You mean a school like Penn State, where President Graham Spanier brought a full embrace of the homosexual agenda to campus, creating the first homosexual Greek organization, on-campus sex events and the firing of the women's basketball coach who refused to tolerate open lesbianism on her team?
...and people are still asking why Penn State allowed Sandusky to have access to campus after being caught several times with young boys.
yes
yes
and like hundreds of K-12 schools around the country
Respectfully, Spanier may have done all of the other things you stated, but he didn't fire women's basketball coach Rene Portland for refusing to allow lesbians on the women's basketball team. He tolerated that without a problem as long as the team was winning and as long as nobody sued.
For about 30 years (a decade of which was under Spanier), Penn State women's basketball coach Rene Portland had a known policy of not recruiting lesbians and of forcing lesbians off the Penn State team. Perhaps Portland got away with it because she was so successful (over 600 career wins).
It started earlier than that - a large media story quoting Penn State players about Portland's "no lesbians" recruiting policy resulting in the Penn State Faculty Senate adding a sexual-orientation clause to its anti-discrimination policy in 1991. Since 1991, it was national news and national knowledge that Rene Portland and Penn State didn't recruit or permit lesbian basketball players. Spanier didn't have a problem with it even though the Penn State Faculty Senate did.
Penn State was winning games and the women's basketball program was one of the national powers. Spanier left it alone (much in the way the football program was left alone). Whenever Portland believed or discovered that a player was a lesbian, Portland dismissed her from the team for whatever reason she could find, or benched her permanently until the girl quit.
It was only in 2005, when Jennifer Harris, Lisa Etienne and Amber Bland were dismissed by Portland from the team immediately after Penn State lost in the first round of the NCAA tournament that things went awry. Portland was weeding out the lesbians again. This time, however, Harris sued (and later settled out of court). Spanier finally acted because Penn State was in the news and was sued 'in the current era' when even he couldn't protect a successful women's basketball program.
So Spanier had no problem with ten years of discriminating against lesbians at the same time he's accused of welcoming GLBTEIEIO in every nook and cranny of the Penn State campus, as long as the school was winning basketball games and nobody sued.
I don't think Sandusky received emeritus status because he was a homosexual; I think he received emeritus status because he was a 30+ year friend of Joe Paterno and the football team was winning and bringing in $55+ million a year to the University (and just under $60 million per home game into the community).