Pomona Today

Picture This

Sixth Times Two

President G. Gabrielle Starr joins members of the Pomona-Pitzer football team to celebrate

With a V-for-victory sign, President G. Gabrielle Starr (left foreground) joins members of the Pomona-Pitzer football team to celebrate after the Sagehens claimed the Sixth Street Trophy for the second year in a row with a 24–19 win over rival Claremont-Mudd-Scripps at Pomona’s Merritt Field last November. The season-ending win gave the team a 7–3 overall record under second-year Head Coach John Walsh, including a 5–2 record in conference play—the Sagehens’ best finish since 1999.

Last Look

Through the Gates

Fall 2018 is a whole semester ago, and the members of the Class of 2022 aren’t newcomers on campus any more—which makes it all the more fun to look back at their arrival at Pomona last August, including their enthu-siastic run through the gates, with President G. Gabrielle Starr, Cecil Sagehen and—of course—their families among the crowd that gathered to cheer them on.

Through the Gates

Through the Gates

Through the Gates

Through the Gates

Through the Gates

Through the Gates

Artifact

The Heart of the Gamelan

Gamelan
In the mid-1990s, the Department of Music ordered a set of approximately 30 instruments that formed the basis for Giri Kusuma, Pomona’s Balinese gamelan. Originally organized by the late Professor of Music Katherine Hagedorn, the ensemble has been directed since 1999 by Nyoman and Nanik Wenten, who are traditionally trained artists from Bali and Java and longtime faculty members of the Herb Alpert School of Music at CalArts.

  • The word “gamelan” means “percussion orchestra” and refers to the many kinds of bronze, iron or bamboo percussion instruments played in Southeast Asia.
  • The set of instruments used in Pomona’s ensemble is called gamelan gong kebyar, named after the central instrument.
  • The word “kebyar,” which can be translated as “bursting open” or “explosive,” is also used to describe the modern gamelan’s dynamic, fiery style of music.
  • The gong-gdé, or “big gong,” is considered the heart of the ensemble. It articulates the beginning or end of each musical cycle.
  • The gong is the largest instrument in the gamelan. Cast in bronze, it weighs about 50 pounds and is played with a padded mallet while suspended from a wooden frame.
  • Like most gamelan gongs, this one was made in Java. Most other instruments in the gamelan were made in Bali and shipped to the United States.
  • The gamelan’s music director, Nyoman Wenten, and dance director, Nanik, were featured in a recent documentary about gamelan music titled Bali: Beats of Paradise.

A Brotherly Hat Trick

Brothers Sam, Noah and Ben Sasaki

Brothers Sam, Noah and Ben Sasaki have a sixth sense for each other in the pool. —Photos by Lushia Anson ’19

Lining up for introductions on the pool deck before Pomona-Pitzer water polo games, the Sasaki brothers fall neatly into place.

No. 9 is Noah Sasaki. Next to him is his younger brother Ben, No. 10. And next to Ben is his twin, Sam, who is No. 11 and the Sagehens’ leading scorer.

“We’ve been asked if we’re triplets,” says Noah, a sophomore who is two years older than fraternal twins Ben and Sam, both first-years.

In the pool, it seems like they are everywhere. As one frustrated opponent said as he got out of the water after trying to defend against one of the Sasakis during a summer tournament, “It’s like there are two of him out there.”

“Dude,” somebody had to tell him, “they’re brothers.”

The Sasakis helped Coach Alex Rodriguez’s Sagehens to an undefeated record this season in the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and a top-20 place in a ranking led by Stanford, UCLA and USC.

“That’s one thing in this sport—there’s no separation between Division I, Division II and Division III. We get to be in the pool with all the others,” Noah says.

After winning the SCIAC tournament title over Claremont-Mudd-Scripps on Nov. 18, Pomona-Pitzer earned the right to compete in the NCAA postseason with the sport’s powerhouse teams, stocked with future Olympians. After losing to Long Beach, 12–5, the Sagehens ended their season with a 24–9 record and shifted their goals to next season.

One of the brothers’ goals is to get past the opening round, known as the play-in games, where the Sagehens have lost the last three seasons, and into the final six-team bracket for the NCAA championship. “I know my aspiration is to be in the top 10, regardless of being Division III,” Ben says.

