Pomona Today

“Here, Let Me Show You…”

David Haley working with electronicsIf you are ever offered a tour of the new Millikan Laboratory and Andrew Science Hall with David Haley as your guide, take it. A 21-year veteran of physics departments, he has an enthusiasm for his subject that is nonstop and infectious. Completely at ease in the corridors of Millikan’s new underground laboratory, he misses no opportunity to point out the fascinating creations of Pomona students and faculty.

“This one is a sonoluminescence project,” he says, referring to one of the many capstone projects he’s kept over the years. “It uses sound to compress a bubble, which produces light. And this—” He gestures to a nearby rolling chair contraption. “—Is a fire-extinguisher-propelled rocket cart. You sit on it and you squeeze the handle and you launch yourself down the hall. It’s for talking about Newton’s laws.” Before exiting a workroom, he pauses to flick on a homemade air hockey table, explaining: “I’m trying to convince one of the students to create 3D shapes that we can print and use to teach conservation of momentum.”

Haley, who has been working at Pomona since the summer of 2001, describes himself as a “physics roadie.” As the senior lab technician of the Physics Department, he is primarily responsible for handling the equipment for labs and the lecture demonstrations, in addition to supporting faculty research and student projects. “One of the nuances of my job is making the process more streamlined and straightforward for students, so they’re less worried about how things work and more focused on the concepts behind the lab,” he explains. “If I do my job right, you’ll rarely know I was there.”

Haley graduated with a B.S. in physics from Kansas State University, after which he spent seven years working as a lab technician at New Mexico State University before moving to California. Luckily for Pomona, he was informed of the open position by chance, after contacting a former coworker who happened to attend the same summer meeting of the Physics Instructional Resource Association (PIRA) as Pomona Professor of Physics David Tanenbaum. “I didn’t really realize the caliber of Pomona when I first got the job,” Haley confesses. “It was just a name to me. But once I started working here, I realized what a special place this is. It makes me believe in karma.”

If good karma is a reward for good deeds, Haley deserves a lot of it. He recently gave a presentation to the Southern California chapter of the American Association of Physics Teachers (AAPT) detailing the Pomona College Lending Library of physics equipment, which he manages. Composed of experiments ranging from electricity and magnetism to mechanics to superconductivity, the library serves physics teachers from around Southern California, who can request to borrow experiment kits for their lessons once they’ve attended a Pomona faculty-run workshop. “This is part of Pomona College’s mission,” says Haley. “We’re obligated as educators to help teach not only our students here at Pomona, but the general populace. I like that I can use what I do, and the equipment I have, to get people interested in science and the world around them.”

Since Haley is an enthusiast for science in general, you’d think choosing to focus in only one field would have been tough for him, but this isn’t the case. “I like the applied nature of physics,” he says. “The world is a very beautiful place, and I want to understand it better. Why do objects have mass? Why is there gravity? The more evidence you get to support a theory, the more you believe it’s accurate, but you can never really take it as truth. But that’s what I like about physics. It’s always a reiteration.”

And yet despite the reiteration, Haley’s job is never boring. Particularly exciting for him was the opportunity to use his many years of experience to help design the new science building. The Physics and Astronomy Department seized the opportunity to reorganize their space, implementing prep rooms between labs and behind lecture classrooms.

His favorite parts of the building also include the new student research project space, which was absent in the old Millikan. And new perks of the job include selecting items for Millikan’s first-floor display case. Haley is eager to point them all out: “These are Lichtenberg’s figures; they’re basically electric sparks encased in acrylic. This is a laser-etched glass figurine. This is the Milky Way galaxy, and this is a large-scale galactic structure. Those are some of our antique Gessler tubes from the 1920s. Those are all meteorites. And here’s a 3D-printed figurine of a student wearing a hat.”

Below ground again, as Haley enthusiastically indicates each of the projects that live in the basement of Millikan, he tells the stories of their creators. The student who created a rail gun as his senior thesis is now working at Los Alamos. Another student started his own software company.

Haley keeps all of his thank-you notes in a special place of honor on his desk. Smiling to himself as he goes through each one, he remarks, “It’s easy to come to work when you have things like this. To work with people like this is amazing. Plus, I get to play with soap bubbles and Tesla coils and shoot balls across the room. It’s really—can you see the colors in the film now?”

He gestures toward his workbench, where he has set up an old junior project, a soap film encased in a clear box. “The colors have to do with the thickness of the film. It’s an interference of light demonstration, pretty much the same idea as an oil slick on water.

