Marysville Appeal-Democrat

A trc building s•ripped of eugenicis•’s name will ins•ead honor a ma•ive American alumnus

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES — One of the most prominent buildings at the University of Southern California — stripped last year of the name of a leading eugenicist and former university president — will instead honor Joseph Medicine Crow, a Native American alumnus who authored influentia­l works about Indigenous history and culture, served in the U.S. Army during World War II and was awarded the Medal of Freedom, the nation’s highest civilian recognitio­n.

In a move to reconcile with a racist chapter in its history, USC banished the name of Rufus B. von Kleinsmid from the Center for Internatio­nal and

Public Affairs in the heart of campus. Von Kleinsmid held a leadership role in the California eugenics movement.

The university is planning a dedication ceremony in the spring to finalize the transition. In addition to the renaming, USC will offer scholarshi­ps for Native

American students starting next fall, as a way to further Medicine Crow’s legacy, said USC President Carol L. Folt.

Students urged the university to remove von Kleinsmid’s name after the campus community began confrontin­g his involvemen­t with the Human Betterment Foundation, a Pasadenaba­sed eugenics group that supported a 1909 California law that authorized the forced sterilizat­ion of those deemed “unfit.” Von Kleinsmid himself is said to have believed that people with “defects” should be sterilized.

As the university’s fifth president from 1921 to

1947, von Kleinsmid led USC through an expansion that lifted the school to prestige. But his stance on sterilizat­ion was “at direct odds” with the university’s mission of inclusion, Folt said when the university announced the removal. A bust of von Kleinsmid was also removed from campus after a unanimous vote from the board of trustees’ executive committee.

Folt said there was broad consensus to honor an alum who contribute­d greatly to society and would inspire students.

“We wanted to make a very different statement than the name that had been there previously, and we wanted to recognize an alum, a person that has really had a big impact in his community and in the world,” Folt said. “We thought that every student that walked into that building and learned a bit about [Medicine Crow] is going to feel a bit prouder and a bit stronger about their own conviction­s and their own potential.”

Universiti­es across the nation have in recent years removed the names of campus figures after calls from alumni and students about their controvers­ial or racist legacies. The University of California, Berkeley, UC Hastings College of the Law and Caltech are among those that have stripped buildings or institutio­ns of their titles.

To rename the building, the university put together the Center for Internatio­nal and Public Affairs Naming Committee, consisting of staff, faculty, students and alumni, to identify an alum who reflected the university’s values. After compiling more than 200 names, the committee unanimousl­y agreed Medicine Crow was the right person to honor — and the university received the support of his family.

For Native American students and alumni, the decision is meaningful to a group that is often underrepre­sented in media and academia.

Mato Standing Soldier, a member of the Oglala Lakota tribe of the Pine Ridge Reservatio­n in South Dakota, graduated from USC in 2020. As a student, it became clear over the years that von Kleinsmid’s role in supporting the eugenics movement needed to be addressed, he said.

As president of the

Native American Student Assembly, he was a part of conversati­ons to ensure the university was standing for students in the community. The naming for Medicine Crow shows Native students that a path in higher education is a space they too can occupy, he noted.

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