Pomona-Pitzer had upset victories this season over No. 10 UC Irvine and No. 17 Princeton, and trailed No. 5 UC Santa Barbara by only one goal in the third quarter of a loss. The leap to competing with the size and strength of the top teams is a big one, however.

It was Noah who led the brothers into water polo, when his mother suggested he try the sport after he took to surfing as a youngster and clearly loved the water. Ben and Sam followed him from a club team in Irvine to Orange Lutheran High School, where they won a California Interscholastic Federation Division I title in 2016 before Noah led the way to Claremont.

Pomona-Pitzer water poloSam, a left-hander who is prized in water polo the way a lefty pitcher is prized in baseball, had his eye on bigger schools at first, such as UCLA. But Ben didn’t hesitate to choose Pomona. “I know I didn’t want to be separated—not from both of them. It just would have been weird,” Ben says.

Noah recruited Sam hard—and hosted him on his official visit—persuading Sam that the chance to play a key role on the team and get a Pomona College education was worth it. Noah is a media studies major with an interest in sports journalism who has written about Sagehens football for The Student Life. Ben is pointed toward economics and a career in private equity management, and Sam is considering philosophy, politics and economics and perhaps law school.

In the pool, the Sagehens are reaping the benefits of the brothers’ close relationship and sixth sense for each other in the water. Noah often looks for his twin brothers on the counterattack.

“Ben and Sam are both very fast. I’d say faster than I am,” he says. “I know where they’ll be in the pool.”

Their Pomona-Pitzer teammates learned that the hard way in early practices and scrimmages.

“It seemed like the twins were up on the counterattack every time,” says Rodriguez, the Sagehens coach. Frustrated, he says he yelled at the defense about Ben and Sam being open. A teammate quickly responded: “He said, ‘They are Sasakis. They are all fast and they all play hard,’” Rodriguez recalls. “I thought it was a great compliment.”

The twins have a special connection, and because they often play on opposite sides of the pool—Sam, the lefty, on the right side and Ben on the left side—it’s not uncommon to see one of them find the other with a long pass. “It makes me feel good every time I set up my brother for a goal,” says Sam, who led the team with 44 goals and 41 assists during the regular season. Ben scored 26 goals, and Noah, who plays more of a defensive role, scored 11.

Together, they turn Sagehens water polo into a family gathering. Their parents, Russ and Jennifer Sasaki, are part of a large group of parents who turn up at almost every game, and Rodriguez says he “cannot say enough” about them. “Russ helps video games for us when we don’t have a student worker available, and both parents help stat our games as well,” he says.

With three sons on the team—and daughter Lexi studying in Scripps College’s postbaccalaureate premedical program after graduating from UC Santa Barbara—Jennifer and Russ did what only made sense: They packed up their home in Irvine and moved to Claremont.

New Dean of Students has Pomona Homecoming

Avis E. HinksonPomona College’s new vice president for student affairs and dean of students, Avis E. Hinkson, brings more than three decades of higher education experience in areas ranging from residential life to student recruitment to undergraduate advising. Her new role, which she began on Aug. 1, marks her return to Pomona College, where she was an associate dean of admissions from 1990 to 1994.

As dean of the college at Barnard College in New York, Hinkson led a staff of more than 100, overseeing academic advising, career development, registrar, health and wellness services, counseling services, Title IX services, residential and campus life, international and intercultural programs and diversity initiatives.

At Barnard, she worked with colleagues to shape the student experience and campus culture while sustaining direct involvement with many of Barnard’s 2,500 undergraduate women and serving as a key partner in Barnard’s unique connection with Columbia University.

“Avis brings just the right experience, energy and high level of engagement to this crucial role,” says Pomona College President G. Gabrielle Starr. “She is someone who reaches out, listens and helps spark change where it is needed. Our students and the wider campus community will benefit from collaborating with her.”

Hinkson’s other roles have included dean of admission and enrollment planning at Mills College in Oakland, Calif.; associate director of admission and director of minority recruitment at the University of Southern California; and associate director of admission and minority recruitment director at Cornell University.

