Los Angeles Times

Occidental College’s first Black president

- By Jack Flemming

John Brooks Slaughter, a pioneering engineer who served as the first Black director of the National Science Foundation and the first Black president of Occidental College, died Wednesday at Huntington Hospital in Pasadena. He was 89.

Over the course of a trailblazi­ng career that spanned more than six decades, Slaughter became a leading voice in both engineerin­g and diversity initiative­s, advocating for Black voices at major institutio­ns across the country. For his efforts, he received the inaugural U.S. Black Engineer of the Year award in 1987.

“We are deeply saddened by the passing of a remarkable trailblaze­r, John Brooks Slaughter, the first Black Engineer of the Year. His pioneering spirit and monumental contributi­ons have left an indelible mark on the engineerin­g field and beyond,” U.S. Black Engineer Magazine said in a statement.

During his 11-year tenure as president of Occidental, Slaughter transforme­d it into one of the nation’s most diverse liberal arts schools. At his inaugurati­on in 1989, he said, “Quality and equality are inseparabl­e and diversity is synonymous with what is best in America.”

Under his leadership, Occidental became a premier liberal arts college with increased applicatio­ns and community-building initiative­s.

Slaughter also oversaw a fundraisin­g campaign that raised $72 million in five years for academic programs, scholarshi­ps and constructi­on projects.

A year before he retired from Occidental, he told The Times that he was proudest of bringing new faces to the college.

“People have for a long time believed that if you focus on diversity and equality that you have to sacrifice quality in students and faculty,” he said. “We’ve shown that both can rise at the same time.”

The college’s flag will be flown at half-staff this week in his memory.

“The Occidental College community is deeply saddened by the passing of President Emeritus Slaughter. He is widely remembered for his positive leadership, warm personalit­y and strong sense of integrity,” said Rod Leveque, Occidental’s vice president for marketing and communicat­ions. “He was a transforma­tive leader whose dual commitment­s to excellence and equity continue to shape who we are today. Our thoughts are with his family during this difficult time.”

Slaughter was born in Topeka, Kan., and earned engineerin­g degrees from Kansas State University, UCLA and UC San Diego. He joined the National Science Foundation in 1977 and became the director three years later, placing an emphasis on funding science programs at historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es.

“I made every effort to make them realize that they could be successful in competing for grants at the NSF,” Slaughter told the Institute of Electrical and Electronic­s Engineers for a profile in 2023.

Slaughter is survived by his wife, Bernice Slaughter, his son, John II, and his daughter, Jacqueline.

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