This article needs to be updated. The reason given is: Removal of name from USC building during
George Floyd Protests. See latest cite.. (June 2020) |
Rufus B. von KleinSmid | |
---|---|
5th President of the University of Southern California | |
In office 1921–1947 | |
Preceded by | George F. Bovard |
Succeeded by | Fred D. Fagg, Jr. |
7th President of the University of Arizona | |
In office 1914–1921 | |
Preceded by | Arthur H. Wilde |
Succeeded by | Cloyd H. Marvin |
Personal details | |
Born | 1875 Sandwich, Illinois [1] |
Died | July 9, 1964 (aged 89) |
Nationality | American |
Spouse |
Elisabeth Patterson Sawyers
(
m. 1911; died 1947) |
Children | 1 |
Alma mater | Northwestern University, 1905 [2] |
Rufus Bernhard von KleinSmid (1875 – July 9, 1964), also spelled Kleinsmidt, was the seventh president of the University of Arizona (1914–1921) [3] and the fifth president of the University of Southern California (1921–1947). [4]
Von KleinSmid started his academic career at DePauw University where he was a professor of education and psychology. [2] He became USC's fifth president in 1921. A high priority of his administration was to expand professional training programs, and von KleinSmid also presided over a building program that added nine major structures to the university campus. By the end of his first decade in office, USC had attained full national accreditation and established a graduate school to unify graduate work across the university.
USC has long considered itself a cosmopolitan school with many foreign exchange students from around the world. During the 1930s, Prince Iyesato Tokugawa worked with USC to encourage student foreign exchange programs between the U.S. and Japan. During Prince Tokugawa's 1934 visit to the United States, von KleinSmid bestowed an honorary Doctor of Laws degree upon the Prince for his philanthropic and educational achievements. During that trip, Tokugawa also met with President Franklin Delano Roosevelt to discuss ways of promoting goodwill between the United States and Japan. In 1935, Roosevelt was also bestowed with an honorary Doctor of Laws degree. [5] [6]
With the onset of the Great Depression at decade's end, USC was forced to retrench in the 1930s. During World War II, army barracks were constructed on campus, and the curriculum reflected a wartime emphasis on international relations, history, geography, languages, science and the like. [7] Some 2,000 military trainees added to crowded conditions on campus. After the war, the lack of space at USC grew even worse, as the G.I. Bill brought former servicemen to the university for study. Enrollment soared from 15,500 in 1945 to more than 24,000 in 1947. In 1947 KleinSmid, then aged 70, elected to step down and became USC's chancellor, a position he held for the remaining seventeen years of his life. [4]
He was recognized as "one of three of the nation's most distinguished citizens" through the National Institute of Social Sciences Gold Medal Award. On an international level, KleinSmid received awards from 20 national governments for his achievements. [8]
KleinSmid died on July 9, 1964. [2]
A passionate supporter of eugenics, which he described as "the science of good birth", [9] and related sterilization programs, [10] [11] KleinSmid co-founded the Human Betterment Foundation. In 1913, he argued that "the acceptance is even now upon us, and the application of the principles of Eugenics to organized society is one of the most important duties of the social scientist of the present generation." [9] [12]
On June 10, 2020, USC decided to remove von KleinSmid’s name from one of its most prominent buildings, the von KleinSmid Center for International and Public Affairs. [12]