George
and Me
by Robert G. Anderson
The sordid story surrounding George Roche is a vivid reminder of
human depravity, and the harm evil can inflict upon those close to it. Even if justice is
done, as has partly been the case here, it can take a heavy toll on the innocent as well
as on the wrongdoer.
It is incomprehensible that a father would have an intimate
relationship with his son's wife and, when confronted with her public confession and
suicide, depart a few days later on a honeymoon with a new wife, having just abandoned his
wife of 44 years who is suffering from liver cancer with a $1000 check and the injunction
to get out. Not even Shakespeare would have dared construct such a fictional tragedy. And,
yet, such are the charges against George Roche. Is it not significant that so many,
including his son, believe the charges, despite his denial?
Justice certainly demands the exposure and condemnation of such a
despicable man. But with justice comes a horror upon his family and an embarrassment to
all of us who have ever crossed his path. How many times I have asked myself how different
my life would have been if George and I had never met that spring of 1971. But we did
meet, and I did introduce him to Hillsdale College, and two years later I left Hillsdale
to escape him.
I joined the Hillsdale faculty in the fall of 1965. The following
year my wife Beverly and I built our new home in Hillsdale and within a few years our two
daughters were born. Hillsdale College was a good school in those days, and it had a good
faculty and administration. The eight years that I taught economics and business courses
at the college were some of the most pleasant of my life. At the time of George Roche's
arrival the economics department included Dean Russell, John Sparks and myself. We were a
compatible staff of free-market economists who shared a common libertarian perspective.
And then came George Roche. Dean Russell had already made the
decision to leave that fall but, before doing so, observed to me, "It's good that I'm
leaving, for I doubt if I could remain with George in charge." All three of us, Dean
Russell, George Roche, and I had worked at the Foundation for Economic Education
previously. I assumed Dean was just making a personal judgment about his attitude toward
George. Soon his words took on a different meaning. Years later I asked him if he had
known something at the time which he hadn't shared with us. He just smiled and responded,
"Some of us are just slow learners!"
Since both George and I shared many common associates and friends
from our days at FEE, and because I had been responsible for presenting him as a candidate
to Hillsdale, I was very pleased with his appointment as Hillsdale's new president. I had
read his writings on education and Frederic Bastiat, and I believed we shared a similar
libertarian perspective. In addition to our common backgrounds at FEE, George had brought
with him two individuals with whom I developed a close friendship. Barry Boyer and Bruce
Oyen were people George had met through his work at FEE. Barry was a young free-market
economist who joined us in the department, and Bruce was involved with media development.
Both were libertarians as well. They were good family men too, and all of us were looking
forward to a promising future at Hillsdale.
It didn't happen, of course. Within two years we would all be
gone, along with my old friend and colleague, Clarence Carson. And soon thereafter the
other conservatives and libertarians with whom I had worked would all be gone too. It
wasn't exactly a purge, even though for some it must have seemed so. It all came from a
growing disillusion among us about George Roche.
His winning charm and warm manner were traits, or should I say
skills, such as I've never known in any other person. He was an incredibly engaging
individual, the kind of person in whom you willingly put your trust, and he knew it and he
used it. I've often reflected that, if there is a Satan doing his evil handiwork through
us, George is just the kind of guy he would recruit.
Of course, until these latest scandalous charges against him, I
would not have been willing to so condemn him. The man I saw in the beginning was a person
of duplicity, hypocrisy, and meanness. His corruption in the form of debauchery and
depravity apparently came later. In the early years what I witnessed was mostly a pattern
of lies.
One of the first indications that there was a different man behind
the facade was George's intolerance toward criticism. Some people can handle negative
comments better than others, but George could not accept any. Like most narcissists,
George had an insatiable appetite for praise but a zero tolerance for the slightest
disapproval or even a differing judgment. Undoubtedly this flaw had much to do with his
wrongful treatment of his wife, June, over the years. June is a gracious lady of the
"old school" who suffered silently through horrendous and repeated verbal abuse
at the top of George's lungs. All of us knew of his hidden and extraordinary temper, in
stark contrast to his public image. You learned quickly the futility of "arguing with
George" or even disgreeing with him. One hundred percent approval and agreement were
required.
When George arrived at Hillsdale in 1971, the college was
participating in the federal government's work/study program. This grant program was
originated a few years earlier by an administrator, much to my chagrin. It was a needless
government intrusion into student employment policies of the college, and to meet federal
guidelines, the college seemed to be engaging in some highly questionable student
employment practices. It was a bad precedent for the College, and both George and I agreed
it should be terminated as soon as possible. But two years later when I left Hillsdale,
the government grants to the college were still being reported by Congressman Ed
Hutchinson in the local newspaper.
