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Pomona College
Pomona College Mark
EstablishedOctober 14, 1887
TypePrivate
EndowmentUS$1.680 billion [1]
PresidentDavid W. Oxtoby
Academic staff191 [2]
Undergraduates1,607 [3]
Postgraduates0
LocationClaremont, California, United States
CampusSuburban, 140 acres (57 ha)
NicknameSagehens
MascotCecil Sagehen
Websitepomona.edu

Pomona College is a private, residential, liberal arts college in Claremont, California, United States.

The founding member of the Claremont Colleges, Pomona is a non-sectarian, coeducational school. Since 1925, the Claremont Colleges, which have grown to include five undergraduate and two graduate institutions, have provided Pomona's student body with the resources of a larger university while preserving the closeness of a small college.

History[]

Pomona College was established as a coeducational institution on October 14, 1887. The group’s goal was to create a college in the same mold as small New England institutions. The College was originally formed in Pomona; classes first began in a rental house on September 12, 1888. The next year, the school moved to Claremont, at the site of an unfinished hotel. The project was deferred following the suicide of Gwendolyn Rose, who died in the basement during construction. This building would eventually become Sumner Hall, current location of the Admissions and the Office of Campus Life. The name – Pomona College – remained after the relocation. The College’s first graduating class had ten members in 1894.[4]

Its founders’ values led to the College’s belief in educational equity. Like other Congregationalist-founded colleges such as Harvard, Dartmouth, Middlebury and Bowdoin, Pomona received its own governing board, ensuring its independence.[4] The board of trustees was originally composed of graduates of Williams, Dartmouth, Colby and Yale, among others, to help create "a college of the New England type."[5]

In the early 1920s, the College’s growth led its president, James A. Blaisdell, to call for “a group of institutions divided into small colleges—somewhat of an Oxford type—around a library and other utilities which they would use in common.” This would allow Pomona to retain its small, liberal arts-focused teaching while gaining the resources of a larger university. On October 14, 1925, Pomona College’s 38th anniversary, the Claremont Colleges were incorporated.[6] By 1997, the consortium reached its present membership of 5 undergraduate and 2 graduate institutions.

Pomona's strength has been its quality of education and preparation for graduate and professional schools as well as postgraduate fellowships. In 2007, 24 members of the Class of 2007 received a Fulbright Scholarships along with four other alumni,[7] thus making Pomona tied with Brown University for third in the nation and first among liberal arts colleges.[8] Pomona was also named as one of the New Ivies by Newsweek.[9]

Campus[]

Pomona’s campus is in Claremont, California, covering an area of 140 acres (57 ha). It includes 59 buildings, including 12 residence halls.[10] The campus in Claremont originally began with the donation of an incomplete hotel—what would become Sumner Hall. It quickly expanded from 7 buildings in 1909—the time James Blaisdell took over as President.[11] He had the foresight to purchase the empty land around the College while it was still available, securing the College’s future and allowing for expansion for years to come.First Street borders the campus on the south, Mills and Amherst Avenues to the east, Eighth Street on the north, and Harvard Avenue on the west. Claremont Graduate University, Scripps College and Claremont McKenna College are adjacent to Pomona’s north, from west to east respectively. Pomona is divided into North Campus and South Campus, casually divided by Sixth Street, with a few exceptions. Many of the earlier buildings were in the Spanish Renaissance Revival and Mission Styles, usually only one or two stories in height. Designed by Pasadena architect Myron Hunt, Bridges Hall of Music, is an example of these styles combined.[12] Later buildings took inspiration from these styles, with usually three or fewer stories and stucco walls.

File:Bridges Auditorium, Pomona College.JPG

Bridges Auditorium across Marston Quad

South Campus consists of mostly first-year and sophomore housing and academic buildings for the social sciences and humanities. Among the notable dormitories are Harwood Court, originally a women’s dorm built in 1921, and Oldenborg Center, a foreign language housing option for students that includes a foreign language dining hall.[13][14] Also of note is Sumner Hall, Pomona’s first building, Bridges Auditorium (“Big Bridges”) —used for concerts and speakers with a capacity of 2,500[15]—Bridges Hall of Music (“Little Bridges”), a concert hall built in 1915 with seating for 600,[12] and Carnegie Building, which houses the Politics and Economics departments. It was originally built in 1929 as a library for the College. Marston Quadrangle is located between Carnegie Building and Bridges Auditorium, one of two quadrangles on campus. The Pomona College Organic Farm is hidden behind The Wash on the southeastern corner of campus.

