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USC to award seven honorary degrees at Commencement 2019

March 08, 2019

Recipients include a groundbreaking U.S. Congressmember, a world-renowned dancer, extraordinary humanitarians and philanthropists, a pioneering statistician and a USC music icon.

Contact: Ron Mackovich at (213) 810-8583 or rmackovi@usc.edu

USC will recognize seven honorary degree candidates for their leadership in government, science, philanthropy, humanitarianism and the arts at the university’s 136th commencement ceremony on the University Park Campus on May 10.

The honorary degree recipients are Rep. Karen Bass, conductor Arthur C. Bartner, dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov, philanthropists Edythe and Eli Broad, statistician Emery Neal Brown and humanitarian Cindy Hensley McCain. Bass is also the commencement speaker.

More than 19,000 degrees will be conferred, either at the main ceremony in Alumni Park or at one of the satellite ceremonies across both campuses. More than 60,000 people are expected to attend.

 

Representative Karen Bass

The first African-American woman to serve as Speaker of any state legislative body, U.S. Representative Karen Bass continues to open new doors in her second decade in elected office.

In January, she was sworn in as Chair of the historic 55-member Congressional Black Caucus. She currently serves as the Chair of both the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security, and the House Foreign Affairs committee on Africa, Global Health, Global Human Rights and International Organizations.

A lifelong Angeleno, Bass served as an emergency room physician assistant at LAC+USC Medical Center early in her career. She later earned a Master of Social Work degree from the USC Suzanne Dworak-Peck School of Social Work.

When a crushing wave of crack cocaine struck Los Angeles in 1990, Bass established the Community Coalition and created a new way for neighbors to confront social and economic issues at the local level.

As a California State Assemblywoman, Bass’ bipartisan negotiation efforts earned her and three other California legislative leaders the 2010 John F. Kennedy Profile in Courage Award.

First elected to the U.S. Congress in 2011, Bass has represented California’s 37th Congressional District, which includes the University Park Campus, since 2013. In that time, Bass has helped shape policy in child welfare, trade policy with the continent of Africa and criminal justice reform.

Photo: Leroy Hamilton

 

Arthur C. Bartner

A distinguished conductor and music educator, Arthur C. Bartner has set a national standard for collegiate bands during nearly five decades as Director of the Trojan Marching Band.

Under Bartner’s direction, the band has become The Spirit of Troy, serving as musical ambassador to global audiences at Olympic Games, the Academy Awards and the Grammys. Thanks to Bartner’s leadership, the Trojan Marching Band has appeared in well over 125 movies and television shows. Its collaborations with the rock group Fleetwood Mac have resulted in two platinum albums.

In 2006, Bartner was awarded the prestigious Lowell Mason Fellow Award by the National Association of Music Educators.  He was inducted into the USC Athletic Hall of Fame in 2012.

Last year, the Trojan Marching Band’s new facility was named in Bartner’s honor, and the Trojan football team established the Dr. Arthur C. Bartner Trojan Commitment Award for dedication.

Photo: USC

 

Mikhail Baryshnikov

A legendary artist in classical and contemporary dance, Mikhail Baryshnikov has inspired audiences around the world. He has danced over 100 roles and has performed with American Ballet Theatre, the Mariinsky Ballet, New York City Ballet, and the Royal Ballet, bringing to life some of the most iconic characters in classical ballet.

An accomplished actor from stage to cinema, Baryshnikov received a Drama Desk Award, and a Tony Award nomination for “Metamorphosis.” His performance in “The Turning Point” earned an Academy Award nomination for best supporting actor. He is currently touring the play “Brodsky/Baryshnikov,” directed by Alvis Hermanis, and is collaborating with Jan Fabre on “Not Once,” an art installation with film.

Baryshnikov’s awards include the Kennedy Center Honors, the National Medal of Honor, and Japan’s Praemium Imperiale International Arts Award. He has earned the rank of Officer of the French Legion of Honor.

He is founder and artistic director of the Baryshnikov Arts Center in New York City.

Photo: Peter Baryshnikov 2017

 

Edythe Broad

Philanthropist, educational benefactor and patron of the arts, Edythe Broad has elevated Los Angeles’ cultural profile with generous and consistent support of the LA Opera, the Los Angeles Public Library, the Broad Stage and other arts organizations.

