Articles Written By: emae2021@pomona.edu

4+7 Cool Things About the New Center for Athletics, Recreation and Wellness

Center for Athletics, Recreation and Wellness Aerial

Center for Athletics, Recreation and Wellness Aerial

When the glass doors of the Center for Athletics, Recreation and Wellness swung open in October, we heard words like “beautiful,” “gorgeous” and “When can alumni use it?” Another question is what to call the nearly 100,000-square-foot building in day-to-day use. Generous gifts by Ranney Draper ’60 and Priscilla Draper as well as the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation (facilitated by Libby Gates MacPhee ’86) allowed Pomona to begin construction on the $57 million project in 2021. Yet when the principal donors selected two special interior spaces—the fitness center and the upstairs gym—to name in commemoration, it left the building without a nickname. The acronym—CARW—wasn’t doing it for Jasper Davidoff ’23, who suggested in an opinion piece for The Student Life it might be better to rearrange the letters for the new home of Sagehen Athletics to a more ornithologically correct CRAW. Other efforts to invoke the sage grouse have landed on the Nest and the Roost. Still another attempt by students to make the acronym roll off the tongue was WARC, as in a place to WARC out. For now, we’ll go with that big, gorgeous, light-filled building at the end of Marston Quad between Big Bridges and Sixth Street. Hope to see you there on Alumni Weekend.

1) Oak Trees

Several large older oaks offer their shade near the building’s entrance, and new wooden tables and chairs entice people to linger in Rains Courtyard. Along Draper Walk on the south side of the building, a row of existing mature oaks has been enhanced with two newly planted young oaks and new benches. A larger oak has been planted between the new building and Smiley Hall, creating a small seating area outside the residence hall and a pleasant, leafy view from the fitness center. A subtle architectural reminder of Pomona’s lovely old oaks are the dappled shadows that fall on the concrete beneath the perforated shade panels that line the top part of the entry portico, and at night the light from the building lends a lantern-like effect.

2) Skyspace Tribute

Rains Courtyard, A tribute to Skyspace

Pomona’s familiar campus Skyspace by artist James Turrell ’65 welcomes sunrise and sunset with varied hues of light on the other side of Sixth Street. Architect Tim M. Stevens of the firm SCB added a nod to Turrell’s work in designing the Center for Athletics, Recreation and Wellness: Look up as you pass through Rains Courtyard just before the main entrance and you’ll see a rectangle of open sky, often a brilliant shade of blue.

3) Repurposed Wood

The basketball court from the earlier Memorial Gym that existed before the Rains Center opened in 1989 had been in storage for decades. The old maple court has been repurposed to gorgeous effect in the Center for Athletics, Recreation and Wellness, adding a midcentury vibe to an otherwise contemporary space. A feisty painted Sagehen on one piece of the court welcomes visitors to the front desk. Wood from center court, marked with the PP logo in the jump circle, can be found above the hallway leading to refurbished Voelkel Gym. And not to be overlooked, an expanse of blond refinished wood from the court provides a seating area along the large central stairway.

4) Ahmanson Studio and Studio 147

Studio 147 Door

With double the studio space of the previous building, there can be two classes in session at once, whether they are P.E. classes, general fitness sessions or faculty/staff fitness and wellness activities. Spin cycling is a new offering, along with standbys like yoga, Pilates and high-intensity interval training.

Each studio features a student-designed mural: Nico Cid Delgado ’25 is the artist of the one in Studio 147 downstairs, and Kaylin Ong ’25 created the one in the Ahmanson Studio on the second floor. And yes, the first-floor studio is literally room number 147.

Studio 147 Interior

5) Locker Rooms

With 12 locker rooms—including day-use lockers for students, faculty and staff—the building provides enough spaces for each of Pomona-Pitzer’s 21 Division III NCAA teams to have its own locker room during the season. Large, colorful banners with the sport’s name and one of the team’s Sagehen athletes of the past make the rooms feel special in-season—and the banners can be exchanged for a different sport’s when another team takes over later in the year. Instead of rooms that were too small or too large for a team’s personnel, they are right-sized—and players love that their names are posted on their stalls.

6) Draper Public Fitness Area

Spanning nearly 6,000 square feet just inside the main entrance and surrounded by windows on three sides, the Draper fitness center is the heart of the building. A space to nurture the health and well-being of students, faculty and staff, it also has become a new place to see and be seen. Indoor joggers, cyclists and stair-climbers can log miles on machines with a view of the passersby on busy campus walks—and perhaps those passersby will be inspired to come inside and work out too when they glimpse others doing cardio and lifting weights.

