Fall 2001, Volume 38, No. 1

Contents

ONLY @ PCMOnline
-Alumni Profile-
Tropical Medicine

SPECIAL SECTION:
THE HEALERS

Dr. Then and Dr. Now
Medical Futures
Rational Medicine, Medical Rationing
Teach the Doctors Well
My Brother's Doctor

DEPARTMENTS
-Pomona Forum-
Remembering a
Family Doctor


-Coming Attractions-
Pomona College
Campus Events


-Pomona Today-
An Organic Community
New Trustees Named
The Wig Awards 2001
Music by the Ton
Bright Lights, Nano City
Acclaimed Novelist to Join Faculty

-Sports Report-
Going for the Title
(IX, that is)


-Bookshelf-
Justice in the Mists
A Jewish Primer
Goddesses in Each of Us

-Campaign Update-
Exceptional Again

ALUMNI VOICES
-Page 47-
"Seven and Forty Attomos"

-Parlor Talk-
Chance Meetings

-Family Tree-
Boynton-Dozier Family

-Alumni Puzzler-
Math Challenge

-Back Cover-
Memories of War



 

Music by the Ton

After a continental crossing in two trailer trucks, nearly 20 tons of equipment and machinery comprising the new organ for Bridges Hall of Music arrived on campus for unloading May 21. More than 30 volunteers--faculty, staff, students, and community members--helped to carry in loads for its installation in the newly remodeled Little Bridges.

The organ--designed and built specially for Little Bridges as Opus 117 of the C.B. Fisk Company of Gloucester, Massachusetts, the worldŐs leading builder of organs--was assembled by a crew of six workers during three weeks in June. Once assembly of the instumentŐs 5,000 pieces was complete, a two-member crew spent a week tuning the organ in preparation for its voicing--a process that will require another eight months of work.

The new organ's 3,519 pipes--some made of wood and others of metal, the largest 32 feet long and the smallest less than a half inch in length--will encompass the full pitch range of human hearing.

A series of inaugural concerts for the new Fisk organ will take place in 2002-03.

 


Related Links

Photos of the new organ and the renovation of Little Bridges
http://www.music.pomona.edu/