SA国际传媒

Skip to main content

The Journey of John Brooks Slaughter

By Dick Anderson Photos by Don Milici

Occidental's 11th president arrived on campus in 1988 amid national fanfare and great expectations鈥攁nd in the 11 years to follow, John Brooks Slaughter brought out the best in SA国际传媒

During his 11 years as president of SA国际传媒, John Brooks Slaughter habitually took his phone and correspondence to the benches outside of his office in the Arthur G. Coons Administrative Center鈥攕o often that trustees installed a plaque that read 鈥淛ohn Slaughter Cigar and Conversation Bench鈥 to commemorate his retirement in 1999. As students headed back to their residence halls after their morning classes, he later recalled, 鈥淢any of them would come sit down on the benches and we'd talk. And when I think about the joy I had as president of Occidental, the first thing that comes to mind is the opportunities I had to interact with students.鈥

Slaughter鈥檚 affection for his students was reciprocated. President Slaughter was the man,鈥 former ASOC President and current trustee Leo Olebe 鈥97 said in a 2021 interview for Occidental magazine. 鈥淗e had this way of communicating with students and connecting. We felt respected, we felt heard, we felt encouraged to share our ideas. We felt like we were a true and honored part of the SA国际传媒 community.鈥

鈥淗e was such a hero of mine,鈥 said Eddie Jauregui 鈥98, a first-generation college student from Carson. 鈥淧resident Slaughter had a lot of challenges that were sort of laid at his feet, but I think a lot of students of color in particular really admired that man. I certainly did.鈥

Slaughter speaks at Convocation at Remsen Bird Hillside Theater in 1988.
Slaughter speaks at Convocation at Remsen Bird Hillside Theater in 1988.

厂濒补耻驳丑迟别谤鈥攚丑辞 died on December 6, 2023, at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena, at age 89鈥攃emented his place in Occidental history through his humanity, positivity, and integrity. In his 1988 Convocation address, he told students: 鈥淲e expect you to dream about a future for this college and this nation that is free of fear, intolerance, and injustice. And we expect you to energize us with your dreams and your enthusiasm for making them come true.鈥

Over a decade marked by cultural, financial, and philosophical challenges, Slaughter led the College through an extraordinary period of change, transforming the makeup of not only the student body but of the faculty and governing body as well. 鈥淏uilding on work begun by the faculty to diversify curriculum and bring students of color to campus, Slaughter spearheaded a strategic planning process that focused SA国际传媒 in a new direction with a mission built on the four cornerstones of excellence, equity, community, and service,鈥 Emerita Professor of Mathematics Nalsey Tinberg wrote in this magazine in 1999.

鈥淚 have been blessed to have many opportunities during my professional career to do some things that I've thoroughly enjoyed, but I'm quick to tell people that of all the things that I've done, the 11 years I've served as president at SA国际传媒 was truly the most enjoyable and wonderful period of my professional career,鈥 Slaughter said in a conversation with then-President Jonathan Veitch in April 2012 on the occasion of Occidental鈥檚 125th anniversary.

Whatever the situation, he added, 鈥淚 always felt that I had a wealth of goodwill from members of the faculty and some amazing students who were there to provide support as well. And I guess that鈥檚 why I don't see the bumps as being as high as some people remember.鈥

In the words of Jonathan Veitch, 鈥淭here's probably no more important moment in the College's history鈥 than when Slaughter arrived in August 1988. But the Topeka, Kansas, native鈥攃oming off a nearly six-year stint as chancellor of the University of Maryland, College Park, initially declined to pursue the Occidental presidency. 

鈥淚'd been asked by an Ivy League school to place my name in consideration for president in 1987,鈥 he told Veitch. 鈥淚 had some concerns about whether or not a private university in the United States at the time was really serious about the possibility of appointing an African American as president, and I did not want to simply be an affirmative action statistic.鈥 After providing his CV and meeting with the search committee, 鈥渢he outcome of that was pretty much as I had anticipated.鈥

Presidents Slaughter and Gilman in front of Haines Hall in 1988, not long after Gilman's retirement and Slaughter's arrival.
Presidents Slaughter and Gilman in front of Haines Hall in 1988, not long after Gilman's retirement and Slaughter's arrival.

