The 2016–17

CUC CUC CUC HMC Legend INDIAN HILL INDIAN HILL INDIAN HILL PROPERTY PROPERTRSABGY PROPERTY RSABG RSABG HMC Member of The Claremont Colleges HMC (Harvey Mudd College) CUC CUC CUC CST Affiliated Institution CGU CGU CGU PITZER PITZER CSTPITZERHMC (Claremont School of Theology) HMCCST Building, field or place location HMC (CMC, 13 Collins Dining Hall) CSTN Parking lot or structureHMC INDIAN HILL BLVD. INDIAN HILL BLVD. INDIAN HILL BLVD. N COLBY CIR. COLBY CIR. COLBY CIR. CST Zipcar location N CST Listings are alphabetical. CGU CGU CGU HMC CST CST CST Admission offices areCST listedbold ROBERT J. ROBERT J. ROBERT J. N (Scripps, 10 Balch Hall) COLBY CIR. COLBY CIR. COLBY CIR. CUC CUC HMC CUCSCRIPPS HMC SCRIPPSHMC SCRIPPS BERNARD BERNARD BERNARD N Map to scale (feet) CGU CGU CGU BIOLOGICAL BIOLOGICAL BIOLOGICAL CST NORTH CAMPUS FIELD NORTH CAMPUS NORTHFIELD CAMPUS FIELD N 0 500 PROPERTY STATION PROPERTY STATPROPERTYION STATION MILLS AVE. MILLS AVE.

MILLS AVE. N

FOOTHILL BLVD. FOOTHILL BLVD. FOOTHILL BLVD. FOOTHILL BLVD. FOOTHILL BLVD. FOOTHILL BLVD. N The Claremont Colleges, a consortium of five undergraduate liberal arts colleges; HMC HMC HMC two graduate institutions; and Claremont COLLEGE AVE. COLLEGE COLLEGE AVE. COLLEGE University Consortium, which provides AVE. COLLEGE

shared institutional support services, TWELFTH ST. TWELFTH ST. PLATT BLVD. TWELFTH ST. PLATT BLVD. PLATT BLVD. E. E. E. AV AV is reminiscent of the Oxford-Cambridge AV model. The under­graduate colleges are

Pomona College, Scripps College, Claremont RTMOUTH RTMOUTH RTMOUTH DA DA DA McKenna College, Harvey Mudd College ELEVENTH ST. DRUCKER WAY ELEVENTHELEVENTH ST. ST. DRUCKER ELEVENTHWAY ST. ELEVENTHDRUCKER ST. WAY ELEVENTH ST. and Pitzer College. The two graduate SCRIPPS SCRIPPS

SCRIPPS MILLS AVE.

institutions are Claremont Graduate MILLS AVE. MILLS AVE. University and Keck Graduate Institute. MBIA AVE. MBIA AVE. MBIA AVE. LU LU LU CLAREMONT BLVD. CLAREMONT BLVD. Each academic institution has its own CLAREMONT BLVD. CUC CUC TENTH ST. CUC TENTH ST. CO PITZER TENTH ST. CO PITZER CO PITZER campus, its own students and faculty CGU CGU CGU EAST EAST EAST and its own distinctive mission. CAMPUS CAMPUS CAMPUS PROPERTY PROPERTY PROPERTY

The eight independent institutions on NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST. NINTH ST. adjoining campuses offer rigorous curricula, small classes, distinguished professors and personalized instruction in a vibrant residential college community that provides EIGHTH ST. EIGHTH ST. EIGHTHEIGHTH ST. ST. CUC EIGHTH SCUCT. EIGHTH ST. intensive interaction between students and CUC CMC CMC CMC faculty. Undergraduate students may choose c c c from more than 2,000 courses offered each Y Y Y HARVARD AVE. HARVARD HARVARD AVE. HARVARD HARVARD AVE. HARVARD WA WA year across the colleges. With 7,700 students WA SEVENTH ST. SEVENTH ST. SEVENTH ST. and 3,600 faculty and staff, located on LLEGE LLEGE LLEGE AMHERST AVE. AMHERST AMHERST AVE. AMHERST CO AMHERST AVE. AMHERST AMHERST AVE. AMHERST AMHERST AVE. AMHERST AMHERST AVE. AMHERST CO more than 560 acres of land, the consortium CO generates an endless variety of intellectual, cultural and social activities. SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST. SIXTH ST. Directions From the 210 Freeway at Towne Avenue Exit Towne Avenue

Go south on Towne Avenue HARRISON AVE./5th ST. HARRISON AVE./5th ST. HARRISON AVE./5th ST. Turn left onto Foothill Boulevard POMONA POMONA POMONA Turn right onto Dartmouth Avenue

From the 210 Freeway at Baseline Road HARWOOD PL. HARWOOD PL. HARWOOD PL. VE. VE. VE.