Draper Public Fitness Area

7) N&N Practice Gymnasium

That view. The San Gabriel Mountains are striking from many points on campus, but the sight of their snow-capped peaks in winter from the second-floor recreational and practice gym is stunning. The nearly floor-to-ceiling windows frame the scene spectacularly. Insider’s tip on the N&N Gym name: It’s a tribute to former head women’s basketball coach Nancy Breitenstein (1969-92) and her longtime assistant Nettie Morrison by former player Libby Gates MacPhee ’86. The teams coached by “N&N” included the 1981-82 team that reached the Final Four of the first NCAA Division III women’s basketball tournament ever held, along with the string of teams that dominated the SCIAC for much of the 1980s.

N&N Practice Gymnasium PE Class

8) Olson Family Terrace

Pass through the Athletics Department conference room at the back of the building on the second floor and you’re suddenly in an unexpected space: The Elizabeth Graham Olson and Steve Olson Family Terrace is a spacious shaded balcony with views of Merritt Field and Alumni Field. It’s a lovely spot for a small special event, a prime stop for visiting recruits and a very sweet perch to take in a football game, which comes in handy: Liz and Steve Olson are the parents of Sagehen football players Graham Olson ’23 and Matthias Olson ’26.

9) Hall of Fame

A silver platter won by Darlene Hard ’61, a Wimbledon singles finalist who won the U.S. Open and French Open championships, is among the memorabilia in the new Pomona-Pitzer Athletics Hall of Fame display, centrally located on the first floor. Other items include the historic drum from the old Pomona-Occidental football rivalry, an 1893 silver teapot trophy and the 2019 and 2021 NCAA Division III national championship trophies won by the men’s cross country team. A large mural features recent Sagehen athletes, among them Pomona’s Conor Rooney ’19, Sophia Hui ’19, James Baker ’17, Caroline Casper ’19, Sam Gearou ’19, Danny Rosen ’20, Vicky Marie Addo-Ashong ’20, Jessica Finn ’18, Andy Reischling ’19, Genevieve DiBari ’23, Ally McLaughlin ’16, Tanner Nishioka ’17, Nadia Alaiyan ’17, Aseal Birir ’18 and Liam O’Shea ’20.

10) Sixth Street Courtyard

What was largely neglected space along Sixth Street is now a gathering place, perfect for Sixth Street Rivalry games against Claremont-Mudd-Scripps or just a spot to pause during the day. An orderly arrangement of sycamore trees, benches made of wood and concrete, and a central planter create a sense of place. Plus, the metal wall sculpture Four Players by Bret Price ’72 has a new home on an exterior wall after being moved from inside the now-demolished Memorial Gym. Another new gathering place, Rains Courtyard outside the front entrance, provides more welcoming surroundings for another large-scale metal sculpture by an alumnus, In the Spirit of Excellence by Norman Hines ’61, which remains in its earlier location but is more prominent in the new landscape.

Sixth Street Courtyard

11) Athletic Performance Center

On the first floor with a wide view of Merritt Field, the nearly 5,000-square-foot strength and conditioning center is a cavernous space where varsity athletes train, along with other users. The equipment includes a dozen new Olympic lifting platforms painted in Sagehen blue and orange, plentiful free weights and a three-lane indoor turf strip. It’s as impressive as some NCAA Division I facilities and an enticing stop on the tour for athletic recruits. “I’m obviously biased but it’s probably a top-five Division III facility,” says Athletic Performance Coach Greg Hook PZ ’14.

CARW Athletic Performance Center workout equipment

 

New Eckstein Scholarship for Refugees

Whether displaced by war, political upheaval or natural disaster, students fleeing crisis could soon find refuge at Pomona College through the new Dr. Albert Eckstein and Liese Bendheim Eckstein Scholarship.

Eckstein Family

Liese and Albert Eckstein in a family photo at son Paul’s 1962 graduation from Pomona, along with images of their U.S. citizenship papers.

Established by Pomona College Trustee Paul Eckstein ’62 P’92 GP’26 and his wife Florence P’92 GP’26 in memory of Paul’s parents with a gift of $1.2 million, the permanently endowed scholarship will provide students with refugee status and financial need a chance to continue their education.

Paul’s father, Albert, born in 1908 in what is now Romania, immigrated to America with his family as a teenager to escape the rise of anti-Semitism in Europe. Encountering quotas on Jewish students in U.S. medical schools, Albert returned to Europe to attend medical school in Germany, where he met Liese Lotte Bendheim. With Hitler in power by the time Albert earned his degree in 1936, the couple left Germany for the U.S. ahead of the horrors of the Holocaust.

