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Roger Mudd,
Donald McCabe Speeches to Launch
W&L Institute for Honor
Newsman Roger
Mudd, a 1950 W&L alumnus and widely respected journalist, and
Dr. Donald L. McCabe, one of the country's leading authorities on
academic integrity and collegiate Honor Systems, are the featured
speakers at Washington and Lee University Founders' Day events and
the inaugural session of the W&L Institute for Honor.
The Jan. 18-19
festivities, which include students' initiation into the Omicron
Delta Kappa honor society for leadership achievements, are designed
to highlight the launching of the W&L Institute for Honor.
The institute
and its anticipated annual sessions are being financed by $750,000,
raised by Billy Schaefer '60 from members of the Class of 1960.
The institute's goals are still being formulated but include promoting
academic integrity in secondary schools and colleges, while also
emphasizing ways that alumni can further promote integrity in the
professions and in the workplace, institute organizers said.
In 1992, Washington
and Lee was among 24 founding institutions of the Center for Academic
Integrity, formerly spearheaded by McCabe and now based at Duke
University's Kenan Institute of Ethics. The center's 1997 annual
convention was hosted by W&L on its national historic landmark
campus in Lexington. Today, the center has about 250 institution
members, including many of the country's most eminent colleges and
universities.
Mudd, who has
become in recent years an avid commentator and speaker on professional
ethics, will launch the weekend events with his Founders' Day convocation
address, "Honor: Is It Absolute or Is It Relative?" The
speech, which is open to the public, is at 11:30 a.m. Friday, Jan.
18, in Lee Chapel.
Mudd will discuss
how W&L's Honor System leaves little room for debate with its
single penalty of expulsion. But it is after students graduate,
Mudd says, that they face a complex world, in which they must juggle
conflicting responsibilities and conflicting interests in government,
politics, law, business and journalism.
In addition
to his work as one of the country's most senior journalists, Mudd
is a member of the board of the Virginia Foundation for Independent
Colleges, from which W&L receives financial support each year.
It was Mudd who took the initiative in organizing the annual "Ethics
Bowl" competition among the foundation's 15 members. Last spring,
W&L's team won the 3rd annual Ethics Bowl.
McCabe, a Rutgers
University professor of organizational management, will deliver
the institute's keynote address at 11 a.m. Saturday, Jan. 19, in
the Law School's moot courtroom.
McCabe specializes
in the roles honor and academic integrity play in developing ethical
decision-making and ethical behavior among college students. He
has surveyed collegiate honor systems across the country three times
since the late 1980s and completed a significant survey of academic
integrity in American high schools in 1999.
The institute's
inaugural two-day session will include a series of workshops and
discussions, which are not open to the public, featuring Mudd, McCabe,
members of W&L's faculty, University officials and outside speakers.
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