Exit Baseline Road FOURTH ST. FOURTH ST. FOURTH ST. CLAREMONT BLVD. CLAREMONT BLVD. CLAREMONT BLVD. MILLS AVE. MILLS AVE. Go west on Baseline Road MILLS AVE. BROOKS A BROOKS A Turn left onto Monte Vista Avenue BROOKS A Turn right onto N. Claremont Boulevard

Turn right onto Foothill Boulevard BONITA AVE. BONITA AVE. BONITA AVE. Turn left onto Dartmouth Avenue MBIA AVE. MBIA AVE. MBIA AVE. BLANCHARD PL. BLANCHARD PL. BLANCHARD PL.

From the 10 Freeway LU LU LU D. D. D. CO CO CO VE. VE.

Exit Indian Hill Boulevard VE.

Go north on Indian Hill Boulevard SECOND ST. SECOND ST. SECOND ST. LLEGE A LLEGE A Turn right onto First Street LLEGE A CO CO CO INDIAN HILL B LV INDIAN HILL B LV Turn left onto CollegeINDIAN HILL B LV Avenue FIRST ST. FIRST ST. FIRST ST. To KGI from Indian Hill Boulevard CUC CUC CUC Turn left onto Arrow Highway FIRST ST. FIRST ST. FIRST ST. Turn right onto Bucknell Avenue Turn left onto Watson Drive

SANTA FE ST. SANTA FE ST. SANTA FE ST.

FUTURE FUTURE FUTURE STUDENT STUDENT STUDENT Claremont Graduate University (CGU) 13 Intercollegiate Women’s Studies Center Harvey Mudd College (HMC) HOUSING HOUSING HOUSING 29 Joan and Da vid Lincoln Ceramic Art Bldg. 9 Academic Computing Building (ACB) 98 Keck Science Complex (Pitzer campus) 19 J.L. Atwood Residence Hall 3 Art Building 2 Beckman Hall(basement level) WHARTON DR. WHARTON DR. WHARTON DR. 15 Kimberly Hall KGI KGI KGI 19 Arts Managemen t Institute/ 23 Lang Art S tudios 20 Case Residence Hall Getty Leadership Institute/ 30 Laspa C enter for Leadership 6 Galileo Hall (basement level) D. RK PL. D. RK PL. D. RK PL. Sotheby’s Institute of Art 17 Garrett House (private) E. E. E. 11 Malott Commons YO YO YO 20 Arts & Humanities A dmin/Institute for 14 Margaret Fowler Garden 11 Hoch-Shanahan Dining C ommons Antiquities and Christianity (IAC) 7 Jacobs Science Center WATSON DR. WATSON DR. WATSON DR. 21 Millard Sheets Art Center 37 Blaisdell F ountain/DesCombes Gate 3 W.M. Keck Laboratories