North Campus is also a mix of residential and academic buildings. Most of the academic buildings house science departments. Among the notable buildings are the Richard C. Seaver Biology Building (“Seaver West”), built with environmentally friendly features, completed in 2005,[16] and the Lincoln and Edmunds buildings, both completed in 2007.

The Lincoln and Edmunds buildings were the first buildings in Claremont to garner a gold certification award from the U.S. Green Building Council’s Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Program.[17][18] The two new academic buildings also house the first publicly accessible Skyspace art installation by renowned artist and alumnus James Turrell '65.[19][20]

North Campus dormitories house mostly juniors and seniors. Smiley Hall is the oldest dorm West of the Mississippi. It was built in 1908.[21] Frary Dining Hall, one of two dining halls on campus, is the location of the murals “Prometheus” by José Clemente Orozco, his first work in the US, and “Genesis” by Rico Lebrun.

Along the south side of Sixth Street are buildings central to the campus. Smith Campus Center is home to many student services, including a mailroom, The Coop student store and two restaurants;[10] Alexander Hall houses administrative offices. Athletic facilities are to the south of Sixth Street and to the east of Smiley Hall. The Rains Center is the main athletic facility with a fitness center, gym and locker rooms. Adjacent to Rains Center is Merritt Football Field, Alumni Baseball Field and Haldeman Pool. Other Pomona facilities of note include the student group and lounge in Walker Hall known as the Women's Union, the Claremont Colleges' radio station, KSPC 88.7fm, located in the basement of Thatcher Music Building, the Sontag Greek Theatre—an outdoor amphitheater, as well as The Farm, an experiment in sustainable farming, and the Seaver Theatre Complex, built in 1990 with a 335-seat auditorium, 100-seat experimental theater and several other studios and rehearsal spaces. Another notable resource is the Robert J. Bernard Field Station north of Foothill Boulevard.

File:San Gabriel Mountains, Pomona College.JPG

San Gabriel Mountains from South Campus

The campus is less than five miles (8 km) south of the San Gabriel Mountains, on top of the alluvial fans that have come from nearby San Antonio Canyon. The campus is relatively flat, with a slight uphill grade from south to north, because of this. Mount San Antonio (also known as Mount Baldy) is 14 miles (22 km) north of the College and is visible from the campus. The Mount Baldy Ski Lifts is a popular spot for students to ski in the winter because of its convenient location. On clear days, the Chino Hills are visible to the south and San Bernardino Mountains to the east.

Academics[]

Any student attending Pomona can enroll in up to 50% of his or her classes at the other four colleges in the Claremont Colleges. This policy is similar across the Claremont Colleges; it is meant to give students the resources of a larger university while maintaining the positive qualities of a small liberal arts college. Through the Claremont Colleges, Pomona students have access to over 2200 courses each year, including 230 English courses and 140 mathematics courses.[22]

The average class size at Pomona is 14. All classes are taught by professors, and there is a 8:1 ratio of students to professors.[23] The majority of professors work with students on research.[24] Additionally, Pomona will provide grants to students to conduct independent research over the summer.[25] Students take at least one course in each of five areas: Creative Expression; Social Institutions and Human Behavior; History, Values, Ethics and Cultural Studies; Physical and Biological Sciences; and Mathematical Reasoning.[26] The Writing Center offers free, confidential consultations for students with student Writing Fellows. Writing Fellows work to improve both individual papers and work with students to develop writing skills.[27]

55% of Pomona students study abroad, mostly in the junior year.[24] Pomona offers 49 programs in 32 countries.[28] Students can study abroad in any major, and petition to study abroad in an outside program. Popular choices include the exclusive Pomona program at Jesus College, Cambridge.

