Walking Backward: The Pomona College Video Tour (1 of 4)
Coming to Pomona
Admitted Students Day 2014 - Students Panel for Students - Pomona College
Pomona College: The Right Questions (Andrew Cha)
Pomona College: The Right Questions (Michael Maltese)
Pomona College: Daring Minds
Real World: Pomona
Beautiful Southern California Campus: Pomona College
Pomona College Commencement 2014
Pomona College: The Right Questions (Lauri Valerio)
Pomona | Campus Preview
47-Hour Challenge: Student Life: Perspectives & Opportunities at Pomona College
47 Seconds: Pomona College First-Year Students "Enter Here"
Pomona College 2014 Convocation: Rachel Jackson '15
Walking Backward: The Pomona College Video Tour (1 of 4)
Coming to Pomona
Admitted Students Day 2014 - Students Panel for Students - Pomona College
Pomona College: The Right Questions (Andrew Cha)
Pomona College: The Right Questions (Michael Maltese)
Pomona College: Daring Minds
Real World: Pomona
Beautiful Southern California Campus: Pomona College
Pomona College Commencement 2014
Pomona College: The Right Questions (Lauri Valerio)
Pomona | Campus Preview
47-Hour Challenge: Student Life: Perspectives & Opportunities at Pomona College
47 Seconds: Pomona College First-Year Students "Enter Here"
Pomona College 2014 Convocation: Rachel Jackson '15
Founders Day Flash Mob at Pomona College
Pomona College campus visit with American College Strategies, Claremont, California
Walking Backward: The Pomona College Video Tour (2 of 4)
Pomona College 2014 Convocation: Professor Sidney Lemelle
Pomona College prank
Jonathan Veitch, Pomona College 2012 Commencement
Plácido Domingo - Pomona College Commencement - May 18, 2014
Father Gregory Boyle - Pomona College Commencement - May 18, 2014
Music at Pomona College: selections from 2008 - 2010
ISV Review: Marissa from Cal Poly Pomona
American Fangs
216 8th Street
Downhill Mountain Bike Long Stoppie at Cal Poly Pomona
Cal Poly Pomona: 24 hour study labratory
Vijay Prashad--What Pomona Taught Me
Gay club in Pomona
CDN Retreat: Ernie G.@Cal Poly Pomona 3/6
Mites Beat Cheetahs as the World's Fastest Land Animal
1947project's L.A. history presentation at Occidental College
Newton Has a Place for You
Cambridge sights and colleges tour
Best Tour Guide at Siena College
Time Traveling Teacher
OFFICE SUPPLIES | LOS ANGELES | SANTA MONICA | PASADENA | LONG BEACH | IRVINE | ORANGE COUNTY
Intrepid Travel A day in the life Hanoi to HongKong mov TonkinCruise com 2014
Who Are The Candidates For Breast Reconstruction Surgery Breast Cancer Every Way Woman
My Sister Graduated From College!
College Trip Diary 2
G-Funk part 1
50Forward Celebration - Laura Skandera Trombley, Pitzer President
Commencement Highlights l Pitzer College l May 18, 2013
Southwest Colorado Winter Guide 2013-2014 - The Durango Herald - Durango TV
Pomona College is a private, residential, liberal arts college in Claremont, California. Founded in 1887 in Pomona, California by a group of Congregationalists, the college moved to Claremont in 1889 to the site of a hotel, retaining its name. The school enrolls 1,548 students.
The founding member of the Claremont Colleges, Pomona is a non-sectarian, coeducational school. Its founders strove to create "a college of the New England type". In order to reach this goal, the board of trustees included graduates of Williams, Dartmouth, Colby and Yale. Since 1925, the Claremont Colleges, which have grown to include five undergraduate and two graduate institutions, have provided Pomona's student body with the resources of a larger university while preserving the closeness of a small college. Pomona is currently ranked 4th in National Liberal Arts Colleges by U.S. News & World Report and is the 9th most selective private university in the United States.
Pomona College was established as a coeducational institution on October 14, 1887. The group’s goal was to create a college in the same mold as small New England institutions. The College was originally formed in Pomona; classes first began in a rental house on September 12, 1888. The next year, the school moved to Claremont, at the site of an unfinished hotel. The project was deferred following the suicide of Gwendolyn Rose, who died in the basement during construction. This building would eventually become Sumner Hall, current location of the Admissions and the Office of Campus Life. The name – Pomona College – remained after the relocation. The College’s first graduating class had ten members in 1894.