BUCKNELL AV 7 Motley Coffeehouse BUCKNELL AV BUCKNELL AV INDIAN HILL B LV INDIAN HILL B LV INDIAN HILL B LV 30 Blaisdell House 8 NEW Hall 9 Kingston Hall 2 Burkle Family Building 26 Performing Arts Center/Garrison Theater 16 Ronald and Maxine Linde Activities Center 12 Center for Neuroeconomics Studies 28 Pool 21 Ronald and Maxine Linde Residence Hall 16, 18, 21, 25 Claremont Evaluation Center 24 Public E vents Office 12 South Hall/Marks R esidence Hall ARROW HIGHWAY ARROW HIGHWAY ARROW HIGHW 38AY Community & Global Health 17 Revelle House 15 East Hall/Mildred E. Mudd Residence Hall 10 Facilities Office 30 Richardson Dance Studio 14 North R esidence Hall 11 Facilities Staff 20 Routt Hall 1 F.W. Olin Science Center Members of The Claremont Colleges 29 Graduate Student Council 22 Ruth Chandler W illiamson Gallery 5 Parsons Engineering Building 14 Grants and Contract Accounting 18 Sallie Tiernan Field House/ 10 Joseph B . Platt Campus Center 7 Harper Hall/Admissions Parking Structure/Alumnae Field 8 R. Michael Shanahan enterC 6 Harper Hall East/Student Services 25 SCORE/SARLO Office for Teaching and Learning 35 Alexander Hall for Administration 4 Jagels Building 5 Senior Routt Apartments 18 Frederick and Susan Sontag Residence Hall 9 Andrew Science Hall 35 Mathematical Sciences (North) 11 Student Union 4 Norman F. Sprague Center 19 Athearn Field/Parking Structure 36 Mathematical Sciences (South) 2 Toll Hall 22 Wayne and Julie Drinkward Residence Hall 65 Baldwin House 8 McManus Hall 13 Vita Nova Hall 13 West Residence Hall 29 Baseball Field 13 Multicultural House/Student Life & Diversity 99 W. M. Keck Science Center (9th St./Mills Ave.) 13 Bixby Plaza 26 Organizational Sciences (DBOS) 16 Wilbur Hall Pitzer College 72 Blanchard Park 17 Quality of Life Research Center 21 Atherton Hall 27 Brackett Observatory 21, 23 SES Bowen Institute/ Claremont McKenna College (CMC) 4 Avery Hall/Benson Auditorium 74 Bridges A uditorium Higher Education Abstracts 29 Bernard Field Station Office 25 15 SES IRIS @ C GU 5 Adams Hall 7 Bernard Hall 40 Carnegie Hall 28 Sponsored Research and Programs/IRB 1 Admission 13 Brant Clock Tower 14 Clark I 5 Stauffer Hall and Albrecht Auditorium 49 Advancement Offices 1 Broad Center 11 Clark V 1 CGU Student Housing 22 Appleby Hall 2 Broad Hall 66 Cook House 31 Student Success Center 44 Arce Baseball Field 22 Community Courtyard 63 Cottages 34 Transdisciplinary Studies/Kozmetsky House 8 Athenaeum 26 East Hall 6 Cowart I.T. Building/Parking Structure 27 Writing Center 30 Auen Hall 5 Fletcher Hall 37 Crookshank Hall 33 Axelrood Aquatics Center 23 Founding Faculty Amphitheater 81 Draper Center for Community Partnerships Claremont University Consortium (CUC) 37 Bauer North 8 Glass Commencement Plaza 7 Duplicating Center (401 Harvard Ave.) 36 Bauer South 1 Administrative Campus Center and Recreation Area 77 Dialynas Hall 15 Beckett Hall Benefits Administration 3 Gold Student Health and Wellness Center 69 Edmunds Hall 18 Benson Hall Central Facilities Services 28 Greenhouse 2 Faculty Offices (156 W. Seventh St.) 20 Berger Hall Environmental Health and Safety 14 Grove House 73 Farm-Agroecology 51 Biszantz Family Tennis Center Executive Office 98 Keck Science Complex 53 Frank Dining Hall 25 Boswell Hall Financial Services 99 W. M. Keck Science Center (9th St./Mills Ave.) 15 Frary Dining Hall 41 Burns S tadium Human Resources 9 McConnell Center 57 Gibson Hall 34 Center Court Offices Information Technology 11 Mead Hall 52 Grounds Building 46 Children’s School Real Estate and Housing 25 Outback Pr eserve 39 Hahn Hall 19 Claremont Hall 4 Campus Safety (Pendleton Building) 12 Pellissier Mall (The Mounds) 30 Haldeman P ool 13 Collins Dining Hall 10 Connection/Honnold Café 19 Pitzer Hall 59 Harwood Court 16 Crown Hall Card Center, Copy Center 18 Rodman Arboretum 55 Kenyon House 5 Davidson Lecture Hall 9 EmPOWER Center (Scripps Campus) 20 Sanborn Hall 79 K.H. Anne x/Sustainability Integration 7 Emett Student Center 3 Honnold/Mudd Library 6 Scott Hall Office 29 Fawcett Hall 5 Huntley Bookstore 27 West Hall/Skandera Hall 18 Lawry Court 1 Financial Aid 6 McAlister Religious Center 48 Lebus