Pomona has 47 majors; students who would like to create their own major are eligible to do so following specific guidelines. The most popular declared majors for Spring 2013 are Economics, Mathematics, Neuroscience, Psychology, Environmental Analysis, and Molecular Biology.[29]

Admissions[]

The acceptance rate has fallen from 16.3% of applicants in 2007 to 14% in 2010 and 12.6% in 2011, making Pomona the 9th most selective private college in the nation.[30][31][32]

For the class of 2016 (enrolled Fall 2012), Pomona received 7,456 applications and accepted 966 (13.0%).[33] The number enrolling was 399; the yield rate (the percentage of accepted students who enroll) was 41.3%.[33] The Class of 2016 has 25-75% score ranges (25% score at or below, 25% score at or above) of 680-770 on the SAT critical reading section, 680-760 on the math section, and 680-780 on the writing section, and 29-34 on the ACT Composite.[33] Ninety-one percent of this incoming class (of those from schools that officially rank students) graduated in the top decile of their high school classes.[2] Around 13% of the class comes from the Posse Foundation program or the QuestBridge program.[34]

As of Fall 2012, the student body hails from 46 U.S. states, the District of Columbia and 22 foreign countries. Roughly half of the students are men and half women.[2] The class of 2016 is composed of 9.2% African American students, 19.7% Asian American, 13.7% Latino American students, and roughly 9.5% foreign students, according to a self-identification survey.[2]

Pomona practices need-blind admission for students who are U.S. citizens, permanent residents, or who graduate from a high school within the United States, and promises to meet 100 percent of demonstrated need for all admitted students, including admitted international students.[35] As of Fall 2008, the College eliminated loans in favor of scholarships in financial aid packages.[2] In the 2012-2013 academic year, 55% of students received a financial aid package, with an average award of $37,900.[34]

Rankings[]

The 2013 annual ranking of U.S. News & World Report categorizes Pomona as 'most selective' and ranks it tied for the 4th best liberal arts college in the nation (and 5th for "Best Value").[36] Forbes in 2012 rated it 9th in its America's Top Colleges ranking, which includes military academies, national universities, and liberal arts colleges.[37] Kiplinger's Personal Finance placed Pomona 2nd in its 2012 ranking of best value liberal arts colleges in the United States;[38] The Princeton Review ranked it the 6th best value in private colleges.[39] In 2010 Pomona was ranked number one in classroom experience by The Princeton Review.[40] It also ranked 6th for "Best Run College", "Great Financial Aid", and "Their Students Love Their College" in the 2013 Edition of Princeton Review. Unigo named Pomona as one of the "Top 10 New Ivies" in 2013 and first for "Top 10 Wired Schools".[41][42] In 2010, Newsweek ranked Pomona as the second most desirable small school and fifteenth for production of students earning PhDs and/or winning prestigious fellowships.[43] For the 2011-2012 year, Pomona had the fourth largest endowment per student of any undergraduate university or liberal arts college in the country, at $1,099,906.00 per student.[44] In a study on student debt produced by the Project on Student Debt for the Class of 2011, Pomona College was among the top 20 schools in the least amount of debt taken on by graduates.[45] The Daily Beast rated Pomona College the 3rd happiest school in the country.[46] College Prowler gave Pomona an A+, the highest grade possible, to its academics, campus dining, campus housing, computers, and facilities.[47]

Student life[]

The Claremont Colleges[]

Pomona is a member of the Claremont Colleges, and most social activities revolve around the five colleges, or "5-Cs". Pomona College, Claremont McKenna College, Scripps College, Pitzer College, and Harvey Mudd College share dining halls, libraries, and other facilities throughout the contiguous campuses. All five colleges, along with Claremont Graduate University and the Keck Institute, are part of the Claremont University Consortium. Notable benefits of being in the consortium include equal access to seven dining halls, the largest liberal arts college library collection, interaction with over 7000 students, special programs like Harvey Mudd's Clinic Program and Claremont McKenna's Semester in Washington DC which are available to all eligible 5C students, and the opportunity to do a housing exchange with another 5C College. Most events sponsored by each school are open to all of the five colleges.

Campus organizations[]

File:Pomona1.jpg

Pomona College in winter

Pomona students have access to 280 clubs and organizations through the Claremont Colleges, including 227 based in Pomona.[22]

There are several newspapers at the Claremont Colleges, including The Collage and The Student Life, which is the oldest college newspaper in Southern California.[48] Other campus publications include political magazines The Undecided, the Claremont Port Side, the Claremont Independent, and the Claremont Progressive; and the literary magazine, Passwords.

