Reflections
on the History and Future Directions
of the
Adelphic Cornell Educational Fund
Circa 1920, the widow of Brother Henry
M. Birge (Class of 1873) donated money to create a fund to be known
as “The Birge Fund.” These funds were entrusted to the keeping of certain
alumni of Alpha Delta Phi at Cornell to be used to grant short-term
emergency loans to needy chapter undergraduates. Fund records show a
great many loans made and most of them repaid scrupulously after graduation.
The Birge Fund was administered by Brother Ansley Wilcox ‘12 for many
years.
In 1955, the Adelphic Cornell Educational
Fund (ACEF) was formally incorporated in New York State. Existing correspondence
suggests that it was created from remnants of The Birge Fund and that
the initial mission of the ACEF was to continue to provide emergency
loans to undergraduate brothers. Although there are various document
and archival “depositories,” both at the chapter house and elsewhere,
so far the ACEF has not been able to locate specific information on
its activities during that period. However, it is known that Theodore
H. Booth ’25 was the driving force behind the registration of the fund
in Syracuse. The original incorporation papers list Brother Booth as
both secretary and treasurer. James T. Lewis Jr. ’27 was the vice president,
and Robert G. Birkin ‘26 was the president. Listed as additional “directors”
of the fund were Frank J. Tone Jr. ’24 and Elwyn L. Smith ‘17.
Writing about the uniqueness of fraternities
in 1963, Brother Booth explained, “The residential fraternity is an
integral and very important part of the training for life which we get
preeminently at Cornell. We strongly prefer this to the “organized irresponsibility”
of the college-run dormitory. The experience of mutual selection, aid,
adjustment, cooperative work and responsibility—not to mention the satisfying
fellowship and enduring friendships formed during the years of interdependence
are perhaps as important as conventional studies to the formation of
capable leaders of American democratic institutions—perhaps more important
today than for many years.”
Brother Booth also spearheaded the effort
to gain federal tax-exempt status for the ACEF. In 1962, this hard work
was rewarded when the U.S. Department of the Treasury formally acknowledged
that contributions to the fund qualified under section 501(c)3 of the
Internal Revenue Code. For the next 25 years, the primary charitable
focus of the ACEF was on continuing to support small, usually short-term,
education-related emergency loans to undergraduate brothers. This was
particularly valuable at the time, since it was only in the 1980s that
financial aid for Cornell undergraduates became broadly and readily
available. Cash flow also allowed for more or less annual contributions
of magazines and books for the house library and, on occasion, the purchase
and donation of books to the Cornell library system.
However, the quality of the administrative
records and reports for the ACEF were often found lacking…even to the
extent that, in some years, excise taxes and registration fees due at
the state and/or federal level (often with additional penalties and
interest assessed) ended up being paid by individually concerned alumni
brothers. Whether apocryphal or not, some of the names of the benevolent
that have been mentioned in this regard include Richard E. Taylor ’63,
Robert E. Maroney ’72, Thomas M. Bower ’73, and Todd J. Slotkin ’74.
Given the administrative shortfalls, it
is commendable that, during this more than two-decade period, almost
all loans made by the ACEF appear to have been repaid generally on schedule
and usually in full. (This, no doubt, was accomplished on occasion with
the assistance of such brothers as James E. Rice ’30 offering “gentle
admonishment” to some recipients who might otherwise have suffered from
forgetfulness as to their financial responsibilities.)
Given the structure of this particular
charitable foundation, with hindsight it appears somewhat unfortunate
that more was not done to systematically promote, manage, and fund it
from the start. But, regardless of the reasons why this opportunity
was not seized upon earlier, during the past 15 years, the potential
for the ACEF to make significant contributions to the continued success
of Alpha Delta Phi (and, by extension, Cornell as well) has finally
begun to be realized. Although a growing number of brothers have been
involved in this effort, the importance of responsible and continuous
management cannot be overemphasized. Thomas S. Foulkes ’52, Gilbert
F. Rankin Jr. ’55, and Douglas J. Smith ’78 successively served as president
during this period. Under their determined leadership, there have been
a number of important organizational improvements.