Court 26 Green Hall 7 Mudd Quadrangle Keck Graduate Institute (KGI) 70 Lincoln Hall 12 Heggblade C enter—Dean of Students 8 Office of Black Student Affairs (OBSA) 60 Lyon Court W International Place (535 Watson Dr.) 2 Tranquada Student Services Center 535 Watson 41 Marston Quadrangle 99 W. M. Keck Science Center (9th St./Mills Ave.) 517 Watson (517 Watson Dr.) Chicano Latino Student Affairs 38 Mason Hall 98 Keck Science Complex (Pitzer campus) 555 Technip Building (555 W. Arrow Hwy.) Health Education Outreach 31 Merritt Football Field 1 Kravis Center 215 York (215 York Pl.) Monsour Counseling and 8 Millikan Laboratory 2 The Living Room 121 Vortox Building (121 S. Indian Hill Bl.) Psychological Services 58 Mudd-Blaisdell Hall 17 Marks Hall 1 Indian Hill (1 N. Indian Hill Bl., 2nd–3rd Flrs) Student Disability Resource Center 45 Museum of Art 10 McKenna Auditorium Student Health Services 16 Norton-Clark III 48 Mills A ve. Offices/Human Resources Vice President for Student Affairs Affiliated Institutions 49 Oldenborg Center 27 Parents Field 36 Pickford Auditorium 50 Office of Student Abroad and Scripps College International Initiatives 21 Phillips Hall Rancho Santa Ana Botanic Garden (RSABG) 20 Pauley Tennis Complex 10 Balch Hall and Auditorium 38 Pritzlaff Field 1 Administration/Plant Science Center 36 Pearsons Hall 24 Baxter Hall 36 ROTC 2 Horticulture and Retail Nursery Complex 80 Pendleton Building 12 Betty Cree Edwards 3 Roberts Hall North Business Office and Human Resources Humanities Building/Auditorium 4 Roberts Hall South Claremont School of Theology (CST) 56 Pendleton Dance Center 3 Browning Hall 32 Roberts Pavilion 61 Pendleton Pool 1 Clark Hall 6 Seaman Hall 7 Butler Building 42 President’s House 12 Clark Humanities Museum 43 Softball Field 1 Colwell Administration Building 32 Rains C enter Athletic Complex 9 Denison Library 28 Stark Hall 2 Craig Academic Building; 8 East Housing 46 Rembrandt Hall 4 Dorsey Hall to San Francisco 14 Story House 10 Edgar Community Center 64 Renwick House 45 Student ApartmentsAngeles National Forest 3 Kresge Memorial Chapel 19 European Union Center to Six Flags Magic Mountain 54 Rogers Tennis Complex 6 Frankel Hall 34c Student Event Plaza 4 Library 1 Seaver Biology Laboratory 33 Gabrielle Jungels-Winkler Hall 23 Wohlford Hall 9 North Housing 43 Seaver House 27 Grounds Building 41 Zinda Field 5 Seeley G. Mudd 3 Seaver Laboratory North (Chemistry) Theater 19 Harry and GrSanace Diego Steele405 Hall 5 San Gabriel Mountains Devore Fwy. 15 Golden State Foothill Fwy. 6 West Housing 4 Seaver Laboratory South (Biology) 13 Human R esourcesFwy. Fwy. 210 Mt. Baldy Hollywood 51 Seaver Theatre Fwy. Mt. Wilson 5 Seeley Mudd Building 170 BUR Pasadena Foothill Fwy. Foothill Fwy. to Las Vegas 33 Smiley Hall Ventura Fwy. Indian Hill Blvd. Burbank Airport 210 34 Smith C ampus Center 101 210 Universal L.A. 134 Norton Foothill Blvd. 66 12 Smith Tower to Malibu Studios Zoo Ventura Fwy. Simon Huntington The Claremont Colleges Towne Ave. to Palm Springs Hollywood Museum Library 215 23 Soccer Field The Getty 101 Auto Club Speedway and Joshua Tree Bowl 68 Softball Field Museum National Park ONT Santa LACMA 10 5 Sontag Center for Collaborative Creativity Downtown Los Angeles Ontario Monica San Bernardino Fwy. 26 Sontag Greek Theatre Pacific 10 Int’l Airport Santa Monica 60 Staples 78 Sontag Hall Ocean Fwy. Pomona Fwy. Pacific CANADA Venice Center Ocean San Diego Ontario Fwy. 76 South C ampus Parking Structure/ Beach 405 Long Beach Fwy. 710 605 San Gabriel Fwy. 15 Fwy. Athletic Field LAX WA Orange Fwy. Riverside Fwy. MT 22 Strehle Track Los Angeles 105 57 Int’l Airport OR 28 Studio Art Hall Century Fwy. 91 ID 47 Sumner Hall 5 Santa Ana Fwy. 67 Sumner House 91 Sacramento 44 Thatcher Hall Riverside Fwy. NV 110 Harbor Knott’s Angel Honda UT 21 Tennis/Track Office LGB San Fwy. Berry Stadium Center CA Long Beach 55 Newport Fwy. Francisco 24 Track Office Farm Airport 71 Walker Beach Disneyland Los AZ Angeles 10 Walker Hall 22 Garden Grove Fwy. San Diego 17 Walton Commons Aquarium 75 Wig Beach of the Pacific San Diego Fwy. Long Beach 405 N MEXICO 62 Wig Hall Huntington Beach