“Here—let me show you.”

88 Years Ago

Photo of the Marjorie Maude Bell ’28 Scrapbook from the Pomona College Archives

Click for larger version

ITEMThe Marjorie Maude Bell ’28 Scrapbook
DATE1924–1928
COLLECTIONOne of 37 scrapbooks currently in the Pomona College Archives collection, ranging from the Class of 1901 to the Class of 1972.
DESCRIPTION240-page scrapbook (12” X 9” X 6”), jammed with pasted-in invitations, dance cards with attached pencils, tickets, programs, clippings and other memorabilia from Southern California college life in the 1920s.
ORIGINThe scrapbook was donated by Karen McDaniel, Ms.Bell’s niece, who explained: “She graduated in 1928, and her brother Gilbert Clyde Bell, (my grandfather) graduatedin 1927. She was a very involved student: secretary of her senior class, president of Phi Kappa Sigma literary society,sorority sister of Alpha Chi Omega, among other positions.”
If you have an item from Pomona’s history that you’d like tosee preserved in the Archives, please call 909-621-8138.

Not Your Ordinary Help Desk

Photo of Melanie Sisneros ’94 at her workstation

IF YOU WANT a sneak peek into the personality of Pomona’s Desktop Support Specialist Melanie Sisneros ’94, you might start by visiting her workstation.

Clustered in rows that fan out across every surface are dolls, toys and figurines—a stuffed Fix-It-Felix Jr. plush can be spotted alongside Cruella DeVille. Harry Potter posters paper the walls above her wildly colorful desk.

“I had to downsize when I moved from my old office,” says Sisneros. She points out several well-dressed Bratzillas and explains their rivalry with Monster High dolls.

Also surrounding her work area are boxes and boxes of the latest Apple computers, waiting to be opened and tested. Sisneros is as serious about her work as she is about staying true to herself. A member of the Class of 1994, Sisneros has been working for ITS since she first began work study at Pomona.

“The first job application somebody handed me was for the computer center,” she recalls. “I didn’t know anything about computers, but I needed to fulfill my work study, and it was a job application.”

If you had asked that younger Sisneros whether she thought her career would involve computers, she’d have laughed. “I hated computers when I was little!” she exclaims. “We had this horrible Tandy 1000 RadioShack-brand piece of junk that I could never get to work right. When I got to college, I was quite surprised that I ended up liking computers.” She attributes this interest in part to the late Professor of Psychology William Banks, who was responsible for the acquisition of Sisneros’s first computer of her own, an all-in-one black-and-white Mac with a power supply problem. “That’s when I really started to play and discover,” she recalls.

Sisneros’s method of discovery was entirely her own. “My high school job was working at Long John Silver’s, a fish shop, where I started drawing a comic strip about these little cartoon fish,” she explains. “So once I discovered SuperPaint, an illustration software on my Mac, I started making it on the computer instead. I would print it out and tape it on the door of my dorm room, and people would walk by and read the latest installment.”

Sisneros took to working with computers like one of her cartoon fish to cartoon water. She worked for ITS for four years as an undergraduate before accepting a post-graduation internship, which she held for several years before being hired full-time.

Now, she works as part of ITS’s six-person Client Services team, where her job includes providing desktop support for several academic departments. One of these is the Department of Classics, in which Sisneros was a major. “I’ve always felt that at liberal arts colleges, you learn how to think,” she says. “Regardless of what you study, you learn how to look at things critically. I use that training every day in doing IT support.”

Sisneros spends a big part of her day answering the phone at the ITS service desk, taking walk-ins and responding to help requests submitted through the College website. Much of her job consists of configuring computers, which can either mean connecting remotely or taking time to visit the offices of professors and administrators across campus.

In Sisneros’s eyes, technology is just a tool. One of the joys of her job, she says, is helping users understand the tools at their disposal and match them to their needs. She recalls a brief stint at Computer City in the mid-’90s, where customers would come to her for help “learning computers.”

“What does that mean?” she laughs. “You don’t ‘learn computers;’ you use them for something. I don’t want to learn vacuum cleaners. I want to clean my floor.”

However, what keeps Sisneros excited about her job isn’t just her love of technology and of helping others fit it to their individual needs. “People have jobs where they’re in a rut, day in and day out,” she says. “For me, every phone call is something new. Every person that walks up to the desk brings a new challenge, a new problem to solve. There are new versions of software, new viruses to fix, new everything.”

