Los Angeles Times

Raise money, protect students

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Re “Nikias to step down as USC president,” May 26

Why was it necessary for the success of USC’s recent $6-billion fundraisin­g campaign to ignore students’ and nurses’ complaints about ex-USC gynecologi­st Dr. George Tyndall? Why did ex-President C.L. Max Nikias have to sacrifice one for the other?

I don’t know much about the process necessary for building up a major university’s endowment, but I just don’t see the conflict between guarding against malfeasanc­e and fundraisin­g.

Surely there is a multitude of gynecologi­sts who would be happy to have a job at USC’s student health clinic. Kathi Smith

Ojai

The recent unhappy news from USC is not greeted with derision or joy by those of us from UCLA. The two pinnacles of success that Los Angeles has relied on for its intellectu­al growth, prosperity and intelligen­t cultural foundation are USC and UCLA.

I grew up in the shadow, almost literally, of USC, at 48th and Hoover streets. A few kids in the neighborho­od went to USC, and even fewer, like me, went to UCLA, Most didn’t go to either, because their parents, like mine, could barely afford their rent.

These universiti­es, however, gave us an achievable goal, and without them we could not have moved forward. I went on to law school and eventually returned to become the vice chancellor of UCLA in charge of its brand-new capital fundraisin­g program.

I know that, once the current dust is brushed off, USC will have retained its place as a source of enlightenm­ent, optimism and intellectu­al challenge, and next year at this time the faith will have been restored. Wait and see. Alan Charles

Beverly Hills The writer was UCLA vice chancellor for university relations and developmen­t from 1979 to 1995.

It was a proud day for our family when our son graduated from USC with a doctorate from the Thornton School of Music. He is a third-generation Trojan.

It was inspiring to hear

Nikias speak of the pride we should all feel as members of the Trojan family. Little did we know that two weeks later, he wouldn’t be a part of that family.

It is sad what has happened at a university that I’ve always been so proud to have attended. Let’s hope we learn from the past as we move forward with a new president. Judi D. Welch

Pacific Palisades

The legal definition of a trustee is a person or a member of a board given control or powers of administra­tion of property in trust with a legal obligation to administer it solely for the purposes specified.

USC’s trustees did not do their job when they expressed confidence in Nikias. They should resign en masse. Jayne Gordon

Santa Monica

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