The driving force behind the couple’s philanthropy to the opera, Edythe Broad and her husband Eli have donated $14 million to the LA Opera, including support for its historic production of the Ring cycle. Edythe inspired Eli’s love of contemporary art, and together they founded The Broad contemporary art museum, which offers free general admission and has welcomed more than 2.5 million visitors since it opened in September 2015. The Broad features one of the most prominent collections of postwar and contemporary art in the world, and appeals to a young, diverse audience.

A graduate of Detroit public schools, Edythe Broad is devoted to uplifting public schools and the students they serve through initiatives such as The Broad Center, which helps develop education leaders. Broad is also a longtime supporter of the Los Angeles Public Library, where she endowed Student Zones, which offer after-school homework help to homeless and other underserved students.

The Eli and Edythe Broad Center for Regenerative Medicine and Stem Cell Research at the Keck School of Medicine of USC is dedicated to early detection of disease, improved therapies, and faster recovery times.

Photo: Ben Gibbs

 

Eli Broad

An unrivaled entrepreneur and humanitarian, Eli Broad’s generosity has expanded access to the arts, improved public schools in high-need communities and invested more than $800 million to fight life-threatening illnesses.

Eli Broad is the only person to have founded two Fortune 500 companies in two different industries. As a co-founder of Kaufman and Broad Homebuilding Co., today known as KB Home, he helped bring home ownership within reach for young families. His leadership of SunAmerica reinvigorated retirement savings for millions.

Educated in the public school system, Broad created generous initiatives to support public school leadership and performance, especially in traditionally underserved areas.

Together with his wife Edythe, Broad built a collection of contemporary art that includes 2,000 works. A selection of works from the collection are exhibited at The Broad museum in downtown Los Angeles.

Over their lifetimes, the Broads have donated more than $4 billion to causes that help create a healthier and more hopeful world.

Photo: Nancy Pastor

 

Emery Neal Brown

Statistician, anesthesiologist and neuroscientist Emery Neal Brown has deepened our understanding of the human brain and expanded the boundaries of neuroscience.

With infinite curiosity, Brown has used a statistical approach to create numerous breakthroughs in the field of anesthesiology. He has built new paradigms for monitoring patients under general anesthesia and has defined more accurately the brain’s response to anesthetic drugs. By deciphering the workings of anesthesia, Brown has improved the patient experience at hospitals everywhere.

His statistics research has also enhanced our understanding of how the brain transmits information, and provided insight into the way neurons adapt and evolve.

Brown served on President Obama’s BRAIN Initiative Working Group. He has received an NIH Director’s Pioneer Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship in Applied Mathematics, the American Society of Anesthesiologists Excellence in Research Award and the Dickson Prize in Science. Brown is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences and the National Academy of Inventors.

Thanks to the range and influence of his work, Brown is the first African American, the first statistician and the first anesthesiologist to be elected to the National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering and National Academy of Medicine.

Brown is the Edward Hood Taplin Professor of Medical Engineering at MIT and the Warren M. Zapol Professor of Anesthesia at Harvard Medical School and Massachusetts General Hospital.

Photo: Picower Institute for Learning and Memory at MIT

 

Cindy Hensley McCain

Cindy Hensley McCain has dedicated her life to improving the lives of those less fortunate both in the United States and around the world. As the chairman of the board of the McCain Institute for International Leadership at Arizona State University, she oversees the organization’s focus on advancing character-driven global leadership based on security, economic opportunity, freedom and human dignity.

McCain, who holds both an undergraduate and a graduate degree in education from USC, also chairs the Institute’s Human Trafficking Advisory Council. This is an issue she cares deeply about and is committed to ending human trafficking and supporting victims in Arizona, the United States and around the world. Through her work with the McCain Institute, several partnerships have been formed with anti-trafficking organizations working on solving various aspects of the problem. She also serves as co-chair of the Arizona Governor’s Council on human trafficking.

In addition to her work at the McCain Institute, she serves on the board of directors of Project C.U.R.E and on the advisory boards of Too Small To Fail and Warriors and Quiet Waters. McCain holds an undergraduate degree in Education and a Master’s in Special Education from USC and is a member of the USC Rossier School of Education Board of Councilors.

McCain is the chairman of her family’s business, Hensley Beverage Company, which is one of the largest Anheuser-Busch distributors in the nation. She is the wife of the late U.S. Senator John McCain. Together, they have four children.

Photo: Vermillion Photography

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