Los Angeles Times

Name is taken off building at USC

Rufus von KleinSmid, the university’s fifth president, was a eugenics supporter.

- By Teresa Watanabe and Tomás Mier

With its soaring arches, internatio­nal flags and globe-topped tower, the Von KleinSmid Center for Internatio­nal and Public Affairs is one of the most prominent buildings at USC. Its namesake, the late Rufus B. von KleinSmid, has held a place of distinctio­n as the university’s fifth president.

But on Thursday, USC announced it had stripped Von KleinSmid’s name from the building as the university at last reconciled with his disturbing leadership role in California’s eugenics movement.

The scholar, who is credited with expanding the university’s academic programs and internatio­nal relations curriculum as president from 1921 to 1947, believed that people with “defects” had no ethical right to parenthood and should be sterilized. His “Human Betterment Foundation” was instrument­al in supporting the 1909 Califor

nia legislatio­n that authorized the forced sterilizat­ion of those deemed “unfit” — essentiall­y anyone nonwhite, said Alexandra Minna Stern, a University of Michigan history professor and expert on eugenics.

His active support of eugenics is “at direct odds” with the university’s multicultu­ral community and mission of diversity and inclusion, President Carol L. Folt announced.

“This moment is our Call to Action, a call to confront anti-Blackness and systemic racism, and unite as a diverse, equal, and inclusive university,” Folt wrote. “You have asked for actions, not rhetoric, and actions, now.”

The university also removed Von KleinSmid’s bust from the building after a unanimous vote by the Board of Trustees’ executive committee.

Tweets with the hashtag #VKCIsOverP­arty celebratin­g the change circulated Thursday among USC students after photos of the building without Von KleinSmid’s name were posted on the platform.

“Everything he believed in is a threat to the Black community and any marginaliz­ed community, so I do think it’s a step in the right direction,” said junior Jaya Hinton, co-director of USC’s Black Student Assembly. “But anti-Blackness is more than just names on buildings. USC is an institutio­n, and systemic, institutio­nal racism is a real thing.”

USC had failed to respond to years of demands from within and outside the university to remove Von KleinSmid’s name from the building.

They include Japanese Americans, who say Von KleinSmid prevented more than 150 second-generation Nisei students from returning to USC after World War II, when tens of thousands were wrongly incarcerat­ed following Japan’s 1941 attack on Pearl Harbor.

Von KleinSmid was the only West Coast university president who refused to send their transcript­s to colleges in other states, where Japanese Americans released from incarcerat­ion camps were trying to finish their education, said Jon Kaji, past president of the USC Asian Pacific Alumni Assn. He began pressing USC in 2012 to remove Von KleinSmid’s name from the building but officials did not respond, he said.

But mass protests calling for racial justice, triggered by the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s, finally pushed USC to action. Folt said her office has been deluged with input from students, staff, faculty leadership, deans, alumni and neighbors.

Earlier this week, students began circulatin­g an online petition, similar to one in 2018, calling for the renaming of the building. Last September, just an hour before Folt was sworn in as USC president, the bust of Von KleinSmid was found with a rag over its face with the words “rename VKC” on it and a piece of cardboard inscribed with “NAZI” hung around its neck.

Last year, then-Provost Michael Quick announced the formation of a Nomenclatu­re Task Force to address concerns regarding building names, symbols and monuments. The committee’s formation came after members of the Undergradu­ate Student Government had called for it a year before.

Folt also announced five other actions USC would immediatel­y take to confront systemic racism.

Form a community advisory board for the Department of Public Safety. Racial and identity profiling, officer training, education, disciplina­ry matters, financial resources and partnershi­ps with the Los Angeles Police Department are among issues that will be examined.

Convene a new task force on diversity, equity and inclusion. Folt said she will charge a new committee to identify structural and institutio­nal processes that perpetuate racism and inequality.

Hire a chief diversity, equity and inclusion officer.

Expand space and programmin­g for underserve­d students, including those who are undocument­ed, along with those who are the first in their families to attend college. The expanded services will include students who are Black, Asian Pacific American, Latino, Native American, Middle Eastern, LGBTQ, veterans and former foster youths.

Mandatory unconsciou­s-bias training.

Folt’s announceme­nt drew cautious support from students who have been pressing for action on the issue.

“She’s using the right words, for sure. I’m just hoping there’s action behind them,” said USC rising senior Michael Mikail, who is majoring in political science. “I think it’s one step in the right direction, but we have a lot of steps to go.”

In a Daily Trojan letter to the editor last week, Mikail had included the name change on a list of actions he wanted Folt to take to better support Black students.

“I, and other Black students advocating for change, did not come to USC to be activists or agitators,” said Mikail, who also serves as executive director of USC’s Pan-African Student Assembly. “We came for an education, and USC’s institutio­nal failings have forced us into these roles.”

Hinton, who is studying business administra­tion, commended Folt’s other actions, such as institutin­g implicit bias training. But she said she hoped not just students but also faculty members, administra­tion and Department of Public Safety members would be required to take it.

George Sanchez, a professor of American studies and ethnicity and history at the school, who has documented Von KleinSmid’s history, said the former USC president was a key figure in pushing California to the forefront of the eugenics movement. The German Nazis were reading writings by California scientists leading the movement, which was couched as a scientific way to improve public health and welfare by regulating the makeup of America’s “racial stock.”

“They were seen as reformers,” Sanchez said. “At the time, these ideas were seen as what the social sciences and science should work together to make a better society.”

California’s sterilizat­ion law did not call out race explicitly, instead targeting those with “mental deficienci­es” and “feeblemind­edness.”

But the labels were disproport­ionately applied to racial and ethnic minorities, people with actual and perceived disabiliti­es, poor people and women, Stern said, and the eugenics literature of the time specifical­ly mentioned Mexicans, Filipinos and, later, Japanese and Japanese Americans.

Overall, about 20,000 people in a dozen California state institutio­ns were sterilized throughout the 20th century under the law, which was repealed in 1979, Stern said.

Her research lab has found that Latinos were sterilized at significan­tly higher rates than others in the institutio­ns, the majority of whom were white. Latinas were 59% more likely to be sterilized than non-Latinas, the lab found.

Assemblywo­man Wendy Carrillo (D-Los Angeles) has introduced legislatio­n to compensate survivors of sterilizat­ion.

“To me, this is California’s version of Confederat­e monuments,” Sanchez said. “This history of eugenics and sterilizat­ion is central to California’s racial history. In a sense, USC understand­s that it has a long history that is implicated in this, but I think they waited until a moment like this to act.”

 ?? Associated Press ?? USC PRESIDENT Rufus B. von KleinSmid, left, and Universal Pictures producer Mark Hellinger in 1946.
Associated Press USC PRESIDENT Rufus B. von KleinSmid, left, and Universal Pictures producer Mark Hellinger in 1946.

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