The Associated Students of Pomona (ASPC) serves as Pomona's central student government. Composed of a dozen or so students who represent a variety of positions, ASPC provides funding for clubs and organizations, runs Pomona Events Committee (PEC), and covers the cost of security and alcohol for social events, as well as publication costs for The Student Life.[49]

Pomona Events Committee (PEC) is a committee of ASPC, and creates on-campus and off-campus events for Pomona students. Some noticeable events include De-Stress, which is meant to provide students a relaxation period before Final Exams, subsidized excursions to attractions and venues in the Los Angeles Basin, and dances like the Yule Ball and the Spring Formal.

The Pomona Student Union (PSU) facilitates the discussion of political and social issues on campus. The PSU is a non-partisan, student-run organization that invites prominent speakers from across the political spectrum to talk and debate. The PSU aims to raise the level of honest and open dialogue on campus. The PSU was founded on the belief that one cannot possess a firm belief in anything unless it is challenged. To this end, the PSU seeks to foster an environment in which students are exposed to a multiplicity of perspectives. Notable speakers the PSU has brought in include Jon Meacham, Mari Matsuda, Sam Harris, Nadine Strossen, and Michael Isikoff.

On the Loose (OTL) is the outdoors club of the Five Colleges. OTL's mission is to get Claremont students into nature. Students can reach mountains, desert and the ocean all within an hour, and famous national parks such as Yosemite and Joshua Tree National Park are close to campus. OTL utilizes the Claremont Colleges Outdoor Education Center (OEC) for support in offering trips and adventures. The OEC loans equipment to students for free and teaches students vital outdoor skills. The OEC also provides a vehicle for OTL trip leaders. The OEC also trains trip leaders in leadership and wilderness first aid, including Wilderness First Responder certifications. Students interested in outdoor leadership can also take many workshops on outdoor leadership including Leave No Trace ethics and many outdoor skills classes offered for credit through the Pomona Physical Education Department. Examples are Beginning Rock Climbing, Beginning Backpacking, and Wilderness Survival. [50]

The Claremont Colleges Queer Resource Center is a student center addressing the needs and concerns of LGBT students at all five colleges.

The major resource center and student group at Pomona College addressing gender issues is the Women's Union.[51]

The campus also has an active environmental group, the Pomona Campus Climate Challenge group, that is focused on tackling climate change and creating a culture of sustainability on campus.[52]

Pomona has a long tradition of student-run a cappella singing groups: Men's Blue and White, Women's Blue and White, the After School Specials, the Claremont Shades, Midnight Echo, and Mood Swing.

The Claremont Colleges Ballroom Dance Company (CCBDC) is one of the largest organizations on campus, with over 130 dancers. It offers dance classes on a variety of expertise levels and showcases several events and performances each year.[53]

There are three remaining local fraternities (originally there were seven), and no officially recognized national fraternities or sororities. Two of the three fraternities are for male Pomona students only (Kappa Delta and Sigma Tau), while membership in the third (Nu Alpha Phi) is open to students of any gender.

Pomona is home to several student support offices, which provide mentoring programs to ease the transition for students who identify within a particular identity or race. These include Office of Black Student Affairs (OBSA), Asian American Mentoring Program (AAMP), Chicano Latino Student Affairs (CLSA), Queer Resource Center (QRC), and the International Place of the Claremont Colleges (I-Place).[54]

Athletics[]

The school's athletic program participates, in conjunction with Pitzer College (another consortium member), in the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and the NCAA's Division III. Once known as the Huns, the school's sports teams are now called the Sagehens. On October 6, 1923, Pomona College and USC played in the inaugural game at the Los Angeles Coliseum, with the Trojans prevailing 23-7.

Over the years, a rivalry has formed between the opposing sports teams: Pomona-Pitzer (P-P) and Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (CMS).

Residential life[]

Pomona is a residential campus, and students must apply to live off campus. Virtually all students live on campus for all four years in one of Pomona's 14 residence halls.

File:A walkway in Pomona College.JPG

Harwood Court

South Campus

All first-year students live on South Campus. As a result, the four residence halls that line Bonita Avenue are sometimes referred to as Freshman Row.

