Pomona College
Encyclopedia : P : PO : POM : Pomona College
Pomona is the founding member of a local consortium of colleges, the Claremont Colleges. The Claremont Colleges strive to deliver the closeness of a small college while also providing the resources of a large university.
Academics
Admissions to Pomona is highly selective. Of the students applying to the Class of 2009, fewer than one in five were admitted. For the Class of 2010, according to Pomona's student newspaper "The Student Life," that rate of admission fell to 16%, further cementing the fact that it is one of the most selective liberal arts colleges in the United States.The price of a Pomona education is comparable to the cost at other liberal arts schools. In 2005, a year of tuition, room, board and textbooks cost about $41,000.
Reputation
Pomona College is a top-notch liberal arts college, as rated by U.S. News and World Report. It consistently ranks among the top 10 liberal arts colleges in the United States. In many of the past years, it has been ranked as having the nation's happiest students, according to the Princeton Review.Student life
There are a few local fraternities (some of which are co-ed or open to students of the other Claremont Colleges), and no officially recognized national fraternities or sororities. Fraternities play a limited role in the school's social life.
There are several newspapers operated at the consortium, including The Collage and The Student Life, which is the oldest college newspaper in Southern California.
Virtually all students live on campus for all four years.
Unique traditions
The college has two unique traditions:
47
The number "47" has held mystical importance for Pomona students for forty years. Two different stories about its roots exist. Campus lore suggested that at some time in the 1960s 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. Soon the entire school was looking for 47s... and of course they found them! Crowds began to cheer at football games when the ball was on the 47 yard line, when basketball game scores for either team reached 47, or when 47 seconds were left on a game clock.Over time the phenomenon built on itself. Writer Joe Menosky, a 1979 alum, included the number 47 in the show Star Trek: when he joined in its fourth season: damaged shields fell to 47 percent strength; 47 colonists were missing; 47 minutes would display on a timer. The traditions continued through Deep Space Nine and . The web link for a full list of Star Trek 47s is below.
Video games, especially those by Intellivision, also displayed 47s regularly on screen and on game boxes. This turned out to be the work of Pomona graduates and Intellivision game designers Don Daglow, Eddie Dombrower and Dave Warhol; Daglow and Dombrower also made 47 the number on the batter's uniform in the seminal Earl Weaver Baseball game from Electronic Arts. Additionally,the game Hitman (computer game series) has the main character of "Agent 47", or simply "47".
'Mufti'
Again rooted somewhere in the mists of the 1960s, the Mufti is a secret society of punsters-as-social-commentators. Periodically their 5x7 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." Although nominally vandals under constant threat of punishment by the school if caught, Mufti are actually celebrated as part of the school's tradition on the Pomona website. As the school states: "The adhesive used to plaster the sheets over campus is not easily removed, and College administrators have tried many tactics to persuade the group to make their statements less permanent. At one point, former Dean Shelton Beatty offered to post the Mufti fliers himself, just to ensure that the glue would not damage the buildings. A few days after his offer, a stack of Mufti fliers appeared in his locked office. The message simply read, 'Mufti comes unglued.' True to his word, Dean Beatty made his rounds of campus, posting the fliers with a more water-soluble adhesive. However, this compromise did not last. The following week, sheets again appeared with the message, 'Mufti stuck up again.'"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. The school's sports teams are called the Sagehens.
Notable alumni
- Chris Burden
- Chris Cain
- Richard Chamberlain
- Vikram Chandra
- Rosalind Chao
- Alan Cranston
- Roy E. Disney
- Myrlie Evers
- Paul Fussell
- David Keirsey
- Bill Keller
- Kris Kristofferson
- Doug McConnell
- Ved Mehta
- Louis Menand
- Joe Menosky
- Keith Murray (singer)
- Lynda Obst
- Douglas Preston
- Richard Preston
- Roger Revelle
- Mary Schmich
- Robert Shaw
- James Strombotne
- Jim Taylor
- Robert Towne
- James Turrell
- Vladimir Ussachevsky
- David S. Ward
- George C. Wolfe
Famous dropouts
- John Cage
- Twyla Tharp
- Frank Zappa Zappa, then a resident near Pomona College in San Bernadino County, would occasionally bring samples of his scores to Prof. Karl Kohn. This was not part of a normal undergraduate program, nor was it some form of school-sanctioned visiting student arrangement, but simply informal private lessons. By 1970, Pomona publications referred to Zappa having studied there, and Kohn's name appears on the cover of Freak Out! (1966) under the heading "These People Have Contributed Materially In Many Ways To Make Our Music What It Is. Please Do Not Hold It Against Them". Zappa contributed to the renovation of Pomona's Bridge's Hall of Music, and one of the seats in the hall bears a plaque with his name.
Majors
Humanities and Fine Arts
- Art and Art History
- Chinese
- Classics
- English
- French
- Japanese
- Music
- Philosophy
- Religious Studies
- Romance Languages and Literatures
- Russian
- Spanish
- Theatre and Dance
- Astronomy
- Biology
- Chemistry
- Computer Science
- Geology
- Mathematics
- Molecular Biology
- Neuroscience
- Physics
- Psychology
- Anthropology
- Economics
- History
- International Relations
- Linguistics and Cognitive Science
- Politics
- Sociology
- American Studies
- Asian American Studies
- Asian Studies
- Black Studies
- Chicano Studies
- Environmental Analysis
- German Studies
- Latin American Studies
- Media Studies
- Philosophy, Politics, and Economics
- Public Policy Analysis
- Science, Technology, and Society
- Women's Studies
External links
- [Official Website]
- [Student Newspaper - The Student Life]
- [The connection between Pomona College] and Star Trek
- [Site devoted to sightings] of the number 47 in Star Trek programs
- [Article on the number 47] in Intellivision games
- [Pomona College] on Placeopedia
- [Claremont Colleges radio station]
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