Paul said his father often spoke about the extraordinary waste of human talent caused by the Holocaust, other wars and political upheaval. Both Flo and Paul know his parents would be proud the endowed scholarship carries their names. Thinking of future recipients, Paul says, “Who knows if they will be Nobel Prize winners, great senators, or wonderful writers or musicians? I like to dream and think this gift will in some way help facilitate that.”

Alumni Voice: Alfredo Romero ’91

Romero, the new president of the Alumni Association Board, arrived at Pomona in 1987 as an undocumented student. After working in international business, he now owns a marketing consulting firm for small businesses and is a part-time lecturer at Loyola Marymount. His conversation with PCM’s Robyn Norwood has been edited for length and clarity.

Alfredo Romero

PCM: How was it that you first came to Pomona?

Romero: In high school, I visited the Harvey Mudd campus through the Upward Bound program, where we got to stay overnight. I was very interested in—and still am—engineering and mathematics. During the tour, somebody pointed out, oh yeah, down the street there are other colleges. Pitzer, Claremont McKenna, Pomona. Only one of my teachers at Pioneer High School in Whittier had actually heard of Pomona, and the only reason he remembered was because Pomona had won the College Bowl back in the ’60s. So that added a little bit more mystique. Sure enough, I fell in love once I got to visit the campus, meet people and read about the student-faculty ratio. I thought, absolutely, I’m going to apply.

PCM: Tell me about your family and higher education.

Romero: We’re all immigrants. I was 8 years old when we came here. I didn’t speak a lot of English. One of the reasons that we came to this country, my dad has said many times, is for the opportunities, including educational opportunities. We were a border family. I was born in Hermosillo, the capital of the state of Sonora, just south of Arizona. This was before the borders were so impenetrable. There was a lot of back and forth.

We finally came here, and I was pretty good at school and ended up skipping eighth grade. In high school, they put me in the track of the honors program. It was really interesting, the encouragement I got from my parents. It wasn’t even explicitly said, but I understood that whatever I chose to do, they were going to support it. It never really dawned on me to think about the price. We’d figure out how to pay for it. I’d take loans if I had to, which I did. There are a lot of things I wish I would have known. But I also had probably the best support I could have gotten.

PCM: How did you get involved on campus once you were here?

Romero: I spent my first two years in Oldenborg, and that was a lot of fun. I was very involved in high school and I just continued that here. I decided to run for ASPC, so I was a senator and then I was the external affairs commissioner my junior year. I played intramurals. I’ve always been very sociable, so I’d just go meet people. A lot of the people on the Alumni Board are people who were very involved. In fact, we have former ASPC presidents on the board, including Andrea Venezia [’91], who was ASPC president when I was here. My personal journey after graduating was that I volunteered with the CDO [Career Development Office] quite a bit. And I served on panels about business, international business, graduate school, anything they needed speakers for that I have experience in.

What it’s always been about is Pomona did a lot for me. Coming in, I was actually undocumented. I didn’t get my green card until I was a sophomore at Pomona. Thinking back, that was probably one of the reasons I chose Pomona over UCLA—a state school versus a private school. I never got to the conversation with UCLA as to what they would have expected of me as an undocumented student, but with Pomona there was no issue. Some of the loans I got were different from federal loans, but they found them for me.

That’s probably one of the biggest debts of gratitude I have to Pomona: They didn’t let my immigrant status get in the way. But the other one is really just the exposure to the world that I got at Pomona. Students from all over the world, all over the country. The access to different socioeconomic groups. I think one of the best advantages Pomona has, especially with the diversity of the student body, is that as a young immigrant kid from Whittier, you get to speak with people whose parents are professors or they’re lawyers or they’re successful business people. There are also instances where you realize that you’re in a better situation than they are, which for a 17-or 18-year-old is eye-opening when you’ve been told your whole life that people in the upper part of the socioeconomic strata have it better: They have a better life; they have a better chance of success.

The story I love to tell is the friend of mine who needed to buy a dress for a formal party. We went down to Montclair Plaza. I had a car, and that was one of the biggest things right? I’m local, so I have a car and I drive people around. There are different kinds of privilege. We get to the mall, she picks the dress she wants and we go up to the counter. Her father had given her a checkbook and said, “Go ahead. Write checks for anything you need.” Which immediately I’m thinking, oh, that’s cool. She opens up the checkbook and goes, “I don’t know how to write a check.” It was a big reveal to me, because I had a checking account since I got a job at 16. So I helped her. Privilege isn’t necessarily a binary thing. It’s not one extreme or the other.

PCM: Given the timing, were you part of the Reagan amnesty era?