Pomona-Pitzer Cracks Top 50 in Director’s Cup Rankings

For the first time in almost 20 years, Pomona-Pitzer Athletics reclaimed its spot in the top 50 nationally in the 2014–15 Learfield Sports Director’s Cup.

Directors' Cup Logo

The Sagehens ranked 49th nationally (out of 332 NCAA Division III institutions) jumping from 63rd last year and 117th in 2012-13 and placing them second among SCIAC institutions. It is the highest finish for Pomona-Pitzer Athletics in the Director’s Cup standings since a 33rd-place finish in 1996–97.

Sponsored by the National Association of Collegiate Directors of Athletics (NACDA), the Director’s Cup is a program that honors institutions maintaining a broad-based program and achieving success in many sports, both men’s and women’s. The standings are calculated via a points system based on how teams finish in their national tournaments.

Pomona-Pitzer had a successful academic year from start to finish, with five teams, as well as numerous individuals, qualifying for the NCAA Championships.

In the fall, men’s soccer won the SCIAC Postseason Tournament to advance to the NCAA Division III Championship for the first time since 1980. Men’s cross country earned a team qualification to the nationals for the third year in a row, by taking a second-place finish in the NCAA West Regionals, and ended in 17th place, the team’s highest finish since 1982. Maya Weigel ’17, meanwhile, earned All-America honors for the women’s cross country team with a 22nd place finish, after claiming first place at the West Regionals.

The winter saw a strong season from the men’s and women’s swimming and diving teams, which both finished second in the SCIAC and had national qualifiers. In his first year, Mark Hallman ’18 earned All-America honors by qualifying for the finals in the 200-yard freestyle. For the women’s swimming and diving team, the 800-yard freestyle relay team of Vicky Gyorffy ’15, Maki Tohmon ’17, Kelsey Thomas ’18 and Victoria Vanderpoel ’18 earned All-America honors as well.

The Sagehens made their biggest leap in Director’s Cup standings during the spring semester, thanks to three teams that advanced to the round of 16 in the NCAA Division III tournaments.

Women’s lacrosse reached the round of 16 with its first-ever NCAA tournament win, defeating SCIAC rival Occidental at home after winning its first-ever SCIAC title by four games. Men’s and women’s tennis both moved on to the NCAA Regional Finals in May after earning top-10 rankings in the regular season, with the men reaching as high as third and the women as high as seventh. Men’s tennis defeated Texas-Tyler in the regional semifinals to reach the round of 16, while women’s tennis earned a win over Whitman. In addition, Connor Hudson ’15 qualified for the NCAA Division III Championships both in singles and in doubles after he and doubles partner Kalyan Chadalavada ‘18 reached the finals of the ITA Small College nationals in the fall, earning All-America honors. On the women’s side, Lea Lynn Yen ’16 and Grace Hruska ’18 qualified for the NCAA Championships in doubles.

Women’s water polo, which is not calculated in the Director’s Cup standings due to the small number of participating teams, added to the spring success for Pomona-Pitzer by tying for the SCIAC title with a 10-1 league record, the fourth year in a row that it has earned at least a share of the conference crown.

In addition to team successes in the spring, Weigel completed a fall-spring All-America sweep by finishing in seventh place nationally in the 800 meters for the women’s track and field team, while John Fowler ‘16 earned a top-10 finish (ninth) in the 5,000 meters. Tiffany Gu ’16 also earned a national qualification for the women’s golf team, finishing 30th out of 110 at the NCAA Division III Championships.

The late push in the spring enabled the Sagehens to pass Redlands (56th place) among SCIAC schools.

Champion Times Nine

Photo of Vicky Gyorffy ’15 diving into the pool

A FAMILIAR CLICHÉ for highly successful athletes is that they may need bigger mantelpieces to hold their many trophies. Vicky Gyorffy ’15 may need an extra fireplace.

As a member of the women’s swimming and diving and women’s waterpolo teams, Gyorffy was a part of nine SCIAC Championships. Her 800-yard freestyle relay team took first at the SCIAC Championships three years in a row. As an individual, she swept the 100- and 200-yard freestyle events in her senior year. Meanwhile, her women’s water polo team won at least a share of the SCIAC title in all four of her seasons.

And that’s not all. Gyorffy also advanced to the NCAA Division III Women’s Swimming and Diving Championships in 2014 and 2015, earning honorable-mention All-America honors, and she was an honorable mention All-America selection in water polo, while helping the Sagehens to the NCAA Championships in 2012 and 2013.