In 1985, the ACEF hired Stewart Howe Alumni
Service of Ithaca to be responsible for record keeping and mailings.
Over the following three years, a number of accounting and financial
controls were implemented. Christophe M. Bergen ’76 created the initial
cash flow spreadsheets for the fund. Thomas Y. Ellis ’55 agreed to annually
prepare accounting reports to be utilized in our form 990 filings with
the IRS. Michael J. Zak ’75 and Thomas C. Reed ’55 drew up formal financial,
audit, and investment policy statements to help guide future financial
management.
The culmination of all these fiscally related
initiatives was the de facto expansion and recapitalization of
the ACEF in 1989. This was made possible primarily through the generosity
of John S. Dyson ‘65 and Leroy W. Sinclair ’65 and the persuasive powers
of G. Lauriston Walsh Jr. ’62. A follow-on to this was the establishment
in 1991 of the ACEF “Core Endowment” investment account, which was in
part designed to emphasize the “durable presence of the Alpha Delta
Phi Fraternity at Cornell University.”
Roughly concurrent with the improvements
in financial and investment management, similar progress was realized
in providing a more efficient and accountable structure for the ACEF’s
charitable endeavors. A number of brothers have been involved in these
efforts (including some who were undergraduates at the time). But, certainly
the individual who continues to accomplish the most in this regard is
Steven D. Ritchey ’81. It was his initiative that resulted in standardized
student loan procedures. He also supervised creation of the policy statements
that established guidelines for our expanding program of academic excellence
awards in the house, as well as, to a lesser degree, on the Hill. And,
since 1992, he has been the fund’s “point man” for coordination with
Cornell’s office of financial aid in regard to disbursement of Martin
McVoy (Class of 1892) scholarship awards to brothers of Alpha Delta
Phi.
Since the early 1990s, the ACEF has persuaded
the university to steadily increase the percentage of a brother’s total
financial aid package that can qualify for outright loan forgiveness.
In addition, it is now possible for McVoy funds to be utilized by ADs
who are in graduate school at Cornell.
With both internal management procedures
and external charitable activities becoming more effective, the final
accomplishment of the past decade has been the recent restructuring
and formalization of ACEF fundraising and donor categories. Going forward,
the Adelphic Cornell Educational Fund plans to solicit fully tax-deductible
contributions of only three types:
• Life Memberships in “The 1869 Society”
(the year the Cornell Chapter of Alpha Delta Phi was established)
• Program Sponsorships (to support a designated
ACEF charitable undertaking for up to three years)
• Will Provisions (as a dollar amount or
specific percentage of one’s adjusted gross estate)
Like any charitable organization, the fund
will certainly continue to accept contributions from all sources. But,
there are three very important reasons why it makes sense for the ACEF
to manage fundraising in a highly focused and targeted fashion. First,
those who are actively involved in the fund’s growth and development
do so on an entirely voluntary basis. Second, the fund has mandated
that the maximum expenses allowed as a percent of balance sheet assets
be capped at three percent. This has resulted not only in the fund’s
being managed in an increasingly efficient and responsible manner, but
also has impressed our donors that their money goes almost exclusively
for legitimate educational programs, not for amorphous overhead. Third,
the trustees of the ACEF believe strongly that their primary goal is
to preserve the history and enhance the future of Alpha Delta Phi as
an independent living unit at Cornell University. But, the “heavy lifting”
(both managerially and financially) necessary to accomplish this should
continue to be focused on the efforts of the alumni corporation and
the undergraduates themselves. The ACEF has consciously positioned itself
as an increasingly valuable adjunct, but an adjunct nevertheless. This
is properly in keeping with the goals and objectives expressed in the
original incorporation papers of the fund in 1955.
J. Thomas Chirurg
’64, Trustee and past president of the Adelphic Cornell Educational Fund, prepared
by this history of the ACEF. Additional research was provided by Howie
Schaffer ’90, current president of the alumni corporation. |