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===1900s=== [[File:OccidentalColl-1904.jpg|thumb|left|Highland Park campus, 1904]] In 1912, the school began construction of a new campus located in Los Angeles' [[Eagle Rock, Los Angeles|Eagle Rock]] neighborhood. The Eagle Rock campus was designed by noted California architect [[Myron Hunt]], also known as the planner of the [[California Institute of Technology]] (Caltech) campus and as designer of the [[Huntington Library and Art Gallery]] and the [[Rose Bowl (stadium)|Rose Bowl]]. That same year, Occidental President [[John Willis Baer]] announced the trustees' decision to convert Occidental College into an all-men's institution. The plans were met with widespread backlash from students and faculty who protested the change. The community outcry garnered national headlines and the board later dropped the proposal.<ref>{{cite news | title = Ask Trustees to Reverse | work = [[Los Angeles Times]] | date = April 11, 1912}}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title = Tells Students Way of Change | work = [[Los Angeles Times]] | date = May 1, 1912}}</ref><ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.vs3-12.historypin.appspot.com/attach/uid31471/map/#!/geo:34.105168,-118.202036/zoom:15/dialog:87139/tab:details/ | title = Oxy remains co-ed | publisher = Occidental College Archives | access-date = March 30, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150402050022/http://www.vs3-12.historypin.appspot.com/attach/uid31471/map#!/geo:34.105168,-118.202036/zoom:15/dialog:87139/tab:details/ | archive-date = April 2, 2015 | url-status = dead }}</ref> Two weeks after [[Booker T. Washington]] came to visit Occidental, on March 27, 1914, Swan, Fowler, and Johnson Halls were dedicated at its new Eagle Rock campus. Patterson Field, today one of the oldest collegiate sports stadiums in Los Angeles, was opened in 1916.<ref>{{cite news | title = Honored Name for Athletic Field | work = [[Los Angeles Times]] | date = February 24, 1916}}</ref> In April 1917, shortly after the United States entered World War I, the college formed a Students Army Training Corps to aid the war effort.<ref name = rolle/> [[File:Occidental College in the 1920's.jpg|thumb|Occidental College in the 1920s]] Under Occidental President [[Remsen Bird]], the school opened a series of new Hunt-designed buildings, including Clapp Library (1924), Hillside Theatre and a women's dormitory (Orr Hall) in 1925, Alumni Gymnasium (1926), the Freeman Student Union (1928) and a music and speech building (1929).<ref>{{cite news | title = Myron Hunt at Occidental College | publisher = Tailwater Press | date = 2012 | last= Winter |first=Robert}}</ref> The Delta of California chapter of [[Phi Beta Kappa]] was established at Occidental in 1926, at a time when the only other chapters in California were at [[Stanford University|Stanford]], [[University of California, Berkeley|UC Berkeley]], and [[Pomona College|Pomona]].<ref name = rolle/> English novelist [[Aldous Huxley]], who had spoken at Occidental's convocation ceremony in the then-new Thorne Hall in 1938, lampooned President Remsen Bird as Dr. Herbert Mulge of Tarzana College in his 1939 novel, ''[[After Many a Summer Dies the Swan]]''. Huxley was never again invited back to campus.<ref>{{cite book | title = Huxley in Hollywood | location= New York | publisher=Harper & Row | date = 1989 | last = Dunaway |first=David King |isbn=9780385415910}}</ref> During [[World War II]], many students left Occidental to fight in the war. In July 1943, the U.S. Navy established a Navy [[V-12 Navy College Training Program|V-12]]<ref name="occidentalv-12">{{cite web |url=http://alumni.oxy.edu/s/956/index.aspx?pgid=410&gid=1 |title=Occidental College - Oxy Trivia |access-date=September 28, 2011 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120519135727/http://alumni.oxy.edu/s/956/index.aspx?pgid=410&gid=1 |archive-date=May 19, 2012 }}</ref> officer training program on campus that produced hundreds of graduates before it was disbanded in 1945 at the end of the war. Occidental President Remsen Bird worked behind the scenes to help Oxy students of Japanese descent continue their education despite mandatory evacuation orders; his letters are included in the Japanese American Relocation Collection in Clapp Library.