It is easy to see how Gyorffy got hooked on water sports. Her older sisters were swimmers and water polo players in high school, with Janelle graduating from Pomona in 2009 after playing both sports and Rachele graduating from Princeton in 2013 after focusing solely on water polo. Both competed in the NCAA Women’s Water Polo Championships in 2012 and 2013.

With a strong background in aquatic sports, and from a high-achieving family academically, Gyorffy had a lot of options, but ended up following in Janelle’s footsteps at Pomona, although sports wasn’t a major part of her decision.

“I wasn’t even sure I wanted to compete in sports in college, which is sort of ironic since I ended up competing in two of them,” she says. “I was just looking for a small school that was great academically, and I didn’t want to be too close to home. I think Janelle probably convinced me that the 5C environment was unique and that choosing Division III sports was a nice way to go. It’s really competitive, but not the super-intense environment than larger schools can be.”

In addition to all the athletic championships, Gyorffy has prospered academically, graduating in May as an economics major with a computer science minor. In 2014, she had a unique chance for a summer internship at Twitter headquarters working with the Girls Who Code immersion program, a six-week course in which she taught computer programming to high school girls.

“The Girls Who Code internship came about through the [Career Development Office’s] Claremont Connect program,” says Gyorffy. “Pomona was amazing, the way they helped fund that internship and make it a reality. The internship only offered a small stipend and the Bay Area is expensive, so I don’t think I could have done it without Pomona’s assistance.”

Gyorffy will start a full-time job next year as a tech consultant with a software company, which will allow her to apply both her economics degree and her passion for technology. “The job is sort of a hybrid between the business side and the software side. You need a tech background, but you can act as sort of a bridge between the software developers and the clients.”

Some people find balancing one sport and academics to be difficult. Gyorffy competed in two sports, which overlapped in the spring, and still achieved great things in the classroom. But she insists it wasn’t as challenging as it seems.

“Balancing academics and athletics wasn’t too difficult,” she says. “I like being busy and doing different things, and the coaches are great here at allowing you to focus on your academics first. What was difficult was balancing the overlap between swimming and water polo, especially the last couple of years. Going to nationals in swimming extended the winter a little more.”

The time spent swimming paid dividends her senior year with her 100-200 sweep at the SCIAC Championships. “I think this year I just wanted to get on the podium really badly, since it was my last chance, and I ended up winning. I think winning the 200 may have been my favorite moment of my athletics career, since I wasn’t expecting it.”

She won the 200 by just four-hundredths of a second, as she finished in 1:53.77, almost a second and a half ahead of her finals time from a year before. The next day, she added a more comfortable win (by 2/3 of a second) in the 100 with a time of 52.67, a full second faster than a year prior.

Gyorffy had a storybook ending to her swimming season, but she ended her water polo career with the opposite feeling. After winning the SCIAC title outright their first three seasons, she and her six classmates all had visions of making it four in a row and returning to the NCAA Championships. But after going undefeated in the SCIAC during the regular season, they were upset in the finals of the SCIAC Tournament by Whittier 7–6. The two teams were officially co-champions, but the loss brought Pomona-Pitzer’s season to a premature end.

“Of course, we were all disappointed, but we are not going to think of one game when we look back,” she says. “It’s going to be all about the journey of the whole four years. Maybe it wasn’t the storybook ending we had hoped for, but we’ve been on the other side of those close games many times, so maybe it was only fair that it came back around.

“For me personally,” she says, “I think losing one maybe makes me appreciate the three we did win even more now. It’s hard to win a championship, and a lot of athletes give it their all and never get the chance to experience it.”

Much less nine times.

Little Bridges at 100

Professor Graydon Beeks ’69

BRIDGES HALL OF MUSIC—Pomona’s signature building that turns 100 this year—has been a part of my life for half of that span, since I first arrived on campus as  a freshman in the fall of 1965.

Photo of Bridges Hall of Music

Bridges Hall of Music

In the days before the construction of the Thatcher Music Building, the College Choir rehearsed in the hall daily during the lunch hour; the Band rehearsed on Monday and Wednesday afternoons; the Orchestra and the Men’s and Women’s Glee Clubs rehearsed in the evenings. Large classes were also scheduled there, and I remember taking Professor Karl Kohn’s Music 54 in Bridges during my second semester. The College Church, in whose choir I also sang, met there on Sunday mornings, and I took organ lessons from “Doc” Blanchard on the Moeller Organ. And, of course, all concerts were given there.