Among her current professional activities, Hinkson serves on the board of the Consortium on Financing Higher Education as chair of the assembly for the organization of 35 highly selective private colleges and universities committed to meeting the full demonstrated financial need of admitted students.

In addition to earning a doctor of education degree from the University of Pennsylvania, Hinkson holds a master’s degree in student personnel administration from Columbia University’s Teachers College and a bachelor’s degree in psychology from Barnard.

She succeeds Miriam Feldblum, who departed in February after a decade of service to become executive director of the Presidents’ Alliance on Higher Education and Immigration, a new initiative that advocates for the legislative interests of immigrant, undocumented and international students on college campuses.

Going Swimmingly

Lukas Menkhoff ’21 swims a winding path from Singapore to Pomona College to an NCAA Championship.

Lukas Ming Menkhoff ’21

The line at the bottom of the pool is always straight, but it has taken Lukas Ming Menkhoff ’21 on a winding path around the world. The 6-foot-4 swimmer from Singapore has competed in Beijing, Berlin, Stockholm, Dubai and Moscow on his dripping-wet international tour.

Indianapolis might not have the same ring, but the first-year swimmer made Pomona-Pitzer history there in March, becoming the first men’s swimmer in Sagehen history to win an individual NCAA title when he claimed the 100-yard breaststroke at the NCAA Division III Swimming and Diving Championships.

Sports Update


Pomona-Pitzer claimed its first Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) All-Sports Trophy in 26 years last spring, taking the men’s trophy after winning four SCIAC championships.


Read more Sagehens Claim All-Sports Trophy for Men’s Teams.

The Pomona-Pitzer men’s team finished eighth overall and the women were ninth, marking the first time both teams have finished in the top 10 in the same season. His time of 53.39 also shattered the old Pomona-Pitzer record and earned him first-team All-American honors.

“It’s a deep honor. I couldn’t have done it without the support of my teammates and coach,” Menkhoff says. “Strangely I wasn’t nervous at all for this race. I was determined to start the race well, kick the wall and stick with my plan. I was able to execute what I visualized.”

Menkhoff also combined with Mark Hallman ’18, Samuel To ’18 and Ryan Drover ’19 to take third in the 400 freestyle relay in 2:59.08, a Pomona-Pitzer record, and Menkhoff finished ninth in the 100 freestyle in 44.22.

By the time his record-breaking race began, Menkhoff had already competed in nine other races over the course of three days, and he was exhausted. During the race, he refrained from looking left or right—“By looking left, you lose like one-hundredth of a second,” he explains—so he didn’t know he’d won until he looked up at the scoreboard.

International Experience

Lukas Ming Menkhoff ’21Menkhoff hardly could have taken a more circuitous route to Pomona College. Already 22 years old as a first-year student, he completed Singapore’s mandatory military service before beginning his college career. He also spent a year focused almost entirely on training with the national team between high school and the military.

His arrival at Pomona-Pitzer added a new level of international experience to the program this season. Menkhoff has swum in 14 FINA Swimming World Cups and almost made the prestigious Commonwealth Games team. Singapore’s small population gave him opportunities he wouldn’t have had as an American.

“For me, it was a true privilege to be able to represent Singapore and swim on the world stage with Olympians and world-record holders, train alongside and converse with them, learn from them and even dine with them,” says Menkhoff, whose races for the national team as a teenager were sometimes televised.

After making Singapore’s national team at 14, Menkhoff had the opportunity at a young age to mingle with some of swimming’s stars, including Ian Thorpe and Michael Phelps. He also had a few Phelps moments while training at the North Baltimore Aquatic Club, Phelps’ home club, for several weeks one summer as a teenager.

Phelps approached him on the pool deck, complimenting Menkhoff’s freestyle stroke as “so long and smooth” and comparing it to Thorpe’s, with the whole interaction captured on video.

“So that was a surreal moment, but he also imparted a lot of great advice,” Menkhoff says, remembering how Phelps gave him some technique tips, told him never to quit and to always swim from the heart.

“Obviously I was dumbfounded by that whole interaction, but you realize that these swimming idols of yours are human beings and you’re able to converse at the same level as anyone else,” Menkhoff says.