Romero: Yes, absolutely. We came here in 1978, and my dad actually had attended high school in Arizona, in Tucson. He joined the U.S. Air Force but ended up moving back to Mexico, met my mom and had a family there. When we came, my dad said, “I’m a veteran. We should have no problem immigrating.” So we started applying for residency. And nothing. It was issues with my dad’s paperwork; there were just all kinds of hurdles. It was seven, eight years of trying. My mom was completely concerned when I was in high school. “Be careful where you go, you don’t want to get caught by Immigration.” At that point, I think I’d already lost any accent I had, so I wasn’t that worried. But my mom was.

At one point, the lawyer we had hired to help us looked at my parents and said, “You know, the best thing you could do right now is to apply for this new amnesty program that is coming through.” So when I hear people talking about, like, why don’t people just come here legally, I remember it took us almost a decade to do it the right way. That is how finally, in 1987, I was in Oldenborg and I got my date to go down to the city of Pomona and have my interview to get my temporary residence card.

PCM: With the Alumni Board, do you come in with anything specific you’re trying to do?

Romero: The Alumni Board to me is a reflection of the alumni community as a whole. So what I immediately recognized is that no matter what my personal feelings may be towards something, the only way to get things done is to make sure the energy is there to get them done. Yes, I have a particular passion for DACA students or anybody undocumented. I have a very, very strong desire to help first-generation and low-income students as they come in. We do have a very diverse group on the board, including other former first-generation students.

But we also have—I guess I’m part of this now—older alumni who are very interested in continuing the traditions of the College. In conversations with some of the younger alums, there seems to be a disconnect between their experience at Pomona and what they see as the traditions of the College. Some of that was done on purpose because there are some traditions that Pomona had—the freshman weigh-in was definitely one we don’t want to continue. It stopped. But there are a lot of traditions that we do want to continue. (For more on traditions, see Pomoniana Blog)

In Memoriam: Julian Nava ’51

Educator and Ambassador to Mexico, 1927—2022

Julian NavaJulian Nava ’51, a professor and trailblazing advocate for public education who later became the first Mexican American to serve as U.S. ambassador to Mexico, died July 29, 2022. He was 95.

Two Los Angeles Unified School District campuses bear Nava’s name—the Dr. Julian Nava Learning Academy and the Nava College Preparatory Academy—in recognition of his contributions as the first Latino elected to the Los Angeles Board of Education in 1967.

Nava, a professor of history at Cal State Northridge for more than 40 years, served on the LAUSD board for 12 years, including two stints as board president. A proponent of bilingual education, a multicultural curriculum and school integration, he emerged as a pivotal figure in the first year after he was elected during the volatile protests remembered as the East L.A. high school walkouts or Chicano “blowouts,” when thousands of students walked out of classrooms demanding more equitable education. Nava, a graduate of Roosevelt High in Boyle Heights, immediately found himself in the middle.

“Having grown up in East Los Angeles and having experienced the same unfair treatment that these students were experiencing, he understood it like no other member on the board,” remembers his daughter Carmen Nava, a professor of history at Cal State San Marcos.

“It was a trial by fire and on a certain level, everybody criticized him. People on the right felt like, ‘Who is this person who’s sympathetic and soft on crime?’ People on the left were like, ‘Why are you wearing a suit? You’ve just become one of them and you’re a sellout.’”

Nava—at times under such criticism he was advised to wear a bullet-proof vest—persuaded the board to move a pivotal meeting to East L.A.’s Lincoln High, and the board eventually implemented reforms that met most of the students’ demands.

“He had to find a way to speak with his brand-new colleagues on the board—to talk with them, to learn from them, to educate them, to convince them that this was an opportunity to listen to these students—and to do what he could, for example, to try to prevent an overreaction, a police reaction, to what the students were doing,” his daughter says.

Though Nava hadn’t planned to go into politics or diplomacy, he was appointed U.S. ambassador to Mexico in 1980 by President Jimmy Carter, serving until 1981 after Ronald Reagan had taken office. In 1992, not long after he taught at Pomona as a visiting professor, Nava announced a run for mayor of Los Angeles, but his candidacy never took hold.

Nava arrived at Pomona after serving in the U.S. Navy Air Corps near the end of World War II. The GI Bill provided a pathway to higher education, and he became the first of eight siblings to attend college. He enrolled at East Los Angeles College, where he was the first Mexican American elected student body president. One of his teachers, a Pomona alumna, pointed him toward her alma mater, suggesting that he could be accepted despite a B+ average. “She explained that grades were not everything that Pomona would take into account. My well-rounded background, military service and election as student body president could help gain acceptance,” he wrote in his autobiography, Julian Nava: My Mexican-American Journey.

At Pomona, Nava recalled, he was one of only a handful of students with Spanish surnames. He reveled in eating in Frary Dining Hall under the Prometheus mural by José Clemente Orozco, one of Mexico’s greatest artists. Professor Hubert Herring, a specialist in Latin American history, urged Nava to apply to graduate school at Harvard. He was accepted and became one of the first Mexican Americans to earn a doctorate from Harvard.