Photo of Professor Graydon Beeks ’69

Professor Graydon Beeks ’69 recalls singing with the Choir at the 50th anniversary of Little Bridges in 1966. A member of the music faculty since 1983, Beeks has also served as building manager since 1984.

My freshman year witnessed the celebration of the 50th anniversary of the opening of Little Bridges, which culminated in a performance of Mozart’s Requiem, K626 by the Choir and Orchestra. I did not realize the significance of this celebration at the time, even though there is a note about it in the program. I remember the event mainly as one of the last concerts conducted by Professor Kenneth Fiske, the conductor of the orchestra since 1936, before his retirement the following year.

Over the next four years I attended or participated in innumerable rehearsals, concerts, classes and church services in Little Bridges, but in many ways the most remarkable event was the appearance of “The Web.” This was an intricate assemblage of thin wire strung between the railings of the balcony by a number of students—many of them my classmates—working in secret during the wee hours of the morning and sprung on an unsuspecting public. Professor William F. Russell, the long-serving choir and band director and chair of the Music Department, had an impish sense of humor himself and was pleased with the ingenuity and execution of the project. Since it seemed to improve the acoustics of the hall, it was left in place for some time, until it collected a substantial amount of dust and the wire began to break, at which point it was removed.

Shortly after I graduated in June 1969, a report on the state of College buildings that was prepared for President David Alexander during his first months in office revealed that Bridges Hall of Music did not meet current standards with regard to earthquake safety, and the building was closed. Thought was apparently given to demolition because of the anticipated cost of bringing the building up to code. Fortunately, Trustee Morris Pendleton was able to find the original plans and discovered that the building was built well above code in 1915, reducing the cost of retrofitting by a substantial amount. The funds were raised in 90 days, primarily from loyal alumni, many of whom had been married in the hall; their names are preserved on large panels in the lobby and on small plaques attached to the bench seats.

 Photo of Professor Tom Flaherty and his wife Cynthia Fogg performing at Little Bridges

Professor Tom Flaherty (here performing with his wife Cynthia Fogg), has composed dozens of pieces to be performed at Little Bridges, including “Millenium Bridges” a crowd-participation piece written to celebrate the reopening after the 2000–01 renovation.

In addition to seismic retrofitting, acoustical work was done to increase reverberation and prevent the loss of bass frequencies. The stage was enlarged to better accommodate collaborations by the Choir and Orchestra, which had become an annual feature since 1962. A loading dock was added on the west side, eliminating the need to load pianos and other large instruments via a temporary ramp. The hall also gained air conditioning, a new lighting system and new chairs on the main floor.

This was the state of Little Bridges when I returned to Claremont in 1981 and resumed playing in the Band and singing in the Choir. In 1983, I was hired to conduct the Band, and the next year I also took over the supervision of the scheduling and maintenance of the Music Department facilities, including Little Bridges, which I have continued to do until the present.

Many things had changed while I was away. The College Church was no more, and classes were no longer held in Little Bridges. Because of the installation of air conditioning and the threat of vandalism to valuable instruments, the building was no longer left unlocked in the daytime. The Choir and Glee Clubs now rehearsed in Lyman Hall, the smaller auditorium in the new Thatcher Music Building, and the instrumental ensembles, which now included a Jazz Band, rehearsed in Bryant Hall (although the Orchestra and the Concert Band were soon to move back to Little Bridges for evening rehearsals). Most of the student ensembles continued to perform in Little Bridges, and their number was increased in 1993 with the addition of a Javanese Gamelan, using rented instruments, followed in 1995 by the acquisition of the College’s own Balinese Gamelan, “Giri Kusuma” (“Flower Mountain”).

 Photo of composer and Professor Emeritus Karl Kohn and his wife, Margaret Kohn, in Little Bridges

Noted composer and Professor Emeritus Karl Kohn and his wife, Margaret Kohn, came to Pomona in 1950 and gave their first two-piano recital in Little Bridges 65 years ago.

Convocations were now held in Little Bridges rather than Big Bridges, but overall, fewer students had extensive contact with the building, and the number of alumni weddings steadily declined. Finally, most organ practice and performance had moved to the new von Beckerath instrument in Lyman Hall, and despite some reconfiguration in the 1970s and re-leathering in the 1980s, the organ in Little Bridges was beginning to show its age.