A year later, Menkhoff was swimming in a World Cup meet in Singapore when Thorpe, the Australian Olympian, came out of retirement. “Same heat, four lanes down,” Menkhoff says.

Menkhoff knew mandatory military service awaited six months after high school, but scheduled an additional six-month deferment.

“In that year, I was a full-time swimmer, training with the national team, traveling the world, competing,” he says. “That was an incredible experience. I managed to squeeze in two internships in that period, but I was mostly swimming.”

The College Search

During his year in the military, Menkhoff also undertook what became an exhaustive and methodical college search. “It was quite remarkable how organized he was about his college search process,” says Jean-Paul Gowdy, the Pomona-Pitzer coach. “He was looking at schools in Britain and he was looking at schools in the U.S. He had a whole spreadsheet that he showed us after the fact.”

Menkhoff researched and communicated with dozens of universities. Yet Pomona College was the first he visited in the U.S., and Gowdy the first coach he met with. He considered Division I programs before learning his post-high school competitions would cost him a year of eligibility, and ultimately circled back to where he began with that first chat in Gowdy’s office.

He began to think, “Where is swimming in my life right now?” he recalls. “It’s not, certainly, my career. It has in many ways been keeping me back from finding myself and my true interests. I realized that the Division III setting is perfect for me, the best of both worlds. For me, deep down, within that four-month college search process, I knew Pomona was for me, and it was mostly the interaction I had with Coach Gowdy.”

Despite all his international experience, Menkhoff also benefitted from the presence of Hallman and To, two seniors who competed alongside him in the NCAA meet.

“In a lot of ways, Lukas is good for them; in a lot of ways, they’re very good for him,” Gowdy says.

For Menkhoff, it would seem, this is just the beginning.

Sports Update

Sagehens Claim All-Sports Trophy for Men’s Teams

Pomona-Pitzer claimed its first Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) All-Sports Trophy in 26 years last spring, taking the men’s trophy after winning four SCIAC championships.

On the women’s side, the Sagehens finished second to Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (CMS). CMS claimed the combined All-Sports Trophy in a closely contested battle with Pomona-Pitzer, finishing the year with a total of 159.5 points to the Sagehens’ 153.

“We knew we were having a strong year and to finish it like this is a huge step forward for our department,” said Director of Athletics Lesley Irvine.

On the men’s side, the 2017–18 Sagehens won SCIAC championships in cross country, swimming and diving, water polo and track and field.

The men’s cross country’s championship was Pomona-Pitzer’s first since 2005, and the men’s track and field team rose to the top of the SCIAC for the first time in 27 years. In Jordan Carpenter’s first year as head coach of both cross country and track and field, he took SCIAC Coaching Staff of the Year along with SCIAC Athlete of the Year in Andy Reischling ’19.

The men’s water polo team appeared in their second straight NCAA tournament with back-to-back SCIAC championships, finishing the year ranked No. 17 across all divisions. Head Coach Alex Rodriguez and his staff earned SCIAC Coaching Staff of the Year, and goalkeeper Daniel Diemer (Pitzer ’18) was named SCIAC Player of the Year.

Swimming and diving claimed the program’s first SCIAC championship with Athlete of the Year Mark Hallman ’18 and Newcomer of the Year Lukas Menkhoff ’21.

The women’s teams claimed two SCIAC championships. The women’s swim and dive team captured their second SCIAC championship in three seasons behind SCIAC Coach of the Year J.P. Gowdy and SCIAC Athlete of the Year Maddie Kauahi. The women’s water polo team won the SCIAC championship for the second year in a row and moved on to play in the opening round of the NCAA Tournament. Alex Rodriguez and his team finished the regular season undefeated in SCIAC play earning him SCIAC Coach of the Year along with SCIAC Athlete of the Year in Jocelyn Castro.

Picture This

Berto Gonzalez ’20 as Puck and Rieanna Duncan ’21 as 1st Fairy in Pomona College’s hip-hop-inspired, gender-bending production of Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream, directed by Carolyn Ratteray.

Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night's Dream

—Photo by Ian Poveda ’21

Citrus Roots

A well-dressed Claremont citrus grower poses among his trees in this undated photo from the Boynton Collection of Early Claremont, Honnold-Mudd Library.

