Life & Style
Opinions
Catch up on “A Midsummer Night’s Dream,” with a review of the performance and Q&As in our spread.
Donnie TC Denome PZ ’20 argues that as an autistic person, hiding their identity is utter exhaustion.
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THE STUDENT
LIFE
The Student Newspaper of the Claremont Colleges Since 1889
CLAREMONT, CA
FRIDAY, APRIL 13, 2018
VOL. CXXX NO. 9
5Cs Announce Admissions Decisions For Class Of 2022 Jaimie Ding
Dominic Frempong & Sarah Wong • The Student Life
P-P Baseball Takes Weekend Sweep Over CMS Noah Shapiro The Pomona-Pitzer baseball team (20-9, 11-4 SCIAC) pulled off a series of shocking comebacks last weekend, taking three games against Claremont-Mudd-Scripps (15-16, 6-9 SCIAC), and completing a season sweep of the Stags for the second year in a row. Game one of the series took place Friday at CMS’s Bill Arce Field, and although it took extra innings, the Sagehens were able to pick up a 6-5 win on the road. CMS held a 4-3 lead through seven innings, but in the top of the eighth, the Sagehens plated two runs to take a 5-4 lead, thanks to a CMS throwing error and the third RBI single of the day for Brian Knapp PO ’20. Despite not getting a hit in the next two frames, the Stags were still able to force extra innings. In the bottom of the ninth, still trailing by one, Ryan Motter CM ’19 was hit by a pitch. As he tried to steal second, the throw ricocheted into the outfield and Motter advanced to third. A wild pitch then brought him home to tie
the game. In the tenth inning, it was the Sagehens’ turn to benefit from throwing errors; Seth Stone PZ ’20 was hit by a pitch and then advanced to third after a failed pickoff attempt. Hunter Hennigh PZ ’21 sacrificed a fly and brought home the unearned run. Brett Super PZ ’21 shut the door on the Stags in the bottom of the tenth and P-P snuck back across Sixth Street with a wild win that foreshadowed the games to come Saturday. In game two, as the series shifted to P-P’s Alumni Field, the Stags came out looking for revenge, and were able to build a commanding 7-3 lead through the first six innings. In the bottm of the sixth, the Sagehens tapped into a bit of the comeback magic that propelled them to the series sweep. With two on and two out in the sixth, Knapp stepped up to the plate and changed the momentum of the game with one swing of the bat. His three-run bomb to left field off Konnor Kwok CM ’20 pulled the Sagehens within one and forced a
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5Cs Release Class of 2022 Admissions Decisions Each of the 5Cs recently announced its admissions rates, with several of them experiencing increases in applicants and some yielding record-low acceptance rates. Pomona College, Scripps College, and Pitzer College saw a surge in the number of applicants this year, pushing down acceptance rates. The number of applicants for Harvey Mudd College stayed about the same, and decreased at Claremont McKenna College. After enrolling 329 students in the class of 2021 — the largest incoming class in the college’s history — Scripps’ acceptance rate plummeted from 33 percent to 24.1 percent this year. The college accepted fewer students this year and utilized the waitlist more to prevent having to house first-year students off-campus again due to over-enrollment. According to Scripps spokesperson Elizabeth Hamilton, the target class size for the class of 2022 is around 250 students. Scripps admitted 90 out of 281 Early Decision applicants and 671 out of 2,917 Regular Decision applicants. ED applicants make up 35 percent of the acceptance pool. Pomona had 10,245 applicants this year, the most in its history, pushing its acceptance rate down from 8.2 percent to a record low 7 percent. The target class size is 410-415 students from the regular acceptance pool and 20-25 students from the transfer pool, Pomona Director of Admissions Adam Sapp wrote in an email to TSL. “Pomona admissions officers put in long hours over the course of many months to complete the application review process,” Sapp wrote. “We were humbled and excited to admit such a diverse and academically talented group of first-year and transfer students.” Pomona did not provide data on early decision applicants to TSL before press time. CMC’s admission rate dropped from 10.4 percent to 8.9 percent despite receiving
Scripps College is currently investigating two different incidents of vandalism, one of which involves someone posting a flyer (pictured above) with apparent anti-Semitic commentary on a Jewish student’s door, and another where racist graffiti was written on flyers affixed to a bulletin board.
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Pomona College is among a group of small liberal arts colleges under investigation by the Department of Justice for potential antitrust violations, according to a Wall Street Journal article published Wednesday. The DOJ appears to be investigating whether the schools share specific identifying information about individual applicants accepted under early decision. Reports indicate that the schools involved use this information to check whether students are applying to more than one early decision school or submitting regular decision applications after being accepted under an early decision agreement, which violates the terms of the binding agreement. The DOJ issued letters last Thursday and Friday to at least seven highly selective small liberal arts schools, including Pomona, Williams College, Amherst College, Wesleyan University, Middlebury College, Wellesley College, and Grinnell College, instructing them
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See ADMISSIONS page 2
DOJ Investigating PO Early Decision Data Sharing Practices Marc Rod
Courtesy of Anonymous Source
fewer applications this year. The college admitted 558 students, compared to 658 students last year. Pitzer received 4,358 applications this year, a 16 percent increase from last year. The college’s admission rate dropped from 15 percent to 13.2 percent, or 577 students, and is expecting a class size of 266-271, according to Yvonne Berumen, vice president of admissions and financial aid at Pitzer. Pitzer admitted 135 out of 456 ED applicants and 441 out of 3902 RD applicants. ED applicants make up 23 percent of the acceptance pool. HMC’s admission rate increased slightly from last year’s 13.9 percent to 14.5 percent. It received 4,101 applications, only slightly more than last year’s 4,078 applications. The target class size is 225 students, according to HMC Vice President of Admissions and Financial Aid Thyra Briggs. HMC admitted 88 out of 465 ED applicants and 506 out of 3636 RD applicants. ED applicants make up 39 percent of the acceptance pool. “We’re excited as always about this group of admitted students and for our campus to get to know them,” Briggs wrote. “We become very attached to these students throughout the process and love imagining how they’ll connect with the rest of our community.” Pomona and CMC’s admitted student pools have similar proportions of first-generation students — around 19 percent — while HMC and Pitzer ’s admitted pools are about 12 percent first-generation students. Scripps’ admitted pool is 7.3 percent first-generation students. There is significant variation in the percentage of non-white students in each admitted student pool at each of the 5Cs. Pitzer admitted the lowest percentage at 43.3 percent of its admitted student pool, followed by Scripps with 45.3 percent, Pomona with 55.2 percent, and Mudd with the highest percentage of 62 percent. CMC did not provide TSL with racial diversity data be-
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to preserve records relating to the sharing of admissions information, the Wall Street Journal reported. “Students applying by early decision choose a path and process with conditional requirements,” Pomona College spokesperson Mark Kendall wrote in an email to TSL. “Per the Common Application early decision agreement, applicants are made aware that Pomona at times shares limited information with other institutions in order to verify their continued commitment to the early decision process.” Kendall added that Pomona complies with the National Association for College Admissions Counseling code of ethics. He declined to comment on the DOJ letter specifically. Pitzer College spokesperson Anna Chang told TSL that Pitzer did not receive a letter from the DOJ. Scripps College and Harvey Mudd College did respond to a request for comment from TSL on whether they have also received letters from the DOJ or share early admissions data with other schools.
See DOJ page 3
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