  • Mudd-Blaisdell is Pomona's largest residence hall. It is home to 280 students living in doubles and singles. It is the only air-conditioned hall that houses first years.
  • Harwood Court houses 170 students. It was built in 1921, is the oldest residence hall on South Campus, and the second-oldest west of the Mississippi (after Smiley).
  • Wig Hall was built in the 1960s and houses 113 students, primarily first-years, mostly in doubles.
  • Lyon Court is the only nearly all-freshman residence hall. It houses 78 students, mostly in doubles.
  • Oldenborg Center is home to 140 students, mostly sophomores. Oldenborg residents live in language or special interest halls, and are expected to participate in the Center's extracurricular activities, which include foreign language film series, speakers, and other activities. Oldenborg also contains a foreign language dining hall, which serves lunch Monday through Friday. The Center is air-conditioned.
North Campus

Most residents of North Campus are juniors and seniors.

  • Smiley Hall is Pomona's oldest residence hall, and the oldest west of the Mississippi River. It was built in 1908 and houses 60 students, all in singles. Smiley used to be home to a program called Unity Dorm, which "emphasize[d] community building across classes, interests, and experiences in order to offer a strong support system for UD residents." The program was cancelled after the spring 2010 term due to lack of interest.[55]
  • Walker Hall houses 112 students in singles and two-room doubles. First-year transfer students live in Walker.
  • Clark I contains two five-person suites, as well as two-room doubles. 116 students live in Clark I.
  • Clark V has space for 95 students in singles and two-room doubles.
  • Norton-Clark III is home to 120 students in singles and one- and two-room doubles.
  • Lawry Court consists of three towers, each of which has three floors. Each floor contains eight single rooms around a common room and bathroom. 71 students live in Lawry Court (the first floor of the B tower has an electrical room).
  • Sontag Hall is a three-story building that has approximately 150 single rooms in suites containing three to six students per suite. Most occupants are seniors, though some sophomores and juniors also reside in Sontag Hall. Pomona and Sontag Halls were completed in 2011, making them the newest residence halls. The building is LEED Platinum certified, and at the time of its awarding, only four other dormitory buildings had been LEED Platinum certified. As part of measures to promote sustainability, the building has a solar hot water system, solar panels, energy saving infrastructure, and water-saving fixtures. A special feature it has that distinguishes it from Pomona Hall is a rooftop garden. [56]
  • Pomona Hall, also known as B Hall, matches Sontag Hall in space, LEED Certification, and how sustainability is implemented. Pomona Hall also houses the Outdoor Education Center and has a rooftop classroom.

Sustainability[]

Pomona's Board of Trustees adopted the College's first Environmental Policy in 2002.[57] The school subsequently hired its first Sustainability Coordinator in 2008 and its Sustainability Integration Office was created in 2009.[58] The College buys local and organic food for its dining halls, has undertaken a variety of outreach initiatives; requires that all new construction meet LEED Silver standards; offsets a percentage of its emissions with Renewable Energy Credits; and reduces water consumption, especially in landscaping.[59] The College was awarded an "A" for its sustainability initiatives by the Sustainable Endowments Institute in the College Sustainability Report Card 2011.[60]

Unique traditions[]

47[]

The number "47" has held mystical importance for Pomona students for almost forty-seven years.[61] Two different stories about its roots exist. Campus lore suggested that in 1964, Pomona math professor Donald Bentley produced a convincing mathematical proof that 47 was equal to all other integers, and that other faculty members and senior students could not disprove his equation at first sight. (By the 1970s oral history had grown this tale into a 1950s McCarthy-era exercise by an unnamed professor, and that it was a symbolic attack on the "big lie" political style of the Red-hunters of the era.) Another version — later verified by Bentley — holds that two Pomona students on a summer grant project in 1964 hypothesized that 47 occurred far more often in nature than random number distribution would explain. Pomona College is also located off exit 47 on Interstate 10.

