University finds prominent astrophysicist Lawrence Krauss grabbed a woman's breast
An investigation by Arizona State University (ASU) in Tempe concluded this week that high-profile astrophysicist and atheist Lawrence Krauss violated the university's sexual harassment policy by grabbing a woman's breast at a conference in Australia in late 2016.
"Responsive action is being taken to prevent any further recurrence of similar conduct," ASU's executive vice president and provost, Mark Searle, wrote in a 31 July letter to Melanie Thomson, a microbiologist based in Ocean Grove, Australia, who is an outspoken advocate for women in science. Thomson, who witnessed the breast-grabbing incident, received the investigative report from ASU's Office of Equity and Inclusion (OEI) and shared it with Science.
In response to an email asking what specific actions the university is taking, an ASU spokesperson wrote: "Professor Lawrence Krauss is no longer director of Arizona State University's Origins Project, a research unit at ASU. Krauss remains on administrative leave from the university. It is the policy of the university not to comment on ongoing personnel matters."
Lawrence M. Krauss and The Origins Project.
Related: Two EmDrive Papers -- Mach Effect Thruster, Too
(Score: 2) by crafoo on Wednesday August 08 2018, @02:27AM
Are you arguing that the roles are symmetric are that it is desirable to enforce a such a system? Both would be pretty dumb arguments. Men are the initiators. Women are the choosers. "as a man", your anecdote has not relevance to the discussion. Both roles have their pros and cons. Lying to people about the reality of these roles is not helping.