As a young man Nava worked as a community organizer with the Community Service Organization. There he met labor leader Cesar Chavez. He served as a pallbearer at Chavez’s funeral in 1993.

Pomona presented Nava with an honorary doctor of laws in 1980, when he was a Commencement speaker. His time as a Pomona student was a watershed, his daughter says. “Up to that point, nothing in his life had been like that. But the beautiful Pomona campus, the richness of the experience that he had in his classes with his teachers and fellow students, I remember stories he would tell me about how small the classes were, almost like a seminar. I’m so grateful for that and I know that he was able to pass it forward to other students.”

Nava is survived by his wife of 60 years, Patricia, children Carmen Nava, Katie Stokes and Julian Paul Nava, sister Rose Marie Herzig and six grandchildren.

Notice Board

Alfredo RomeroMessage from Alumni Board President
Alfredo Romero ’91

Greetings, my fellow Sagehens,

Happy New Year! How are we here in 2023 already? I’d like to begin by thanking Don Swan ’15 for his leadership of the Alumni Association Board these past two years. The board and I deeply appreciate his time and commitment, especially as it stretched across the pandemic and the return to in-person life.

I am excited to be leading this dynamic group of dedicated and energetic Sagehen volunteers and can’t believe it’s already been six months since the Alumni Board members kicked off their work this academic year. We have had fantastic planning and discussions taking place in our meetings and are working toward many opportunities for alumni engagement and philanthropy—so stay tuned for more details! And I am also pleased to share some highlights of board work already in motion:

Partnering with the Career Development Office to offer Alumni Futures, virtual career exploration and planning presentations from Alumni Board members for young alumni and students. Chirps to Jeff Levere ’12 for kicking off this effort with his workshop this past fall!

Connecting with members of the campus community to share information and support Pomona traditions.

Working to grow alumni registrations as well as alumni-to-alumni and alumni-to-student mentoring on Sagehen Connect. (Did you know you can access the official Pomona College Alumni Directory and the Pomona College Magazine class notes pages on Sagehen Connect?)

Supporting activities of our Sagehen Regional Alumni Chapters, including working with chapter volunteers and planning the launch of two new chapters by Summer 2023!

As we get closer to spring, I want to remind you that all alumni are welcome to attend Alumni Weekend—April 27-30—and hope to see you there. The Alumni Board also looks forward to welcoming our newest Alumni Association members (the Class of 2023) in May!

Until next time—CHIRP!

Alfredo

Alfredo Romero ’91
Alumni Association Board President

To learn more about the Alumni Association Board, see the board roster or read meeting minutes online—or to nominate a fellow Sagehen (or yourself) for the board—please visit pomona.edu/alumni-board.

For questions, please contact
Director of Alumni and Family Engagement Alisa Fishbach at
alumni@pomona.edu.


Family Weekend Fun

We happily welcomed hundreds of families to campus for Family Weekend in October to enjoy a special weekend of programs and activities with their students. Families toured the new Center for Athletics, Recreation and Wellness and Benton Museum of Art, attended faculty and staff presentations like Hen Talks and History of Pomona, and were welcomed to many open house receptions hosted by academic departments and Student Affairs offices. We also appreciated the opportunity to thank our generous family donors in person at a special luncheon held in their honor on Saturday.

three photos of smiling families


Blue Badge: Alumni Weekend & Reunion Celebrations: April 27-30, 2023

Alumni Weekend

Who’s Coming to Alumni Weekend 2023?

Alumni Weekend registration opens in February, and we can’t wait to welcome our Sagehens back to campus for a fantastic weekend of reconnecting and making new memories. We’ll visit familiar and new Pomona spaces and celebrate reunions with class years ending in 3 or 8 as well as the 47th reunion of the Class of 1976 and our Diamond Classes of 1962 and earlier. As always, therewill be an abundance of curated programs and events for our alumni community to enjoy. All alumni are invited, so don’t wait for your next reunion to come and say hello to classmates, faculty, staff and Cecil!

Watch your email and the Alumni Weekend and Reunion Celebrations website at pomona.edu/alumniweekend for details, updates and information on how to register. Questions? Please call (888) SAGEHEN or email Director of Alumni and Family Engagement Alisa Fishbach at alumni@pomona.edu.


Sage Coaches Needed on Sagehen Connect!