Now none of this would matter so much but for the manner in which
George handled it. He began a publicity crusade, both in written advertisements and public
speaking, declaring that the college had never accepted "one cent of government funds
in its entire history." He knew, and he knew we knew, that this was a lie. Professor
Boyer finally challenged him on it, and to this day he still believes it was the cause of
his eventual termination. George continued to profess the lie until today it is enshrined
as part of Hillsdale College's heritage. It was a false claim which George knowingly
conveyed to all who would listen. To me it was an early demonstration of how his rhetoric
conflicted with factual reality. How many private supporters over the years have relied on
that falsehood can never be known, or even whether it mattered to them. But it mattered to
me.
There was another big lie, still in use today: that Ludwig von
Mises had selected Hillsdale to receive his library. In fact, Mises had never heard of the
school. The books were purchased from his widow, and two donors-a wealthy businessman and
a famous conservative foundation-were told that each had paid the entire cost. More lies.
It was during his second year and my last year at Hillsdale that
things really started to come apart. In the spring of 1972 George had hired Clarence
Carson as chair of the history department, commencing that summer. Clarence and I had
previously taught at Grove City College, and we were close friends. When George told me
that he had hired Clarence, after the fact, I was somewhat confused that he hadn't
discussed it with me earlier. I naively assumed at the time he just wanted to surprise me
with the good news,...and it did. I couldn't have been more pleased that Clarence was
coming to Hillsdale. Had I known what was lying ahead for all of us, my enthusiasm would
have evaporated.
It was that fall that Lew Rockwell also came to Hillsdale. The
gathering of Lew, Barry Boyer, Clarence Carson, John Sparks, and Jim King made for some
great times that fall, even though they were to be short lived for most of us, and
ultimately, for all of us. It all came apart while I was on a Florida holiday with my
family during Christmas. Upon my return from the break I learned that Clarence Carson had
been terminated and Barry Boyer would not have his contract renewed in the spring. I was
furious and immediately requested a meeting with George Roche to seek some explanation
from him over what was happening. The meeting was, of course, an exercise in futility.
It was a session which I'll never forget. The moment I walked into
his office he announced that the "subject of Carson" was not open to discussion.
I opened it anyway and George informed me, "If you don't like it here, you should
leave too." I responded, "I have tenure and don't have to leave, so why don't
you leave?" Of course, I knew at that moment I couldn't remain at Hillsdale, and at
the end of the year I accepted a position at FEE, a move that did not "sit well"
with George. Our relationship over the years thereafter remained civil, but guarded. I had
come to the sad conclusion that George was a man without integrity.
A year or so after my departure from Hillsdale I learned something
that, to this day, still infuriates me. During George's first months as president he
announced he was going to buy a Porsche 911 Targa. June, told me, "I just can't
object to this indulgence because he has worked so hard and this is something he has
always wanted to do." I agreed with her and encouraged George to buy the car. Barry
Boyer even went with him when he picked it up and, like myself, was pleased that George
was buying something he really wanted.
During the fiscal year 1971-72 the administration had all of us on
an austerity budget to keep the operating deficit to a minimum. Faculty were requested not
to incur any expenses unless absolutely necessary. It was a "belt-tightening"
time at Hillsdale. So imagine my shock when it was discovered that the expensive sportscar
had been purchased at college expense, at George's request! The incredible indifference to
the college's budget problem, not to mention his duplicity with me and others, confirmed
for me his lack of integrity. We had learned what a master he was at conveying false
impressions, and thus leading people to wrong conclusions. I never forgave him for that
falsehood. It served also as an early example of his willingness to abuse his power.
The years passed, and though George was on FEE's board, my contact
with him was limited. As he became more involved with college affairs, he had less and
less to do with FEE. After my return to FEE in 1973, I began to hear some revealing
stories about George and, of course, I shared my own experiences as well. Perhaps the most
curious of these was told to me by my old friend, Ben Rogge. Ben was a professor of
economics at Wabash College, a FEE trustee, and a regular lecturer in FEE seminar
programs. He was a man of great wit and an outstanding speaker and thinker. Were he alive
today I know Ben would be relating one of his favorite quips, that "A thoroughly
dishonest man can last longer in the pulpit or as a college president than he ever could
as a used car salesman!" When George came to FEE as director of seminars in the late
sixties, he asked Ben if he could use his lectures at FEE weekend seminars. Ben graciously
agreed, but used to joke afterward, "I didn't mind him giving my lectures, but he
even stole my jokes!" Those who had heard Ben's lectures previously were astounded by
how George could be so brazen as to repeat the lectures word for word before audiences
acquainted with Ben Rogge. George never seemed to be bothered about using the work of
others, whether approved or not.
