Los Angeles Times

USC forms president-search panel

The 23 members include developers, philanthro­pists and a Pulitzer Prize winner.

- By Matt Hamilton

The diverse group charged with selecting USC’s next president includes a former Goldman Sachs executive, a prominent social worker, a Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and the founding chief executive of the nation’s largest health benefits company.

Rick Caruso, the billionair­e developer leading the search committee, said the 23 faculty members and trustees on the panel reflect a broad spectrum of views but have the singular goal of choosing a leader who can guide the university out of a series of damaging scandals.

The committee includes Viet Thanh Nguyen, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for fiction and a tenured professor; Thomas J. Barrack Jr., a real estate developer who has prominentl­y supported President Trump; David Bohnett, a tech entreprene­ur and philanthro­pist; and Elizabeth M. Daley, the dean of USC’s School of Cinematic Arts and the longestten­ured dean at the university.

The committee’s task is to sift through candidates and identify the successor to C.L. Max Nikias, who resigned this summer after revelation­s by The Times of sexual misconduct allegation­s against the longtime campus health center gynecologi­st, Dr. George

Tyndall. The newspaper’s reporting catalyzed a wave of public criticism of Nikias’ leadership and triggered mounting litigation against USC.

“This is a monumental moment for the future of our university, and we commit to this undertakin­g with the utmost faith, trust and confidence,” Caruso said in a letter last week that named the committee members and outlined the search process. He said the group would use “as much time as needed” to pick a president.

Dr. Wanda Austin, the former chief executive of Aerospace Corp. and a USC alumna, was named interim president last month and serves on the search committee.

The sprawling private university has about 45,000 students, tens of thousands of employees, a vast healthcare enterprise in partnershi­p with Los Angeles County and an annual budget that approaches $5 billion.

The president post’s unique challenges are compounded by the revelation­s about Tyndall, who has been accused of sexually harassing and abusing scores of young women during their gynecologi­cal exams over a career that spanned nearly three decades.

Hundreds of women came forward after The Times documented the record of complaints about Tyndall and recounted in graphic detail their experience­s on his exam table. Tyndall, 71, has denied wrongdoing, but L.A. County prosecutor­s are evaluating dozens of cases for possible criminal charges.

Caruso, who took over as chairman of the Board of Trustees in May, said in his letter that the process of replacing Nikias will include multiple chances for the community to participat­e. The search committee has launched a website to provide updates, collect nomination­s of prospectiv­e candidates and gather feedback via an online questionna­ire.

The committee will also hold forums on campus for students, alumni, faculty and staff.

“There are ‘listening sessions’ where you can directly share your views and recommenda­tions,” Caruso said of the forums.

Although several alumni sit on the committee, none of the members is a student now — a move that current and former students criticized.

“After numerous scandals that sacrificed student safety, you choose not to include a student voice on the presidenti­al search committee,” Rini Sampath, a former student body president, said on Twitter. “This is a grave mistake.”

William Tierney, a USC professor who studies governance in higher education, praised how Caruso assembled the search committee and communicat­ed the group’s work.

“He has listened, and he’s a good listener,” Tierney said. “There will always be nitpicking. No search committee is perfect. Some will say the staff are not on the committee. Some will say a student is not on the committee. But this isn’t the United Nations. This is a committee that would pass muster at any major university.”

 ?? Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times ?? THE COMMITTEE that will select USC’s next president is made up of faculty and trustees but no students. It’s headed by billionair­e developer Rick Caruso.
Marcus Yam Los Angeles Times THE COMMITTEE that will select USC’s next president is made up of faculty and trustees but no students. It’s headed by billionair­e developer Rick Caruso.
 ?? John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation ?? VIET THANH NGUYEN, who won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2016 and is a tenured professor, is one of 23 members of USC’s search committee.
John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation VIET THANH NGUYEN, who won the Pulitzer Prize for fiction in 2016 and is a tenured professor, is one of 23 members of USC’s search committee.

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