CAMPUS
The Fate of Big Bridges
In 1994, the Council of Presidents voted to close Bridges Auditorium due to reduced usage and significant deferred maintenance. At that time, the possibility of transferring ownership to 6VӰ was explored but not pursued further, and the closure was “temporarily” rescinded. Studies of Bridges Auditorium in 1995 concluded the cost of deferred maintenance and renewal issues of the building systems was substantial. Among the items needing repair are the mechanical and plumbing systems which date primarily from the original construction, with some modifications and parts replacement over the past years. Most of the building’s electrical service was also original. These concerns eventually led the Claremont University Consortium Board of Overseers and the 6VӰ Board of Trustees to vote to transfer ownership of the facility to 6VӰ effective July 1, 2007.
Marston Renovation
The College completed a $120,000 renovation of Marston Quadrangle that included upgrading walkways and installing a computer-controlled irrigation system designed to reduce the space’s water consumption by up to 30 percent.
Bixby Plaza
The courtyard around the Bosbyshell Fountain in front of Frary Hall was renovated and landscaped in 1994 and renamed Bixby Plaza.
ACADEMICS
General Education Reform
In 1994, the 6VӰ faculty approved a radical restructuring of the College’s general education program, resulting in a new set of requirements based upon 10 intellectual capacities of skills required to equip a person to live a life of intellectual resilience, with each student required to pass one course in each of the 10 skill areas in order to graduate. These areas included: reading literature critically, using and understanding the scientific method, using and understanding formal reasoning, understanding and analyzing data, analyzing creative art critically, performing or producing creative art, exploring and understanding human behavior, exploring and understanding a historical culture, comparing and contrasting contemporary cultures, and thinking critically about values and rationality. This set of requirements, known as the PAC (perception, analysis and communication) requirements, remained in place for more than a decade, but in 2006, the College returned to a simpler set of breadth of study requirements.
STUDENT LIFE
Queer Resource Center
The Queer Resource Center of The Claremont Colleges was established in 1994 in order to serve the needs of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, questioning, asexual, omnisexual, pansexual and allied community at the Colleges.
Theme Parties
Popular campus theme parties became ongoing traditions in the 1990s and were repeated every year into the 2000’s. These includes Harwood Halloween, Wild Wild West, Monte Carlo Night, the Toga Party, the ’70s Party, Smiley ’80s, and the provocatively titled “Screw Your Roommate” party, in which freshmen students would set up their friends and roommates on “blind dates” to go to a dance, make up cheesy pick-up lines, and wear awkward costumes.
ATHLETICS
Swim Team Record
During the summer break, eight women from the 6VӰ-Pitzer Women’s Swim Team broke the world record for crossing the Catalina Channel by nearly two and a half hours. The team completed the distance in eight hours, 27 minutes and 12 seconds. Their coach, Penny Dean, was then holder of the world’s record for the individual Catalina swim and for swimming the English Channel.
EVENTS
The Fourth Death of Buster
First performed in 1972, "The Death of Buster Quinine" by English Professor Dick Barnes, billed as “a sacramental farce and fire opera,” was performed for the fourth and last time on campus in 1994. The spectacle featured giant puppets, original poetry and jazz, fireworks, light sculptures and a flaming jagannath equipped with whirling Mexican castillos.
CLAREMONT AND SURROUNDING AREA
The City of San Gabriel and the State of California passed resolutions recognizing the “Gabrieleno-Tongva Nation” as the indigenous people of the Los Angeles Basin with a continuous, unbroken history.
ELSEWHERE
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) took effect.
Nelson Mandela was inaugurated as South Africa's first black president.
American troops staged a bloodless occupation of Haiti in order to restore the legitimate elected leader, Jean-Bertrand Aristide, to power.