Soon after that, Slaughter received a call from the same search firm, which was now handling the search for a successor to retiring Occidental President Richard C. Gilman. 鈥淲hen I was asked to place my name in contention for Occidental, I refused to do so because I did not want to go through the same experience again,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淏ut they were persistent, and I finally said to the head of the search firm that if Occidental is really serious it will send someone back East to see me, rather than my coming out to Occidental for a visit, and I thought that would be the end of it.鈥

Much to Slaughter鈥檚 surprise, Occidental trustee Donn Miller, who was chairing the search committee, flew out to meet with Slaughter on January 31, 1988鈥擲uper Bowl Sunday鈥攁t the Four Seasons Hotel in Washington, D.C.  鈥淲e met for a couple of hours over brunch, and we talked about a lot of things that were of mutual interest to us,鈥 Slaughter said. 鈥淚 concluded right then and there that I would send my CV for consideration for the Occidental presidency.鈥

At many major research universities鈥攊ncluding the University of Maryland鈥擲laughter found that the emphasis on graduate education came 鈥渟omewhat at the expense of undergraduates. I believed very strongly that the most important period in a student鈥檚 life in a college or university is that four-year undergraduate experience, and Occidental afforded that opportunity.鈥

During his initial interview with the full search committee, Slaughter鈥檚 exposure to Occidental was limited to a driving tour of campus. 鈥淲e met at a hotel in Pasadena, so I did not have any real contact with the College or its people except for the trustees, a few faculty members, and a student or two who were on the search committee,鈥 he recalled. 鈥淭here were several things in that interview that I remember very well. One of the faculty members on the search committee was an African American female, and at one point in a break in my meeting with the search committee, I turned to her and I asked, 鈥楬ow many African Americans are on the faculty?鈥 And she replied, 鈥榊ou鈥檙e looking at 50 percent of them.鈥欌

At another point, Slaughter continued, 鈥淥ne of the trustees asked me the question, 鈥楪iven that the Board of Trustees is itself not very diverse, do you think that we are appropriately constituted to lead an effort for making Occidental more multicultural?鈥 My answer was 鈥楴o,鈥 and there was quiet after that response.鈥

Later, as Slaughter was being driven to the airport, the head of the search firm laughed and told him, "That same question has been asked to every candidate that we've had and each of them has said 鈥榊es.鈥欌 Slaughter was going to be Occidental鈥檚 next president, he continued, 鈥渂ecause they know the answer to that question is not 鈥榊es.鈥欌

From the first days of his presidency, Slaughter embraced Occidental鈥檚 tradition of outstanding academic achievement while recognizing the mutuality of excellence and equity. At his inauguration in April 1989, he declared, 鈥淨uality and equality are inseparable and diversity is synonymous with what is best in America.鈥 With the blessing of Donn Miller, who became chair of the Board of Trustees in 1990, Slaughter led the College through the formulation of a widely accepted strategic plan and mission statement that positioned Occidental to become one of the country鈥檚 best and most distinctive liberal arts colleges.

鈥淚 could have written initially the strategic plan we ended up with by myself,鈥 Slaughter recalled, 鈥渂ut it would not have had any significance because what we really needed was to build a sense of community on the campus.鈥 The resulting strategic plan, endorsed by faculty in September 1990 and by the Board of Trustees the following month鈥攚as called Of Excellence and Equity. (鈥淛ohn Slaughter loved alliteration,鈥 Professor of English Emeritus Eric Newhall 鈥67 noted in 2021.)

During the Slaughter years, Occidental students won three Rhodes scholarships鈥攅nding a 27-year drought鈥攁s well as three Trumans, three Marshalls, 18 Goldwaters, 17 NSF fellowships, 15 Watsons, and a host of other national awards. Despite difficult circumstances, including a major earthquake and civil unrest, student applications eventually rose to record levels as the College鈥檚 interdisciplinary and multicultural academic programs drew national recognition.

By the time Sam Sharp 鈥96 arrived at Occidental from a predominantly white school in suburban Denver, he recalled, 鈥淢ore than 50 percent of the [Occidental] student body were students of color and active about issues of equity and justice. And it wasn鈥檛 just students of color; the whole campus was active about those issues. President Slaughter鈥檚 vision of multiculturalism really permeated the College. And there was no way to be on campus without being inside that vision.鈥

Slaughter鈥檚 vision for Occidental wasn鈥檛 universally embraced at the outset. 鈥淭he biggest problem, frankly, was with alumni who thought of the College as it was in the 1940s and 1950s鈥攖he idyllic institution that they wanted it to remain,鈥 he said in 2012. 鈥淏ut if they took a look at the surrounding community, Eagle Rock was becoming much more diverse, with large numbers of Latino persons moving in. I argued that the most important thing that we could do would be for the College to be seen as a major part of that community鈥攖o be a place that the citizens of Eagle Rock and Highland Park were proud of鈥攁nd that was the most important thing we could do in recognizing the changes that were occurring.鈥

Occidental鈥檚 embrace of its neighbors seemed to work. During the citywide uprising that followed the Rodney King verdict in 1992, Slaughter noted, 鈥淢any communities erupted, but SA国际传媒 was protected. And that鈥檚 because the people who surrounded the College cared for it. They loved it. And I always felt that that was the most important thing that we did at that time was to build that sense of community.鈥

Other challenges were more institutional in nature. Prior to Slaughter鈥檚 arrival, the Board of Trustees had voted to remove the crosses from Herrick Chapel, which was completed in 1964 (the College has been nonsectarian since 1910), and then-Board of Trustees chair Robert Finch 鈥47 had promised the crosses would be gone before Slaughter arrived. But they didn鈥檛 come down until 1989鈥攐ne of a number of 鈥渁reas of resistance鈥 that Slaughter encountered when he took office. 