This tradition is endorsed by the college, as seen in Pomona College's official website's explanation of the "mystery of 47".[61]

Ski-Beach Day[]

Near the San Gabriel Mountains and within driving distance of the Pacific Ocean, Pomona College takes advantage of its location to host an annual "Ski-Beach Day" each spring. It has been around for at least twenty years. Students board a bus in the morning and are driven to a local ski resort where they ski or snowboard in the morning. After lunch, they are bused down to an Orange County or Los Angeles County beach for the rest of the day.[62]

Mufti[]

Rooted somewhere in the mists of the 1940s, originally the outgrowth of an unhappy group of women students protesting on-campus policies, Mufti is a secret society of punsters-as-social-commentators. Periodically their name and insignia as well as 3.5"x8.5" sheets of paper are glued to walls all over campus, with double-entendre comments on local goings-on: when beloved century-old Holmes Hall was dynamited to make way for a new building in 1987, the tiny signs all over campus announced "BLAST OF A CENTURY LEAVES THOUSANDS HOLMESLESS."

Gwendolyn Rose[]

Rose is the campus ghost, widely believed to haunt the basement and staircases of Sumner Hall. It is believed that she committed suicide in the women's bathroom during construction of the building. Although the exact reasons for her suicide are unknown, it is believed that she witnessed her husband being unfaithful. Though the building was originally planned as a hotel, after her suicide the building was sold to Pomona College and was adapted into an administrative building. Students, housekeepers, and deans believe that she can be seen at late hours, often wearing a long white dress.

Star Trek connection[]

Pomona College also has many connections to the Star Trek universe. In addition to the incorporation of the college's mystical number 47,[63] a writer for the series who attended Pomona College (Joe Menosky) may have used the Oldenborg Center as inspiration for the Borg, a drone-like race of assimilated half-machine creatures.[63] The foreign language dormitory was popularly referred to as "the Borg" long before Star Trek: The Next Generation, and for many years the students who chose to live there had the reputation of never leaving the building except to attend classes (the air-conditioned building has its own dining hall, theatre, library, and computer rooms). Even the cube-shaped spacecraft of the television series is reminiscent of the design of the dorm (which from the air resembles the letter E). Menosky has neither confirmed nor denied the well-reported account.

Recent controversies[]

Pomona alma mater[]

The alma mater recently caused controversy when it was discovered that the song was originally written to be sung as the ensemble finale to a student-produced blackface minstrel show performed on campus in 1909 or 1910.[64] Due to this controversy, the Alma Mater was not sung during the 2008 commencement ceremony to give the college time to consider the song's future at Pomona. On December 15, 2008, the college announced a decision to retain the song as the Alma Mater, but not to sing the song at either commencement or convocation.[64]

Labor conflicts[]

On March 1, 2010, Pomona's dining service workers publicly announced their intention to attempt to form an independent labor union. That morning over 40 workers and 150 students marched from Pomona's two dining halls into President David Oxtoby's office and handed him petitions one at a time.[65] The petitions called for a "Fair Process," asking the College to remain neutral during the unionization process and to acknowledge the results of a card check. As of March 29, 90% of dining hall staff and 50% of Pomona students had signed the petition.[65][66][67]

On March 3, 2010, Oxtoby responded to the petitions, suggesting that the College would only support an NLRB-regulated secret ballot.[68]

On March 6, 2010, following Oxtoby's statement, workers and students rallied outside of Bridges Auditorium, marching over to Smith Campus Center in the midst of trustee meetings. Several workers spoke about specific grievances, followed by Pomona students, Pitzer Professor Jose Calderon, and Anthony Chavez, the grandson of Cesar Chavez.[69] A vigil on March 24 called for labor peace, with a demonstration of over 300 students, professors, and community members.

In 2011, the college requested proof of legal residency from its employees. Seventeen workers (sixteen of them dining hall employees) could not produce documents showing that they were legally able to work in the United States, and they were fired on December 2nd, 2011. Many[citation needed] people believe that the college began looking into employees' work authorizations as a way to thwart unionization, although the college president, David Oxtoby, has repeatedly denied these allegations. [70]

Following an agreement between Pomona College and the union UNITE HERE in April 2013, the College's dining hall employees took part in a secret-ballot election administered by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) on April 30, 2013, to determine whether or not they wish to be represented by the union. The vote was 56 to 27 in favor of being represented by UNITE HERE in collective bargaining. Representatives of the College administration and the union plan to meet for formal negotiations toward an initial contract in the near future. [71]

Notable alumni and faculty[]

Famous alumni of Pomona College include Walt Disney Company Executive Roy E. Disney (1951), writer, actor, and musician Kris Kristofferson (1954), Civil Rights activist and NAACP chairman Myrlie Evers (1968), United States Senator for Hawaii Brian Schatz, New York Times executive editor Bill Keller (1970), and six-time Grammy Winning conductor Robert Shaw (1938),[72] as well as several Academy Award-winning screenwriters. Notable faculty have included the late novelist David Foster Wallace and jazz musician Bobby Bradford.

