From a Harvard Crimson article about Harvard College rules that prohibit students facing disciplinary proceedings from having lawyers accompany them to the disciplinary proceedings or from having lawyers advocate on their behalf to members of the disciplinary board: "Sundquist said the reform committee discussed the possibility of including lawyers in the process but was also wary of bringing people with a profit motive into the room."
So deeply ingrained is the suspicion of the profit motive, at least in some precincts at Harvard, that it extends even to denying a right to counsel to students accused of serious offenses. Do they think this way at the business school? At the Harvard Management Company that manages the university's $30 billion endowment?