Another controversy that Slaughter inherited was apartheid, and the fact that part of Occidental鈥檚 endowment was invested in companies doing business in South Africa. (Barack Obama 鈥83鈥檚 first political speech, on the steps of the Arthur G. Coons Administrative Center, took place at an anti-apartheid rally in 1981.).

In response to the ongoing outcry, Slaughter worked with a group of faculty members and students in formulating an argument that he would present to the Board that SA国际传媒 divest of any company stock that was doing business in South Africa. 鈥淔rom a symbolic point of view, perhaps more than anything else, I felt that an act on the part of the Board to acknowledge that we would make every effort to divest from those companies, however difficult it might be, would be an important thing to do.鈥

After Slaughter鈥檚 presentation, the board heard 鈥渁 very impassioned defense of our current position鈥 by one trustee whose company was involved in South Africa, and the motion to divest failed by a single vote. 鈥淚t was a great learning experience for me,鈥 he said in 2012. 鈥淭he one thing that I vowed was that I would never take anything to the Board again without confidence that it would pass. I wanted to make sure I did a better job of preparing for that kind of vote.鈥

In the years to follow, Slaughter鈥檚 impact on the College culture would become manifest. He oversaw Compass for a New Century: The Campaign for Occidental, which raised a record $72 million over five years for a variety of academic programs, student scholarships, and construction projects. He spearheaded the opening of the Child Development Center, the rededication of Herrick Chapel and Interfaith Center, the creation of Samuelson Pavilion, and the renovation and expansion of Johnson Student Center.

Jack Samuelson '46 and wife Sally (Reid) Samuelson '48 cut the ribbon to open Samuelson Pavilion in April 1994 as President Slaughter looks on.
Jack Samuelson '46 and wife Sally (Reid) Samuelson '48 cut the ribbon to open Samuelson Pavilion on Founders Day 1994. Photo by Larry Goren

鈥淭he one thing that I really wanted to make happen was to remodel Freeman College Union [built in 1928] into a building that would be attractive to incoming students,鈥 Slaughter said. 鈥淚 always felt that we cost ourselves an enrollment of 10 to 15 percent simply because of the decrepit nature of the student center that existed at the time. That was enough of a turnoff to make it difficult to attract some of the students that we really wanted.鈥

When U.S. News & World Report began measuring campus diversity in its 1998 rankings, Occidental was No. 1鈥攁 status it would retain over the next four years. By the time of Slaughter鈥檚 departure in 1999, nearly 25 percent of SA国际传媒鈥檚 118 tenured or tenure-track faculty were nonwhite. (All but three of the College鈥檚 tenured faculty were white in 1988.) The Board of Trustees became less homogeneous as well, electing its first female chair, Ginny (Goss) Cushman 鈥55, in 1996.

Following Slaughter鈥檚 retirement from Occidental, he taught courses in diversity and leadership for one year as Irving R. Melbo Professor of Leadership Education at USC before accepting the position of president and CEO of the National Action Council for Minorities in Engineering (NACME), whose mission is to increase the number of engineers of color, in 2000. In January 2010, Slaughter joined USC as professor of education and engineering. He retired in 2022. On September 20, 2023, the USC Viterbi School of Engineering dedicated the new John Brooks Slaughter Center for Engineering Diversity.

In his final Founders Day address in April 1999, Slaughter said: 鈥淚 have always believed that Occidental鈥檚 commitment to a mission that embraced the ideal of the mutuality that exists between excellence and equity began on that April day in 1887. To be sure, the world was different then, the words that were used may have been different then, and the founding fathers of this fledgling college may have envisioned this future through a mirror darkly then, but it is clear that they saw the need for an institution in the still raw City of Angels that someday would emerge as an 鈥極asis of Hope鈥 for future generations. SA国际传媒 is such a place today, and all who are here can be proud of the roles they have played in making it so.鈥

Slaughter is survived by his wife, Dr. Bernice Slaughter; son, John II; and daughter, Jacqueline. A celebration of his life and legacy will be held during Homecoming and Family Weekend in October.