Notes[]

  1. As of June 30, 2012."U.S. and Canadian Institutions Listed by Fiscal Year 2012 Endowment Market Value and Percentage Change in Endowment Market Value from FY 2011 to FY 2012" (PDF). 2012 NACUBO-Commonfund Study of Endowments. National Association of College and University Business Officers. http://www.nacubo.org/Documents/research/2012NCSEPublicTablesEndowmentMarketValuesFinalJanuary232013.pdf.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 "Pomona Profile". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/about/facts-and-figures/pomona-profile.aspx. Retrieved March 13, 2013.
  3. As of October 15, 2012. "Pomona College Common Data Set 2012-2013, Part B". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/administration/institutional-research/common-data-set/12-13/B-Enrollment.pdf.
  4. 4.0 4.1 "History of Pomona College". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/welcome/aboutpomona/history.shtml. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  5. Rudolph, Frederick (1962). The American College & University: A History. Athens, Georgia: University of Georgia Press. ISBN 0-8203-1284-3.
  6. "History of the Claremont Colleges". Claremont University Consortium. http://www.cuc.claremont.edu/aboutcuc/history.asp. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  7. Pomona College : News@Pomona
  8. New Fulbright Grant Brings Scientists to U.S. - Chronicle.com
  9. America's 25 New Elite 'Ivies' | Newsweek Best High Schools | Newsweek.com
  10. 10.0 10.1 "Pomona Profile 2007". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/Welcome/AboutPomona/FactsAndFigures.shtml. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  11. Anderson, Seth (2007-12-14). "James Blaisdell and the Claremont Colleges". Claremont Graduate University. Archived from the original on 2007-09-28. http://web.archive.org/web/20070928024653/http://claremontconversation.org/tcourse/tndy4010/page/James+Blaisdell-The+Visionary. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Peterson, William (2002). "CB Fisk #117 Pomona College, Claremont, CA". C.B. Fisk, Inc.. http://www.cbfisk.com/fisk_files/organs/op117_01.html. Retrieved 2007-01-11.[dead link]
  13. "Residence Halls -- South Campus". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/adwr/campuslife/residentiallife/southcampus.shtml. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  14. "Oldenborg "The Borg" Center - Pomona College". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/about/pomoniana/oldenborg-center.aspx. Retrieved 2012-02-16.
  15. "About Bridges Auditorium". Claremont University Consortium. http://www.cuc.claremont.edu/bridges/background/index.html. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  16. "Richard C. Seaver Biology Building". Pomona College Biology Department. http://biology.pomona.edu/facilities/seaverbiology.shtml. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  17. "Winning Gold". Pomona College Magazine. http://www.pomona.edu/Magazine/PCMwin08/DEtomorrow2.shtml. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  18. "Lincoln Edmunds Receives Gold". The Student Life. http://www.tsl.pomona.edu/index.php?page=news&article=2941&issue=108. Retrieved 2008-03-12.[dead link]
  19. "Night Rite". Pomona College Magazine. http://www.pomona.edu/Magazine/PCMwin08/FSnightrite.shtml. Retrieved 2008-03-12.
  20. "Dedication Held For Turrell Skyspace Exhibition". The Student Life. http://www.tsl.pomona.edu/index.php?article=2669. Retrieved 2008-03-12.[dead link]
  21. "Residence Halls -- North Campus". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/adwr/campuslife/residentiallife/northcampus.shtml. Retrieved 2007-01-11.
  22. 22.0 22.1 "By the Numbers". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/academics/curriculum/consortium.aspx. Retrieved 5 May 2013.
  23. "Pomona College Profile". http://www.pomona.edu/about/facts-and-figures/pomona-profile.aspx.
  24. 24.0 24.1 "By the Numbers". Pomona College. http://www.pomona.edu/academics/curriculum/by-the-numbers.aspx. Retrieved 14 October 2012.
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