And so in 1979 when Ed Opitz, who had been the resident theologian
at FEE for the previous twenty years, walked into my office and asked me to read in the
latest issue of Imprimis, an essay written by George Roche, I suspected something was
amiss. After reading it, Ed handed me some old typewritten pages of a sermon he had
delivered in l969. He said, "Now read my sermon." The plagiarism was appalling.
Entire paragraphs of Ed's sermon were scattered throughout the Imprimis essay by George
Roche. My first reaction was to ask Ed, "Did he have your approval to use your
writings?" Of course, he did not. My second reaction was that George's presidency was
over. The plagiarism was so serious and extensive that its disclosure would surely topple
any college president.
But there was a problem. George was still a trustee of FEE and,
more importantly, he and Ed had been long-time friends. The Reverend Edmund Opitz is one
of the most decent men I've ever known and a total gentleman. (Not only that but he
performed the wedding ceremony for Beverly and me in FEE's library on his own 15th wedding
anniversary in 1961!) He was, and is, a man who would never harm a friend, even if wronged
by that friend. His response when I expressed outrage over George's plagiarism was to
quote that old adage, "It's the highest form of flattery." He contacted George,
quietly, and George responded, quietly! The matter never went public even though it
traveled the "gossip mill" for years thereafter. He got away with it.
There was another episode at FEE involving George which created a
great deal of consternation. One day we received a letter from one our contributors
reprimanding us for sharing our donor list with Hillsdale. He was certain we were guilty,
since the same mailing address error appeared on both of his envelopes. It confirmed
something we had long suspected. As a member of FEE's board, George received our
confidential monthly donor report. From the beginning at FEE we had supplied this
information to trustees so they could know who was supporting our work and, if they wished
to do so, could contact the donor with a further expression of gratitude. Upon discovering
that George was using our confidential donor list for fund raising activities at
Hillsdale, we were forced to change our policy of sharing this information with the
trustees. Thereafter, we supplied only a "summary" of monthly donor information,
deleting the addresses of our contributors. George's improper use of our confidential
donor list violated his stewardship duty as a FEE trustee. It was another instance of his
brazen disregard of ethical standards.
Over the years rumors kept surfacing and people kept passing
through Hillsdale, disillusioned and bitter over their encounters with George. The only
time I ever intervened again at Hillsdale was in 1990, when Jim King resigned after
twenty-five years at the college. Jim has always believed that the suicide of our close
friend Bert Fink, who had taught art at the college, was partially due to Bert's
despondency over the way George was running the college. It was a bad era in Jim's life.
Jim and I arrived at Hillsdale together in 1965, and perhaps because we both grew up in
the Pittsburgh area, we immediately developed a close friendship which continues to this
day. Jim had become sort of a "Hillsdale icon" during his tenure at the college,
and it was inconceivable to me that he was leaving of his own accord. I wrote to George,
urging him to do everything possible to prevent Jim's departure, but he was welcoming the
event. George viewed Jim (who was widely admired by trustees, faculty, students, and
alumni) as some kind of personal threat, and thus was pleased to see him leave. Jim's
departure was a tragic loss for the college which could have been prevented, but there
could be only one big man on campus.
In 1992 I retired from FEE and thought I had heard the last of
George Roche. I still suffer a personal regret over having introduced George to Hillsdale
in 1971, and now more so when I see the culmination of my error with this sordid affair
being reported nationwide. It has caused me to reflect on the years and realize how that
casual meeting in 1971 has so dramatically impacted on the lives of so many of us. In the
beginning I saw a man of great talent and promise. But as time passed I became disgusted
by his hypocrisy. However, not until this latest scandal did I realize how thoroughly
corrupt and evil the man had become.
The question, of course, is how will his 28 years at Hillsdale
play out? Does it merely end with the destruction of one fallen man? Does the $340 million
in private support raised during his tenure somehow balance the scales? Does the college
not bear any of the burden or responsibility for the years of the Roche presidency? Has it
just been nothing more than a good story with a bad ending? It seems to me that these, and
many other questions, must be confronted before the college can "move on."
The initial response of the college seemed promising. After some
early vacillation, the college announced the dismissal and replacement of the president.
The question of what will follow has yet to be answered. A board of trustees that has
evolved over a long period of time under the tenure of a dominant leader is much like a
defendant-selected jury. George understood how to use power within a not-for-profit
organization,...he established a large number of board members and weeded out his critics
over time. Such a strategy assures virtual control to a man seeking power. He was an
expert on power,...he once wrote a booklet by that title!