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://callimachus.org/cdm/landingpage/collection/p4004coll1 | title = Occidental College Japanese American Relocation | publisher = Occidental College Library Digital Archives | access-date = March 30, 2015}}</ref> After having its first [[Rhodes Scholar]], Clarence Spaulding, named in 1908, Oxy seniors John Paden and Aaron Segal were awarded Rhodes Scholarships in 1958, the only time Occidental has produced two Rhodes Scholars in a single year.<ref>{{cite news | title = Two Rhodes Scholars Named at Occidental | work = [[Los Angeles Times]] | date = December 21, 1958}}</ref> Paden and Segal were among the ten Occidental students who participated in Crossroads Africa that year, a forerunner to the [[Peace Corps]] that later became a national program.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://operationcrossroadsafrica.org/index.php#div[content]=1202 | title = What is Operation Crossroads Africa? | publisher = Operation Crossroads Africa | access-date = March 30, 2015 | archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20150402190138/http://operationcrossroadsafrica.org/index.php#div | archive-date = April 2, 2015 | url-status = dead }}</ref> In 1969, 42 students were suspended for peacefully protesting military recruiting on campus. One year later, faculty voted to suspend classes in the wake of the [[Kent State shootings]] and America's invasion of Cambodia. Subsequently, Oxy students wrote 7,000 letters to Washington D.C., protesting U.S. involvement in the war in Southeast Asia.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://goarticles.com/article/Occidental-College-and-Its-Relationship-to-Eagle-Rock-and-Highland-Park-CA/9672790/ | title = Occidental College and Its Relationship to Eagle Rock and Highland Park, CA | publisher = Go Articles | date = November 9, 2014 | access-date = March 30, 2015 | last= Fender |first=Nicholas}}</ref> Occidental launched one of the country's first [[Upward Bound]] programs in 1966, aimed at increasing the number of low-income, underrepresented high school students who become the first in their family to go to college.<ref>{{cite web |title=Upward Bound / About Us |url=https://www.oxy.edu/about-oxy/community-engagement/upward-bound/about-us |website=Occidental College |access-date=January 17, 2024}}</ref> Also in 1969, the school opened its first two co-ed [[Dormitory|dormitories]], and two more followed a year later. In 1988, [[John Brooks Slaughter]], formerly Chancellor of the [[University of Maryland, College Park|University of Maryland]],<ref>{{Cite news|last=Goldstein|first=Amy|date=April 2, 1988|title=Slaughter to Quit U-MD. Post|language=en-US|newspaper=The Washington Post|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/archive/politics/1988/04/02/slaughter-to-quit-u-md-post/590a8dcf-6283-492d-bd0d-401d1091732a/|access-date=July 14, 2020|issn=0190-8286}}</ref> became Occidental's first black president.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Biography of Dr. John B. Slaughter, Director of the NSF from December 1980 - October 1982|url=https://www.nsf.gov/about/history/bios/jbslaughter.jsp|access-date=July 14, 2020|website=National Science Foundation}}</ref> Building on faculty and student advocacy and a series of grants the college had received previously to increase the diversity of the Occidental student body, Slaughter led the process of creating a new mission statement that is still used today.<ref>{{cite web | url = http://www.oxy.edu/our-story/mission | title = Mission | publisher = Occidental College | access-date = March 30, 2015}}</ref> Also, Slaughter led the college's community outreach expansion with the creation of the Center for Volunteerism and Community Service, the predecessor for the current Center for Community Based Learning.<ref name=wallace>{{cite journal| title=Occidental College's Noble Experiment in Diversity| first=Amy |last=Wallace| date=Spring 1996| journal=The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education| publisher=The JBHE Foundation | volume=11| issue=11 | pages=114β117| doi=10.2307/2963331 | jstor=2963331 }}</ref> In November 1990, the college rededicated the campus' main chapel as the Herrick Memorial Chapel and Interfaith Center. The school also took down the crosses in the chapel in an attempt to "broaden Occidental's appeal among non-Christian students."<ref>{{cite web | url = https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1990-11-15-gl-6363-story.html | title = Occidental Removes Cross From Chapel | work = [[Los Angeles Times]] | date = November 15, 1990 | access-date = March 30, 2015 | last= Grange |first=Lori}}</ref>
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