There have been many distinguished concerts in Little Bridges in the years since my return to Claremont, but what stands out most clearly in my mind are the concerts related to the celebration of the College’s Centennial in 1987–88. These included performances of newly composed works by Pomona College alumni and a performance by the Pomona College Choir and Orchestra of the Requiem by Maurice Duruflé and of a new work, “To the Young,” commissioned from Pomona alumnus Vladimir Ussachevsky ’35, who had also written the work commissioned to celebrate the College’s 50th anniversary. The Centennial concert was conducted by distinguished alumnus Robert Shaw ’38 and featured Professor Gwendolyn Lytle as soprano soloist.

Professor and College Organist William Peterson

Professor and College Organist William Peterson oversaw the installation of the C.B. Fisk pipe organ, in 2000–01 as part of a full renovation. The instrument has 3,519 pipes ranging from a half-inch to 32 feet long.

I would argue that the single most important event to take place during my 32 years on the Music faculty was the installation of the Hill Memorial Organ, built by C.B. Fisk of Gloucester, Mass., as part of another renovation in 2000–01. This project, spearheaded by College Organist William Peterson, required many years of detailed planning. It involved extensive acoustic alterations, including a quieter air conditioning system and the installation of mass above the ceiling to prevent sound from escaping into the attic (where some enterprising students used to go to listen to concerts). The addition of wings on either side of the building allowed for the installation of an elevator, an accessible restroom and additional storage. The repositioning of air conditioning ducts made it possible to remove some walls added in 1970 and reopen four windows that had been closed off at that time, while the ingenuity of the architect permitted the addition of musician’s galleries above both sides of the stage. Finally, the imaginative design of the new organ case maintains several significant aspects of the original case. All these things, taken together, mean that the current configuration of Little Bridges actually resembles more closely the interior layout of the hall as originally designed by Myron Hunt, while also incorporating the improvements made in 1970 and 2000.

It has been a great privilege for me to work in Little Bridges for what has now been just over half my life. I have appeared on the stage as a conductor, singer, percussionist and harpsichord player. In the course of facilitating appearances by others, I have also made appearances as an announcer, a gaffer, an audio engineer, a lighting technician and a caretaker—jobs that are generally done these days by far more qualified people. In the early years, the light settings would occasionally change of their own accord—sometimes during concerts—and we attributed this to the ghost of Mabel Shaw Bridges 1908. Her ghost has not been as active in recent years, and I hope that is because she is happy about the current state of the hall and the way the College maintains and uses this gift that her parents provided in her memory just over a hundred years ago. I hope to have the opportunity to oversee that legacy for a few more years.

Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, Author of Americanah

Chimamanda large files 2014 42s3

“People sometimes say, ‘You’re an African writer; you’re a Nigerian writer.’ And in their minds, they have an idea about what that should be and what you should write. So it becomes a very prescriptive kind of label—which I don’t like very much. … So I don’t mind being called that so long as it’s not a prescriptive label and so long as that label has room for many other labels, because I am a Nigerian writer, quite happily; I’m an African writer; I’m an Igbo writer; I’m a Black writer; I’m a feminist writer. I’m all of those things.”

Adichie, the author of Americanah, which was selected as the common-reading book for Pomona’s incoming class of 2018, visited Pomona in early October 2014, meeting with students, visiting classes and reading from her work in a public event at Bridges Auditorium. Above center, she poses with a group of students following a discussion at Smith Campus Center. —Photo by Carrie Rosema

How to Become a Role Model for Women in Math

Ami Radunskaya math professor 2014 17

AS A LONG-TIME LEADER of EDGE (Enhancing Diversity in Graduate Education), Pomona College Professor of Mathematics Ami Radunskaya says she tries to instill some of her own innate stubbornness in young women seeking higher degrees in math. EDGE, founded in 1998, is a national mentoring program and summer workshop designed to encourage female mathematicians —particularly those from underrepresented groups—to persist in graduate study of math. Radunskaya was a member of the original EDGE faculty and has served as an instructor, mentor and organizer ever since its inception. Currently, Radunskaya is featured in the documentary film, The Empowerment Project, about “ordinary women doing extraordinary things.” Here’s how she became a role model for young women everywhere who are trying to build a career in mathematics.

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Discover math as a toddler. At age 4, do math problems for fun and amuse guests at cocktail parties by showing your prowess in adding and subtracting. When challenged by your father, a professor of economics at UC Berkeley, with a tricky subtraction problem, invent negative numbers to solve it.

