Harris Named Vice President for Advancement
Vice President for Advancement Kim Harris
Kim Harris, Senior Associate Vice President for Advancement and the University’s Campaign Director, has been appointed Vice President for Advancement at Colgate. The veteran higher education fundraiser takes over for Karl Clauss ’90, who held the position since 2020 and has moved on to seek new challenges.
“I am extremely grateful that Kim has agreed to serve as Vice President and to continue the significant momentum we have experienced in the Campaign for the Third Century,” says President Brian W. Casey. “Kim has served as Campaign Director for the past several years at Colgate and will be sure to do well as she transitions into this larger role.”
Harris, Colgate’s first female Vice President for Advancement, will lead a busy division that is moving the University closer to its extremely ambitious $1 billion campaign goal which seeks to significantly strengthen the University's core mission – from its academic program through student life.
“In the Advancement Division, we are positioned between an institution’s aspirations and the resources our supporters have worked their whole lives to generate,” Harris says. “They are choosing to consider us. To sit in the middle and be an honest broker for that choice is a privilege. I am excited to partner with President Casey and others as we continue to capitalize on the momentum of this historic campaign to march into Colgate’s third century. As I step into this leadership role, I am very focused on caring for this hard-working division, for this university, and for our third century.”
Harris began her academic fundraising career at the University of Kentucky, where she served in the colleges of Dentistry, Fine Arts, and Medicine during a 14-year tenure. She joined Colgate’s Advancement Office in 2021 as Associate Vice President for Major Gifts. Upon the launch of the campaign in 2022, Harris added Campaign Director to her title and began to manage teams that have been vital to the University’s current fundraising success. Their efforts have resulted in over $680M to date supporting the completion of four major building projects, the creation of 15 endowed faculty chairs, and the expansion of the Colgate Commitment — an initiative to significantly increase student financial aid.
Moving forward, the University will reimagine the residential and social experience for students, completing the Residential Commons program while renovating structures and creating new residences along Broad Street. Colgate will also invest in its Division I athletics program with new facilities, increased endowment support, and additional current-use funds for its teams. Meanwhile, the University will continue its efforts to increase the percentage of aided students and invest in the academic enterprise that is the cornerstone of a Colgate education.
“This campaign is in support of the Third-Century Plan, and we will achieve our goals and celebrate the next chapter for Colgate while lifting up and honoring our important history,” Harris says. “Campaigns are a key ingredient to a university’s ability to bring its vision to life and lift the words of our Third-Century Plan off the page and into reality.”
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Burke earned an MBA from Harvard Business School, then worked in finance and banking prior to staying home with her five children, two of whom are Colgate graduates. Ann S. Masten Ann Masten is Regents Professor of child development and Distinguished McKnight University Professor at the University of Minnesota Twin Cities Institute of Child Development. With her research focus on understanding risk and resilience in human development, she identified the fundamental psychosocial resilience factors in children that promote positive development and protect against adversity. In 2024, Masten received the Grawemeyer Prize in Psychology for her idea that resilience depends on ordinary but powerful processes. Past president of the Society for Research in Child Development (SRCD) and the developmental division of the American Psychological Association (APA), Masten is a fellow in the APA and the Association for Psychology Science. 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A visionary leader in institutional transformation, Tiefenthaler spent more than 30 years in higher education. She served as president of Colorado College, provost at Wake Forest University, and professor of economics and associate dean at Colgate. Deborah Willis Deborah Willis is University Professor and chair of the Department of Photography & Imaging at New York University’s Tisch School of the Arts. She has affiliated appointments with the College of Arts and Sciences, the Department of Social & Cultural Analysis, and the Institute of Fine Arts, where she teaches courses on photography and imaging, iconicity, and cultural histories visualizing the black body, women, and gender. She directs NYU’s Center for Black Visual Culture/Institute of African American Affairs. Her research examines photography’s multifaceted histories, visual culture, the photographic history of slavery and emancipation, contemporary women photographers, and beauty. 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His military decorations include the Silver Star and Legion of Merit as well as three each of the Bronze Star and Purple Heart. His military experiences appear in several books and documentaries, including the film Minh: A Bond Unbroken, which tells how he and his SEAL Teammates found and rescued their Vietnamese combat interpreter 40 years after the war. After active duty, Woolard enjoyed a second career in the private sector and became involved in charitable work. He served as president of the Special Operations Fund and chairman of the National Navy SEAL Museum Board of Directors, creating the Navy SEAL Monument in Virginia and the Naval Combat Demolition Units/Scouts and Raiders Monument in Normandy. News and Updates Student
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