How else can you explain the disproportionate compensation
package-$550,000 a year-that George had acquired during his tenure? I have no doubt that
even a preliminary investigation of his financial arrangements with the college will yield
some shocking disclosures. Power corrupts, and is used for the benefit of he who wields
the power. His greedy indulgence in buying a Porsche at college expense in the first year
of his presidency is probably mild to what has transpired since. The question is whether
the trustees are willing to look. I'm afraid it's much like the futility of expecting an
accountant to audit his own books. They will find only what they want to find, and the
rest will be buried. Now that George has left with a reported $2 million more in a
retirement package, it is the trustees and administrators of the college who remain behind
to answer these questions. The college cannot escape with impunity from the 28 year reign
of George Roche.
There has been a lot made of the $340 million of private gifts
received by the College during George Roche's tenure. But that begs the next question: How
has it been expended? Less than half the total, $160 million, is reported to have been
accumulated in the endowment fund (which would have grown enormously over the past few
years). While a few new buildings and additions have been constructed in the past 28
years, certainly not all of the remaining $180 million was expended on capital
construction. Was the balance used to cover operational deficits resulting from a short
fall of student revenues? And, if so, to what extent were these deficits generated due to
excessive expenditures in non-student activities, especially by George's private fiefdom,
the Shavano Institute? The college will be facing such questions in the near future, and
it is imperative that such inquiries not be greeted with more silence.
The college, if it is to achieve any credibility, must open its
windows and let the stale air out! Questions of proportionality and excess must be
examined. Costs are just as important as revenues, sometimes even more so. For example,
Imprimis maintains a mailing list of almost one million. That's nearly a thousand copies
for each student enrolled at the college! The annual cost of this publication, and the
overhead in honoraria and management of it, has to be a major item in the college budget.
It would be interesting to compare this cost against student tuition revenue. Like George
Roche's half-million-plus compensation, the cost and magnitude of Imprimis is obviously
out of proportion for a college the size of Hillsdale.
It's not my intent to belittle academic quality at Hillsdale, for
it is indeed a fine college with an excellent faculty. However, claims of high academic
standards can be misleading. Back in the late eighties a Hillsdale official commented to
me, "Hillsdale students have an average SAT score in the nine hundreds and, yet,
almost eighty percent of them are on the dean's list. What does this say for our academic
standards?" Such a candid critic was soon discovered and ousted by George! But his
question does remind that the upper limit of academic standards are ultimately determined
by the students. Obviously, students with SAT scores of 1600 can handle a more rigorous
curriculum than students scoring 950. Only brighter students can make higher standards
possible. Any teacher who sets academic standards higher than the capability of his
students will soon have an empty classroom. The great teacher is one who sets demanding
standards which are realistic and achievable for his students. This has been, and I assume
still is, the uniqueness of Hillsdale College, where a personal and close contact exists
between faculty and student. Hillsdale has always understood that a demanding culture of
academic achievement is the first requirement for a quality institution of higher
learning.
It is precisely for this reason that colleges have differing
admission standards and guidelines. The sad flaw at Hillsdale has been the massive public
relations effort to create a conservative image which does not, and never has,
corresponded to the structure of its faculty. I used to like observing that if college
catalogs were subject to false advertising laws, all college administrators would be in
jail. But we know that at Hillsdale the culprit has been far more than
admission-department rhetoric over the years. Of course, Hillsdale has had, and has today,
many fine conservative faculty members. But the notion that the faculty as a whole has
been conservative is absurd. We live in an age of extreme statism, and Hillsdale was not
isolated from that reality. Statist politics dominate intellectual thought today, to such
an extent that conservative ideas are rarely even heard in most college classrooms. The
uniqueness of Hillsdale is that the conservative voice is being heard at all; but it was
always a minority voice.
The final shame of George Roche, I fear, may be his destruction of
Hillsdale's reputation as a fine liberal arts college founded upon the traditional values
of Western civilization. It is an all too human tendency when reacting against an evil man
to discard the good with the bad. It is for this reason that the college must act openly
and frankly as it cleanses itself not only of the onerous images of George Roche as
incestuous adulterer, but also of George Roche as an abuser of trust, a user who saw the
deep pockets of conservatives and looted them for his personal aggrandizement.
There is much bad to overcome, but there is more good to be told
about the institution and its traditions. The task for Hillsdale College now is to tell it
all honestly.
December
3, 1999
Professor
Anderson, a student of Ludwig von Mises and Hans F. Sennholz, taught economics at Grove
City College and Hillsdale College. He was also a long-time senior staff member of the
Foundation for Economic Education, retiring in 1992. |