this is simply not true. The boys supposedly did not know their dad had bought their coach's house. Doesn't that make it fishier? He clearly did not want them to know, or be part of his schemes. Only 2 boys from STA 2017 were accepted to Harvard, while numerous students with equivalent grades and scores -- including several who contributed much more to the life of the school did not get in. While it seems STA had nothing to do with these actions, just like the other college scandal, it reeks of unfairness when one can just buy a coach's house (instead of a straight up bribe), contribute to the coach's charity and get your kid in above others. At least when development candidates get in, the $$ goes to the benefit of all who go there. The BS that 40 people from the Admissions Committee make the decision is laughable. Every coach from every Ivy sport gets a certain number of pre determined slots. If the coach recruits you, and Admissions give the coach the green light after a pre-read from transcripts and test scores, the recruit gets in through ED. Needham isn't exactly so far from Harvard that it is a hardship. And yes, different from the Varsity Blues scandal, these boys actually were on the fencing team. The older one was even captain his last two years, perhaps due to the largesse of his dad buying the team plane tickets and other goodies. Neither are the stars of the team; just read the web site and see neither are mentioned in most of the recaps. And the younger son's profile and name on the roster has been removed. There is some irony that this wealthy individual will get a tax loss on this "investment." The deal was structured in a savvy way so as to not be illegal on the face of the transactions. But if anyone thinks this is acceptable behavior -- by the coach, by the father and by Harvard -- you need to reassess your value system. |
That’s money laundering? Isn’t that how foundations work? |