Who knows the ins and outs of graduating from Pomona and experiencing life beyond the Gates better than a Sagehen? Alumni and students would love to connect with you and hear your advice about career experiences, graduate school and other post-Pomona life wisdom as a Sage Coach on Sagehen Connect. Provide resume feedback, offer advice on career roles and paths, make recommendations on graduate school programs or assist with other types of support—you choose how you would like to help and how much. Additionally, Sage Coaches may be invited to participate in panel discussions or individual presentations hosted by the Career Development Office or Alumni and Family Engagement.ipad with screen shot of sagehenconnect.pomona.edu

Signing up is easy:

  1. Log in to Sagehen Connect at sagehenconnect.pomona.edu.
  2. Select “Edit profile” next to your profile image.
  3. Scroll to “Offer Sage Coaching” and select what you would like to do as a Sage Coach.
  4. Don’t forget to save your changes!

Not on Sagehen Connect yet? Learn more about our Pomona College online alumni community and register today at pomona.edu/sagehen-connect.


A Message from Nathan Dean ’15, National Chair of Annual Giving

Hello and Happy New Year, Sagehens!

I hope your holiday season was full of joy and relaxation and gave you time to reconnect with family, friends and your favorite Sagehens. During these past months of giving, I have been in awe, once again, at the generosity of our Sagehen community. It is inspiring to begin 2023 as a proud member of our philanthropic community, noting the impact that’s been made in support of our students so far this academic year.

With January here, it occurs to me that I am heading into the last six months of my term as the national chair of annual giving. In July, I’ll be honored to pass the torch to our newly named national chair, Christina Tong ’17. It’s been a rewarding role indeed, and I look forward to working on several special giving opportunities coming our way this spring that will strive to raise funds for key areas in need at Pomona.

Thank you to everyone who has made a gift in 2022. Rest assured that your support goes directly to the immediate needs of current students and faculty, including financial aid, academic programs and resources, experiential learning and student activities. If you haven’t given yet, I hope you’ll consider donating to the area of Pomona that’s most meaningful to you before June 30 reaches us. Gifts of all sizes make a great impact.

Nathan Dean ’10

Gratefully,

Nathan

Nathan Dean ’10
National Chair of Annual Giving

Letter Box

Kudos to the Pandemic Graduates

I came home from summer vacation to find the Summer 2022 edition of PCM had arrived. What a joyful read! I love the beautiful graduation photos for all three classes. They fought hard these past few years and I’m overjoyed to see them celebrating together.

I admire the members of the classes of 2020, 2021 and 2022 so much. While they couldn’t spend their years together the way anyone would have imagined, they’re linked in a new and different way. I think they’ll find power in remembering what they’ve overcome as individuals, and together.

Recent graduates make the traditional exit through the College Gates during the May 2022 delayed Commencement celebrations for the pandemic Classes of 2020 and 2021.

Recent graduates make the traditional exit through the College Gates during the May 2022 delayed Commencement celebrations for the pandemic Classes of 2020 and 2021.

I also loved the “Heart to Heart” article with my classmate Roxanne Ruzicka Maas ’94 and Elisa Louizos ’96. They didn’t just survive something frightening. They chose to renew their friendship, and renew their commitments to living with love and meaning.

I always feel a little restless in the fall, like I should be starting a new academic pursuit. So I’ll take this renewal and inspiration with me as I head back to work, and take my daughter Bailey to first grade.

—Christina Caldwell Lobo ’94
Ballwin, Missouri


Remembering William Irwin Thompson ’62

I noted with sadness the passing of William Irwin Thompson ’62 (Spring 2022). Thompson was one of the formative writers of my early 20s. I read two of his books—At the Edge of History and Passages About Earth—before I even knew I would be transferring to Pomona, which I eventually did in fall 1975. Those books offered a heady brew of history, philosophy, religion, literature, art and anthropology, all in the service of nudging what Thompson saw as a nascent planetary culture into being.

For someone coming of age in the early ’70s, they offered a vision of culture more grounded and hopeful than the unhinged and rapacious one we were instead coming to inhabit. I have continued to collect and read his writings over the years, and while my older, more pessimistic self may not have found them quite so intoxicating, they still provoked and stimulated as well as introduced me to writers (Francisco Varela, James Lovelock, Lynn Margulis, Evan Thompson) and ideas (embodied minds, Gaia hypothesis) that at the time were outside the mainstream.

After I learned of Thompson’s death, I ran across an online interview he gave in 2008. This passage caught my eye: “And I didn’t like high school, I had A’s and F’s. So I couldn’t get into UCLA or a conventional school, but I was able to talk my way into Pomona as a maverick. The professor said, ‘We’re allowed one oddball a year. I will make you my oddball for this year if you go back and finish your high school diploma.’” I thought, Hey, that’s me! I too had a checkered high school record and a vexed relation with educational institutions generally. My first semester, Chemistry Professor Wayne Steinmetz told me I was the very last applicant the admissions committee decided on, hinting that his doubts persisted. But I stayed on despite having my own doubts about Pomona that first year. And though my life has followed a very different path than Thompson’s, I’m grateful Pomona saw fit to take a chance on us both and that it was the kind of place that offered us the means to find our footing and flourish in our own distinct ways.

