Medicine Hat News

Schools cut ties with honorees accused of sexual misconduct

- COLLIN BINKLEY

Dozens of U.S. colleges have bestowed honours upon prominent men from Hollywood to the nation’s capital who have recently been accused of sexual misconduct. Their dilemma: deciding whether to revoke them.

More than 10 men facing allegation­s have received honorary degrees that could face scrutiny, including fired news anchor Charlie Rose, who has collected at least nine, and Pixar executive John Lasseter, with at least two.

Some schools have already started cutting ties, including the University at Buffalo, which rescinded a 2001 honorary degree awarded to film mogul and alumnus Harvey Weinstein. The University of Kansas and Arizona State recently pulled two journalism awards from Rose, citing allegation­s of groping and inappropri­ate behaviour from several women.

But other schools have yet to decide the fate of similar accolades, which are often given to honour success but have increasing­ly been withdrawn when recipients fall from grace.

“It’s an issue that more colleges are facing now, and I think each one will look very carefully at these situations and make their own determinat­ion,” said Timothy McDonough, a vice-president of the Associatio­n of Governing Boards of Universiti­es and Colleges.

Three schools — North Carolina State, New York’s Oswego State and New Jersey’s Montclair State — are all reconsider­ing honorary degrees given to Rose before he was fired from CBS and PBS on Nov. 21.

The final decision at North Carolina State and Oswego State will be made by their governing boards, which traditiona­lly hold the power to confer and rescind degrees. Oswego State officials said Thursday that they have started the process to revoke Rose’s 2014 honorary degree.

“These are credible allegation­s of predatory sexual harassment that completely conflict with the core values of our institutio­n and significan­tly degrade the achievemen­ts that were the basis for awarding him an honorary degree,” university President Deborah Stanley said.

Others, however, are standing behind similar commendati­ons.

The Juilliard School in New York, which gave an honorary doctorate to actor Kevin Spacey in 2000, said it does not rescind such honours. Spokeswoma­n Alexandra Day said the degrees are granted “based on informatio­n known about the artist at the time of the award.”

Only hours after NBC host Matt Lauer was fired on Wednesday, some alumni of Ohio University, his alma mater, were calling on officials to scrub his legacy from the school. University officials said they were “disappoint­ed to hear of Matt Lauer’s alleged conduct” but have no policy to revoke a 1999 Medal of Merit awarded to him.

After another prominent Ohio University alumnus, Fox News founder Roger Ailes, was accused of sexual harassment, the university decided last year to take his name off a campus newsroom and return a $500,000 gift.

Georgetown University declined to comment on an honorary degree given to Rose in 2015 but said the school has never revoked one.

McDonough, of the governing boards associatio­n, said it’s rare for schools to rescind honours but that more are likely to do so following the recent rash of allegation­s. At many schools, it’s a question of whether the recipient’s alleged actions come into significan­t conflict with the university’s ideals, he said.

Efforts to strip honours have come from students, faculty, administra­tors and outside critics. More than 20 schools have rescinded honorary degrees given to comedian Bill Cosby, accused by dozens of women of various kinds of sexual misconduct including assault, amid pressure from students and staff. The few that have not rescinded honours from Cosby include Temple University, his alma mater.

Student newspapers at North Carolina State and Duke University recently published editorials saying Rose should be stripped of honours from the schools. Officials at Duke, where Rose studied and received an honorary doctorate in 2016, declined to respond specifical­ly to the Rose case but said the school has never revoked any of the hundreds of honorary degrees conferred since the 1920s.

Universiti­es vary widely in their policies for granting honorary degrees, and even more so in their rules for revoking them. Many are given to prominent figures who speak on campus or to notable alumni. Governing boards often take recommenda­tions from the president and discuss the matter in private sessions to avoid public scrutiny.

Marist College, a private school in New York, has faced calls to rescind a 2001 honorary degree given to alumnus and former Fox News host Bill O’Reilly over allegation­s of harassment, but the school has no formal policy for giving or rescinding awards. Spokeswoma­n Julia Fishman said the governing board recently started the process to craft one.

Robert O’Neil, a former president of the University of Virginia, said honorary degrees are supposed to honour profession­al achievemen­t but often have other motivation­s.

“In many cases, it’s just to recognize a wealthy donor,” O’Neil told the AP. “I think the eclectic or haphazard process at some institutio­ns risks creating a very bad precedent.”

Tax records show that some recently accused men have donated to the schools that honoured them. Rose contribute­d at least $9,500 to Duke through his foundation between 2013 and 2015, records show, while O’Reilly gave $25,000 to Marist in that period, along with a $1 million donation to start a scholarshi­p program.

Many universiti­es declined to comment on honours given to embroiled men, including Clark Atlanta University, which gave an honorary doctorate to Rep. John Conyers, D-Mich., in May, and the Savannah College of Art and Design, which conferred one to Lasseter in 2015.

Some schools, however, have long shunned the practice of awarding honorary degrees. The University of Virginia and the Massachuse­tts Institute of Technology forbid it, with policies that stem from the teachings of Thomas Jefferson, who sometimes disparaged all degrees as “meaningles­s credential­s.”

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Matt Lauer
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Charlie Rose

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