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Start playing cello at age 9. Form a trio with your siblings (who play violin and piano) and play your first paying gig at the Martinez Music Forum, earning $5 each. Graduate from high school at 16, skip college and immediately join the Oakland Symphony. Quit the symphony at age 23 to compose and perform more experimental music.

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Start college at UC Berkeley after taking your son on two European tours before the age of 6 months and realizing that was no life for an infant. Try chemistry and computer science, but gravitate back to your first love—math. Find two mentors on the faculty, one a talented but untenured woman, the other a man who won a MacArthur Fellowship for a program that helps students from underrepresented groups overcome sociological barriers.

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See your woman mentor denied tenure. Watch as she challenges the decision in court and wins. Be infuriated by the sexist attitude of some of the faculty. Decide to go to Stanford for graduate school. Create a program there based on the one your second mentor pioneered and win the Gores Award for Excellence in Teaching.

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Find out you’re the only woman in the Math Department when you begin your post-doc at Rice University. Start a group called Woman Math Warriors to make women in math more visible by sponsoring talks by top woman mathematicians. Meet lots of amazing women in the field. Leave after three years to join the Pomona faculty in 1994.

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Join the original faculty of EDGE to encourage female mathematicians to persist in graduate school. Take over co-leadership when the founders retire. Take pride in the program’s success in retaining women in math (current total of 56 PhDs and 90 master’s degrees, with many of the 200 participants still in the grad school pipeline).

Sports: Bank Shots

AT ONE POINT during the 2013-14 season, an opposing men’s basketball coach visiting Voelkel Gymnasium was a little frustrated with the way his day was going and needed a sympathetic ear. The kyle-mcandrews-basketballclosest people to his bench were working the scorer’s table, so during a dead ball, he turned and started an impromptu conversation.

“Holy (bleep), McAndrews is good,” he said. “Has anyone stopped him? Because we sure can’t.”

While his question was rhetorical, the answer has mostly been no. A first-team All-SCIAC selection, Kyle McAndrews ’15 already had over 1,000 points in his Pomona-Pitzer career (1,023) heading into his senior year, averaging 17.8 as a junior. He is also an Academic All-District winner and strong All-America candidate this year with a lofty GPA as a dual major in mathematics and economics.

As a result of his success in the classroom at Pomona, he earned an internship opportunity at J.P. Morgan in San Francisco last summer, and will begin full-time work there as an investment banking analyst after graduation. He’s the rare college basketball player who already signed his pro contract before his senior season, and with no need for the NCAA to start asking questions.

In fact, there were several investment banking firms interested in McAndrews, who missed a couple of practices last winter to fly to San Francisco for interviews. It was almost like going through the recruiting process all over again. However, McAndrews is quick to point out the flaw in the parallel. “For these interviews, you have to try to convince them to hire you,” he laughs. “During the recruiting process, the coaches already want you and just try to win you over. It’s safe to say that my interview with Coach Kat [Head Coach Charles Katisiaficas] was a little less intense.”

As a standout basketball player at Lakeside School in Seattle, McAndrews was intrigued by Pomona almost from the start of the college application process. Several other Lakeside students had recently attended Pomona and had successful experiences in sports and in the classroom, including Academic All-American football players James Lambert ’12 and Duncan Hussey ’13, and women’s soccer captain Charlotte Fisken ’14, among others.

“I knew Pomona was a great school and it seemed like an ideal fit,” he says. “The biggest thing that convinced me to come here was just the visit and spending time with the guys on the team. I also visited during one of the games against CMS so I got to see what the rivalry was like.”

If the recruiting visit didn’t give him a full sense of the intensity of the Pomona-Pitzer vs. Claremont-Mudd-Scripps rivalry, his freshman year drove the point home. In the first meeting in front of an overflow crowd in Voelkel Gymnasium, the Sagehens tied the score with six seconds left, only to see CMS drive coast-to-coast for a winning buzzer-beater in a crazy swing of momentum.

In the rematch, the Sagehens were down by two after a CMS three-pointer with 10 seconds left, when McAndrews was fouled shooting a three-pointer with just 0.4 seconds showing on the clock. With Ducey Gymnasium going bonkers trying to distract him, McAndrews stepped to the line for three pressure-packed shots, and buried all three to give Pomona-Pitzer the one-point win.

“It was pretty loud in there,” McAndrews laughs. “When the whistle blew, I was just glad to get the chance to step to the line in that situation since the game was over otherwise. Then the noise started building and it got really intense. I was just happy to help us get the win.”