—Rick Penticoff ’78
Moscow, Idaho

Two books by William Irwin Thompson: At the Edge of History; and Passages About Earth: An Exploration of the New Planetary Culture

P.S. Your notice makes it appear as if At the Edge of History and Passages About Earth are one book. They are two—Edge was published in 1971; Passages in 1974.


Pomona’s Contributions to Diplomacy

I was thrilled to read in the summer issue “Partners in Prague” by Doug Morrow ’01 and Erik Black ’95, relating their efforts in Prague and elsewhere to “share and strengthen” our democratic values there. It is heartening to read that these two Pomona grads recognize the importance of constant vigilance in this respect. Even in our own country, we need reminders of the significance of these values. Thank you for publishing their story.

—Jane Barnes ’58
Julian, California

Stray Thoughts: Echos from A Different Era

Teddy Roosevelt speaking at Pomona College

Almost everyone who comes to Pomona College learns that Theodore Roosevelt gave a speech in front of Pearsons Hall in 1903, the only visit by a sitting president in Pomona history.

In one of the stories in this issue of Pomona College Magazine, there’s an allusion to a theme in some of Roosevelt’s more famous addresses. Though the exact phrase “dare mighty things” comes from his 1899 speech “The Strenuous Life,” the better-known speech is “The Man in the Arena,” itself part of a longer address called “Citizenship in a Republic” that Roosevelt delivered in Paris in 1910.

A popular figure at the time, Roosevelt is more controversial today for certain imperialist and racist views. And the famous speech is mostly spoiled for me anyway by Richard Nixon’s use of it as he resigned the presidency in disgrace in 1974, still believing he was being persecuted.

What draws me in isn’t the “It is not the critic who counts,” part, though granted, that might have something to do with my background in journalism. Instead, it’s the words at the end about being willing to fail in striving for a worthy cause. Like poet Robert Browning’s idea that one’s reach should exceed one’s grasp, it encourages aiming for more than we might be able to achieve, along with accepting that we may be judged for it.

That willingness to try, not blindly but with a clear understanding that they might not be able to do the thing they set out to do, is at the heart of several of the stories in this issue. Jessie Berman Boatright ’98 and Laila Bernstein ’04 work intently in Boston with their teams in the Mayor’s Office of Housing to try to end homelessness, even though it often seems like every time 100 people find homes, another 100 appear in the streets. Laura Kerber ’06 works at NASA’s Jet Propulsion Laboratory, where virtually every shot is a long shot. And Zach Landman ’08 and his wife Geri, both physicians, are bringing to bear all their training, talents and connections to try to find a cure for their daughter Lucy’s rare genetic disorder. Even if they can’t, they’ve launched a foundation to try to discover therapies that might help cure other children with single-gene disorders.

There’s another story in this issue that reflects a different type of persistence and conviction. It’s an essay by physician Atsuko Koyama ’96 about why she has chosen to be an abortion provider. I ask you to hear her out to better understand why her professional and personal experiences have led to her decision, and to respect her readiness to explain it.

These Pomona alumni exhibit a boldness some educators believe is diminishing among high-achieving students: the willingness to fail. When getting a B feels like failure for students trying to gain admission to highly selective colleges or graduate schools, it can lead to not attempting courses or projects beyond ones they’re confident they’ll master. When a student at another college once told me she had failed an engineering course in statics, I remember being surprised she didn’t change her major. She took the course again, passed it, won a six-figure federal grant for her technology startup and completed her degree.

So here’s to trying, and to trying again.

How To Teach a Robot

Anthony Clark, assistant professor of computer science with soldering iron
Kenneth Gonzalez ’24, Simon Heck ’22 and Liz Johnson ’24 work with Anthony Clark, assistant professor of computer science.

Kenneth Gonzalez ’24, Simon Heck ’22 and Liz Johnson ’24 work with Anthony Clark, assistant professor of computer science.

Someday, when a storm downs trees and power lines on campus or elsewhere, emergency workers may turn to autonomous robots for help with immediate surveillance.

 “Maybe you want a robot to roam around campus, because it’s safer for them than for a human,” says Anthony Clark, assistant professor of computer science. “Maybe you have 10 robots that can take pictures and report back, ‘Hey, there’s a tree down here, a limb fallen there, this looks like a power line that’s down,’” he says, and technicians can be dispatched immediately to the correct location.

