鶹Ӱ

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LEADERSHIP

President Peter Stanley

Pomona’s eighth president, Peter W. Stanley, came to the College from The Ford Foundation, where he had been director of the education and culture programs for the past seven years. Inaugurated in 1991 as the College’s eighth president, Stanley was, from the outset, sensitive to the role of the physical campus, an awareness that reflected, in part, the concern for heritage and regional identity fundamental to the ongoing nationwide historic preservation movement. In his inaugural address, Stanley noted the need for a campus center and pledged to see this goal realized. Dedicated in 1999, the Smith Campus Center was the most ambitious of the three important new building projects of Stanley’s tenure (the others being the Hahn and Andrew buildings) and one whose impact on the daily life of the Pomona community is particularly significant. Equally important, the building has, through its design, recaptured the spirit of Myron Hunt’s 1908 campus plan, opening north-south axes across Marston Quadrangle to Mabel Shaw Bridges Hall of Music and Sumner Hall, and creating an east-west corridor from Mason Hall to Rains Center.

The period of President Peter Stanley’s tenure was remarkable for the significance of the new buildings constructed and, equally, for the number, quality, and extent of renovations of older structures. That Pomona’s campus today bears a closer relationship to its historical roots than has been the case for many years is a tribute to the sensitivity with which new buildings have been designed and older ones restored to former glory while, at the same time, being upgraded to meet contemporary needs.

The growth of the campus during this period was closely tied to that of the endowment, which doubled between 1996 and 2002, ultimately exceeding $1 billion. This unprecedented increase was due in great part to The Campaign for 鶹Ӱ, endorsed in 1995. When formally launched in 1997, more than a third of the ultimate goal of $150 million was already in hand; by 2002, the campaign concluded 37 percent above its initial goal, having raised over $206 million and significantly met every program objective. A similarly impressive record was set in terms of applications for admission, which had set new highs in each of the five preceding years, as had levels of academic achievement of those admitted.

New and renovated classroom buildings reflected, as they enhanced, the College’s curriculum as it underwent important changes during this period. The relocation of the Pacific Basin Institute from Santa Barbara to the Pomona campus in 1997, and the introduction in 1998 of the Intercollegiate Asian American Studies Program, consolidated ongoing efforts to intensify Pacific Rim studies. In 2000, a new major in Cognitive Science was added to the curriculum as part of the Department of Linguistics and Cognitive Science that, as Stanley remarked, served to position the College at the forefront of the study of “the nature of mind and thought … that will only grow in importance as our century unfolds.”

CAMPUS

Haldeman Aquatics Center

During the summer of 1991, a new $3.1 million swimming pool, given by and named for Henry F. Haldeman, was added east of Rains Center, adjacent to Alumni Field. The Haldeman Aquatics Center has a 50-meter Olympic-size pool, one- and three-meter diving boards and separate locker and training facilities.

ACADEMICS

160 Years of Service

Five faculty members retired in 1991, totaling 160 years of service. Retiring were Zoology Professor William Andrus (31 years) Philosophy Professor Morton Beckner (34 years), Art Professor Charles Daugherty (18 years), Psychology Professor William Faust (38 years) and Physics Professor Jack Miller (39 years).

STUDENT LIFE

Asian American Resource Center

The 鶹Ӱ Asian American Resource Center was established in 1991 with a mission of helping "Asian Pacific American students develop intellectually, socially, personally, academically and politically."

ATHLETICS

Alumni Field Renamed Merritt Field

In 1991, Alumni Field was renamed Earl J. "Fuzz" Merritt Field in honor of Earl J. “Fuzz” Merritt ’25, who retired as football coach in 1961 after guiding the Sagehens to a 95-59-9 record since 1935.

ALUMNI

First Distinguished Service Award

The first 鶹Ӱ Alumni Distinguished Service Award was presented to Mason Hill ’26, a retired geologist who played a key role in discovering some of the most important oil fields in the world, including Prudhoe Bay on Alaska’s North Slope.

ELSEWHERE

  • Kuwait is liberated from Iraqi occupation in Operation Desert Storm.
  • Exxon agreed to pay $1 billion for the clean-up of the Exxon Valdez oil spill in Alaska.
  • The Soviet Union dissolves following an abortive coup against President Mikhail Gorbachev.