Michael "Mike" Maltese (February 6, 1908 — February 22, 1981) was a long-time storyboard artist and screenwriter for classic animated cartoon shorts.
In 1941, Maltese was hired by Leon Schlesinger Productions, which three years later became Warner Bros. Cartoons, Inc. (Maltese had actually appeared on camera in a 1940 Porky Pig cartoon as a live-action guard at the Warner Brothers entrance gate, who winds up chasing the animated Porky around the Warners lot; the short is entitled You Ought to Be in Pictures and was directed by Friz Freleng). He first worked for Freleng until 1945, but after that he worked for Chuck Jones for a very long time. He and Jones collaborated on classic cartoons like the Academy Award-winning For Scent-imental Reasons and the animated public health documentary, So Much for So Little which won that same year for "Best Documentary Short Subject." Maltese was also the voice of the Lou Costello-esque character in Wackiki Wabbit.
Some of his earlier works included The Wabbit Who Came to Supper and Fresh Hare, Hare Trigger (which introduced Yosemite Sam), Baseball Bugs for Freleng; Bear Feat, Rabbit of Seville, and Rabbit Fire for Jones. Some of his best known cartoons are Feed the Kitty, Beep, Beep, Rabbit Seasoning, Don't Give Up the Sheep, Duck Amuck, Bully for Bugs, Bewitched Bunny, From A to Z-Z-Z-Z, and Beanstalk Bunny. These were all directed by Jones. He also worked on One Froggy Evening, the first appearance of future Warner Brothers mascot Michigan J. Frog.
Rachel Donelson Robards Jackson, born Rachel Donelson, (June 15, 1767 – December 22, 1828) was the wife of Andrew Jackson, the 7th President of the United States.
Donelson is said to have been among one of the first settlers of Tennessee. She was considered beautiful in her younger years and was quite vivacious. She had been in an unhappy marriage in Kentucky with Captain Lewis Robards, a man subject to irrational fits of jealous rage, and the two separated in 1790.[citation needed]
Andrew Jackson migrated to Nashville in 1788, where he boarded with Rachel Stockley Donelson, the mother of Rachel Donelson Robards. Jackson and the younger Rachel fell in love.
Jackson and Robards married after believing that her husband had obtained a divorce. As the divorce had never been completed, their marriage was technically bigamous and therefore invalid. Historians found that a friend of Lewis Robards had planted a fake article in his own newspaper, saying that the couple's divorce had been finalized.[citation needed] The Jacksons later found out about Robards' action in planting the article, and that he had never completed the divorce.
Jonathan Veitch (born 1959) has been the president of Occidental College since July 2009. Prior to that, he was an actor, a professor at the University of Wisconsin and dean of The New School's Eugene Lang College. He has authored several books, including Colussus in Ruins and American Superrealism: Nathanael West and the Politics of Representation in the 1930s.
Veitch is the first president of Occidental College to be a native Angeleno.
Plácido Domingo (Spanish pronunciation: [ˈplaθiðo ðoˈmiŋɡo]; born 21 January 1941), born José Plácido Domingo Embil, is a Spanish tenor and conductor known for his versatile and strong voice, possessing a ringing and dramatic tone throughout its range. In March 2008, he debuted in his 128th opera role, and as of July 2011, his 136 roles give Domingo more roles than any other tenor.
One of The Three Tenors, he has also taken on conducting opera and concert performances, and he is the General Director of the Los Angeles Opera in California.
Plácido Domingo was born on January 21, 1941, in the distrito de Retiro section of Madrid, Spain, and in 1949 moved to Mexico with his family, who ran a zarzuela company. He studied piano at first privately and later at the National Conservatory of Music in Mexico City.
In 1957, Domingo made his first professional appearance, performing with his mother in a concert at Mérida, Yucatán. He made his opera debut performing in Manuel Fernández Caballero's zarzuela, Gigantes y cabezudos, singing a baritone role. At that time, he was working with his parents' zarzuela company, taking baritone roles and as an accompanist for other singers. Among his first performances was a minor role in the first Mexican production of My Fair Lady where he was also the assistant conductor and assistant coach. The company gave 185 performances, which included a production of Lehár's The Merry Widow in which he performed alternately as either Camille or Danilo.