That day may not be too far off, thanks to research being conducted by Clark and three Pomona computer science majors. Right now they are working on computer simulations, exploring how to train autonomous robots to navigate the campus using machine learning. By spring, they hope to test their methods in actual robots, prototypes of which are already under construction elsewhere in Clark’s lab.

The group scoured the campus last summer to find a building with an interior that would present challenges to the autonomous robots. They settled on the Oldenborg Center because it “was potentially confusing enough for a robot trying to drive around,” with one hallway, for instance, leading to stairs in one direction and a ramp in the other.

Machine learning, Clark explains, is a subset of artificial intelligence. “It is basically an automated system that makes some decisions, and those automated decisions are based on a bunch of training data.” 

To generate the data, the team created an exquisitely detailed schematic of the Oldenborg interior, down to a water fountain in a hallway. Kenneth Gonzalez ’24 took 2,000 photos and used photogrammetry software to determine how many images the robot would need for correct decision-making. Liz Johnson ’24 created another model with the flexibility to change various elements—from carpet to wood or even grass on the floors, for example, or rocks on the ceiling. Simon Heck ’22 worked on the back-end coding.

“The reason why we want to modify the environment, like having different lighting and changing textures, is so the robot is able to generalize,” says Clark. “The dataset will have larger amounts of diverse environments. We don’t want it to get confused if it’s going down a hallway and all of a sudden there’s a new painting on the wall.”

Clark says that once the group has models that work in virtual environments and transfer well to the physical world, the team will make the tasks more challenging. One idea is to create autonomous robots that fly rather than roll. “It’s pretty much the same process,” Clark says, “but it’s a lot more complicated.”

The goal, Clark says, “is a better way to make machine learning models transfer to a real-world device. To me, that means it’s less likely to bump into walls, and it’s a lot safer and more energy efficient.” 

What keeps him up at night is training a machine and then, for example, a person taller than those in the dataset enters the field. The robot mischaracterizes what they are and runs into them. “I’m hoping the big takeaway from this work is how do you automatically find things that you weren’t necessarily looking for?”

Geology Department Turns 100

Founded in 1922 by A.O. Woodford, a 1913 graduate of the College better known as Woody, the Geology Department has marked its centennial year. So did Woodford, a one-man department for 30 years who died in 1990 at the age of 100. A great-nephew of Pomona co-founder Rev. James Harwood, Woodford majored in chemistry before earning a Ph.D. studying soil science at UC Berkeley. In addition to his research, Woodford was known for developing scientists. Among them was Roger Revelle ’29, an early predictor of global warming. UC San Diego’s Revelle College bears his name.

Artifact: The Last Champs

The object below is a game program from the crucial contest of Pomona’s 1955 season, the most recent time the Sagehens were part of a SCIAC football championship season.

1955 Homecoming Game Program: Whittier College vs Pomona-Claremont

Pitzer College, Pomona’s current partner in athletics, had not yet been founded. Pomona and what was then Claremont Men’s College—now rivals as Pomona-Pitzer and Claremont-Mudd-Scripps—played together on a combined team known as Pomona-Claremont that claimed the third of three titles in a row.

The title-clinching win was a dramatic 14-13 victory over Whittier College in the Poets’ homecoming game, where this program sold for 20 cents. The two met late in the season as the only SCIAC teams that remained undefeated in conference play.

The recently completed 2022 season marked a poignant milestone for Whittier. The college dropped its football program after 115 years, along with men’s lacrosse and men’s and women’s golf. The decision was primarily for financial reasons. Whittier had not won a game since the pandemic canceled the 2020 season, going 0-18 over the last two seasons.

Whittier’s coach in 1955 was George Allen, who went on to coach the Los Angeles Rams and Washington Redskins. Pomona-Claremont was coached by Earl “Fuzz” Merritt ’25, for whom Pomona-Pitzer’s home field is named.

The Pomona-Claremont roster included end Bill Schultz ’56, tackle Ken Wedel ’56, halfback Herb Meyer ’57, guard/tackle Hugh Martin ’57, and halfback/quarterback Jim Lindblad ’58, all later inducted into the Pomona-Pitzer Athletics Hall of Fame. The name of a certain 165-pound sophomore end might also ring a bell.

Pomona-Claremont’s final game of the 1955 season was a 29-13 victory over rival Occidental in front of 6,000 fans in Claremont. Oxy’s standouts included quarterback Jack Kemp, who went on to play professional football and serve nine terms as a U.S. congressman. In 2020, Occidental announced it would discontinue its football program, ending the rivalry. Six remaining teams will compete for the 2023 SCIAC football title: Cal Lutheran, Chapman, CMS, La Verne, Pomona-Pitzer and Redlands.