The clutch performance was a harbinger of things to come. In the SCIAC semifinals against Whittier as a freshman, McAndrews scored 18 of his 22 points to carry the Sagehens to a 60–53 win after trailing by five at the half. As a sophomore, he hit a tying three-pointer with 20 seconds left in an 81–79 win over Westmont, while last year, he hit several big shots in a double-overtime win over Chapman, including a jumper and a three-pointer in the last 30 seconds of regulation and a three-point play with 12 seconds left in the first overtime, all with the Sagehens trailing.

He also had 15 of his 18 points in the second half of a home win over CMS after breaking a scoreless drought with a first-half buzzer-beater from three-point territory. He broke out his full arsenal of scoring weapons late in the second half to help put it away—step backs, pull-ups, crossovers, drives to the rim through traffic, etc.

According to Katsiaficas, McAndrews arrived at Pomona-Pitzer with many of those scoring gifts, but has worked exceptionally hard at becoming a complete player. “Kyle has an aggressive scoring mentality that is difficult to find anywhere at this level,” says Katsiaficas, who puts McAndrews on the short list of the top four or five guards he has coached in 27 years. “Where he has really added to his game is expanding his range out to the three-point line and improving as a passer. He’s so much tougher to guard now             because you can’t afford to play off him, and it’s hard to run a double team at him.”

McAndrews says the process of developing that added range was a difficult one. “After my freshman year, I made a structural change to my jump shot,” he says. “It required taking a couple of steps backwards to move forward. It was frustrating for a while, but fortunately I had good coaching to help me through it,    and most of the frustration was during the off-season.”

That same work ethic has helped him succeed in the classroom. He also credits the culture in the athletic program for making it doable. “We have a great atmosphere here, where our coaches and teammates all buy in to the philosophy that academics come first,” he says. “If you have a lab, you go to the lab; if you have class, you leave practice early. When I had my interviews last year and had to miss practice time, it wasn’t ideal, but everyone was 100 percent supportive.”

McAndrews had another big effort in the SCIAC semifinals last year, scoring 26 points against Chapman, but the team came up short and did not get an at-large bid to the NCAA Tournament. The only things missing from his resumé are a SCIAC title and an NCAA bid.

“That’s the big goal,” he says. “That’s everything to me. We have a really good chance to make this a special season with the guys we have coming back and the young guys we have who are ready to step in and play right away. We’re just going in with the attitude that we need to work hard at getting better every day and hopefully have it be our year. We’d love to put 2015 on a banner.”

—Jeremy Kniffin

A Sampling of Fall Events

THEATRE:

The World Premiere of “Kitimat”fall-events

8 p.m. April 9–11 and 2 p.m., April 11–12, Seaver Theatre (300 E. Bonita Ave.)

Commissioned by the Theatre Dept. and the Mellon Elemental Arts Initiative, “Kitimat” is a new play by Elaine Avila based on true events in Kitimat, British Columbia, an industry town in the Canadian wilderness that found itself at the center of an international controversy when asked to vote “yes” or “no” on an upcoming pipeline project.

 

LECTURE SERIES

53rd Robbins Lecture Series: Nobel Prize-winning geneticist Jack Szostak

March 2–4, Seaver North Auditorium (645 N. College Ave.)

Professor Jack Szostak of Harvard Medical School, winner of the 2009 Nobel Prize in Medicine or Physiology, will give four lectures on the biochemical origins of life on Earth:

  • “The Origins of Cellular Life”—8 p.m., March 2
  • “Synthesis of the Building Blocks of Life on the Early Earth”—11 a.m., March 3
  • “RNA Replication Before Enzymes”—4:30 p.m., March 3
  • “Primitive Cell Membranes and the Assembly of the First Cells”—4:30 p.m., March 4

 

MUSIC:

Pomona College Choir & Orchestra in Concert

8 p.m. April 17 & 3 p.m. April 19, Bridges Hall of Music (150 E. 4th Street)

This concert by the Pomona College Choir (Donna M. Di Grazia, conductor) and the Pomona College Orchestra (Eric Lindholm, conductor) will feature Fauré’s “Pavane” and “Les Djinns” and Mozart’s “Mass in C Minor, K 427.”

 

EXHIBITION:

PAGES: Mirella Bentivoglio, Selected Works 1966–2012

Through May 17, Pomona College Museum of Art (330 N. College Ave.)

This exhibition of more than 60 works—prints, photographs, sculpture, video—traces the Italian artist’s engagement over almost 50 years with the concept of the “page.”