A well-dressed Claremont citrus grower poses among his trees in this undated photo from the Boynton Collection of Early Claremont, Honnold-Mudd Library.

In 1888, the same year that an upstart college moved in, the town of Claremont planted its first citrus trees. At the time, gravel and shrubs dominated the unincorporated town in a region once inhabited by Native Americans of the Serrano tribe.

Twelve years later, Claremont’s 250 residents belonged to one of two camps—the College or the citrus industry.

Early 20th-century Claremont was a citrus boomtown, a battleground for countless brands and packinghouses. Until the mid-1930s, according to historian Richard Barker, citrus was one of California’s largest industries, second only to oil. Particularly in Claremont, “the economy was driven by citrus.” Once, Queen Victoria ordered a shipment of Claremont oranges for her birthday.

Citrus label image courtesy of the Claremont Heritage Archives

Citrus label image courtesy of the Claremont Heritage Archives

One packager, known as the College Heights Orange & Lemon Association, sold citrus under numerous names: “Athlete,” “College Heights,” “Umpire,” and “Collegiate.” A 1930s packing label for the Collegiate brand, pictured above, featured a vintage image of Pomona’s Mason Hall, along with the long-since demolished Harwood Hall for Botany, which once occupied the center of the Stanley Academic Quadrangle.

Many growers were members of the California Fruit Growers Exchange, founded in Claremont in 1893 under a different name. Membership soon exploded, and in 1952, the group formally adopted the name from their longtime advertising campaign—Sunkist.

Team Work

A Voice for Change

Alaina Woo ’17 onstage with NCAA President Mark Emmert

Alaina Woo ’17 onstage with NCAA President Mark Emmert

Alaina Woo ’17 stepped to the free-throw line hundreds of times during her basketball career with Pomona-Pitzer. But she had never stepped onto an athletic stage quite like the one at the NCAA Convention in January when she stood in front of nearly 3,000 of the movers and shakers of college sports for a one-on-one talk with association President Mark Emmert.

“It was a completely new experience for me,” says Woo, who appeared in her role as chair of the first NCAA Board of Governors’ Student-Athlete Engagement Committee, tasked with considering some of the crucial issues facing college sports—including the hot-button topic of how the NCAA addresses sexual violence.

“I felt prepared in the sense that I obviously was very familiar with the committee’s work and I had worked on the Commission to Combat Sexual Violence, which is why I was named chair,” Woo says. “But it’s completely different when you arrive in Indianapolis and see the giant place you’re going to be speaking. The NCAA helped me out by making it be more of a conversation with President Emmert, rather than me giving this giant speech looking out to a crowd.”

Among the points Woo made onstage: “I think it’s a rare opportunity for student-athletes to have that direct line to the Board of Governors. And like I said, I was a public policy major, and I’m surprised by how often people craft policies or make changes without engaging the people that they’re making the policies for.”

Woo’s role is seeking change from within the NCAA.

“There is so much more to be done,” she says. Citing recent news stories of mishandled cases of sexual violence in athletics and at NCAA institutions, Woo feels that athletics and higher education are a step behind. “Issues of sexual violence have plagued college campuses and athletics—both youth and collegiate—for years. It is imperative that the NCAA and other sport governing bodies continue to work on efforts to prevent sexual violence, support survivors and hold their memberships accountable.”

Basketball and Advocacy
Woo driving the baseline during a game

Woo driving the baseline during a game

Now in her first season as an assistant basketball coach at Tufts University while simultaneously working as a research assistant at the Harvard Kennedy School, Woo was deeply active in NCAA issues while at Pomona, where she is the Sagehens’ career leader in three-pointers. She also is ninth on Pomona-Pitzer’s career scoring list and was the team’s leading scorer as a senior.

Woo was still a first-year student when a teammate took her to a meeting of Pomona-Pitzer’s NCAA Student-Athlete Advisory Committee. That friend and Lisa Beckett, a professor of physical education and associate athletic director, encouraged Woo to get involved.

“They said, ‘If you’re interested in making athletics something where you can make a difference off the court, interested in community service, interested in leadership, you should definitely check this out.’”

By Woo’s sophomore year, Beckett—“a wonderful mentor,” Woo says—suggested applying for the NCAA Division III national Student-Athlete Advisory Committee.  Woo was selected and represented Pomona-Pitzer’s Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference and the Northwest Conference for a three-year term that ended in January. Among other roles, she also served on the NCAA Committee on Women’s Athletics for Divisions I, II and III.

“My interests really lie in women’s athletics and Title IX, advocacy for victims of sexual violence and underrepresented student athletes, so that was why I was chosen for those committees rather than a championship committee or something like that,” Woo says. “My interests were definitely inspired by being at Pomona, a liberal arts campus where there’s this sense to explore how something like athletics could make a difference.”

She hopes for further advances on sexual violence issues after the NCAA adopted a policy last year requiring coaches, athletes and administrators to complete education in sexual violence prevention each year.

The new sexual violence policy has been an opportunity for the NCAA to reflect on what its role is, she says.

“It seems ridiculous that someone who has a low GPA might not be eligible but someone who perpetrates sexual violence is eligible. These are the types of conversations we are now facilitating on a national level.”

Choosing a Goal

Woo’s work at the Harvard Kennedy School, where she is not enrolled as a graduate student but works part-time on a project called Participedia that seeks to crowdsource and map participatory political processes around the world, allows her to continue pursuing the policy interests she developed in her studies at Pomona with Politics Professor David Menefee-Libey.

At Tufts, a Division III women’s basketball power that has reached the NCAA title game the past two seasons, Woo got a foot in the door thanks to Pomona-Pitzer Coach Jill Pace, a former Tufts assistant coach.

Like a basketball player in position to pass, shoot or drive, Woo is something of a triple threat as she starts her career: She could continue coaching, pursue graduate work in public policy or possibly combine sports and advocacy as an athletic administrator.

“I’m still very on the fence,” she says.

“When I’m thinking about being a coach in college sports and mentoring young women, I’m thinking all about policies and politics and power and how to best advocate for my athletes or people in the athletic department who are struggling with things outside of athletics.

“It feels so connected. This work at the NCAA has really tied together my academic interests with my love and passion for the game of basketball.”

—Robyn Norwood

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FOOTBALL: A Hail-Mary Memory

Sagehen Highlights

Here are a few highlights from the 2017–18 seasons of Pomona-Pitzer Athletics.

FOOTBALL: A Hail-Mary Memory

For most Pomona-Pitzer fans, the crowning achievement of the year in sports happened at the very end of football season, in early November 2017, when the Sagehens won the 60th edition of the “Battle of Sixth Street” against the Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (CMS) Stags, 29–28. The game ended with an overtime, fourth-down, Hail-Mary pass from quarterback Karter Odermann ’20 that bounced off the helmet of a Stags defender before falling into the waiting arms of Kevin Masini ’18, followed by an equally heart-stopping two-point conversion reception by David Berkinsky ’19 to seal the victory. (In the photo above, Sagehen fans lift Berkinsky onto their shoulders.)

The football season was also marked by a series of team records. Aseal Birir ’18 set both the all-time career rushing record (3,859 yards) and the single-game rushing record (275 yards), and Evan Lloyd ’18 set an all-time record for career tackles with 275.

BASKETBALL

The men’s basketball team won 13 of their last 16 games to advance to the finals of the Southern California Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (SCIAC) tournament before losing to CMS. For the women’s team, Emma Godfrey ’21 was named SCIAC Newcomer of the Year after tallying at least 30 points in six games.

SWIMMING & DIVING

Both the men’s and the women’s teams won SCIAC championships,  the second in a row for the women and the first in program history for the men. Maddie Kauahi (PI ’19) won SCIAC Female Athlete of the Year; Mark Hallman ’18 was Male Athlete of the Year; and Lukas Menkhoff ’21 was Newcomer of the Year.

MEN’S WATER POLO

For the second straight season, the men’s water polo team claimed the SCIAC title both in the regular season and in the conference tournament. Daniel Diemer (PI’18) was SCIAC Player of the Year.

MEN’S CROSS COUNTRY

The men’s cross country team won its first SCIAC title since 2005 and finished sixth at the NCAA Championships.

THE SAGEHEN NIKE STORE

Sagehen apparel is now available from the Sagehen Nike Store.

Nike Store