Newport SNA to San Diego Santa Catalina Island Beach John Wayne Airport

cuc_7C-map-brochure_160915.indd 2 9/15/16 6:50 PM Pomona College | Admissions Offi ce: (909) 621-8134 | [email protected] | pomona.edu Pomona College, founded in 1887, ranks among the nation’s concentrations and approximately 650 courses each year. foremost liberal arts colleges. Pomona is a place for adventurous, Opportunities include 54 study abroad programs, summer creative-minded students with the drive to explore and pursue research grants, and paid internships in the L.A. area and around their academic passions. Student interests are wide-ranging, the world. Pomona enrolls about 1,640 students from 47 states, distributed across the humanities, natural and physical sciences, the District of Columbia, and 35 countries, refl ecting a broad social sciences, and the arts, as well as a range of interdisciplinary diversity of socioeconomic, ethnic, and geographic backgrounds. fi elds. With a student-faculty ratio of 8:1, students have the More than 80 percent go on to graduate or professional schools opportunity to work closely with great professors who are also within 10 years of graduation. top scholars. Pomona off ers 48 majors, individually designed

Claremont Graduate University | Admissions Offi ce: (909) 607-7811 | [email protected] | cgu.edu Claremont Graduate University (CGU) is one of a select few the accelerated master’s program, students of the undergraduate universities in America devoted solely to graduate-level education. Claremont Colleges can begin graduate coursework at CGU Founded in 1925, CGU is a leading research university with during their senior undergraduate year. Th is unique opportunity more than 2,000 students pursuing graduate degrees in more than allows students to save both time and fi nancial resources while 20 distinct areas of study. Students are encouraged to look beyond remaining in the familiar surroundings of the Claremont the traditional disciplinary divisions and defi ne their own unique community. program of study — CGU’s transdisciplinary trademark. Th rough

Claremont University Consortium | Executive Offi ce: (909) 607-9285 | cuc.claremont.edu Claremont University Consortium (CUC), established in 1925, and institutional services (campus safety, real estate and housing, is a nationally recognized model for providing shared support fi nancial services, and benefi ts). CUC is an international model services designed to meet the needs of the students, faculty and of advantageous, effi cient, consortial collaboration in higher staff of Th e Claremont Colleges. CUC serves more than 7,700 education. Th rough innovative leadership, CUC continually students and 3,600 faculty and staff through 28 shared programs strives to improve the quality and value of services and programs, and services, including student services (Student Health Services, and launch responsive, cost-eff ective central activities. Health Education Outreach, and Counseling and Psychological Services), academic services (Th e Claremont Colleges Library),

Scripps College | Admission Offi ce: (909) 621-8149 | [email protected] | scrippscollege.edu Scripps College was founded in 1926 by Ellen Browning Scripps, develop their intellects and talents through active participation a pioneering philanthropist and infl uential fi gure in the world in a community of scholars, so that as graduates they may contribute of education, publishing, and women’s rights — a woman ahead to society through public and private lives of leadership, service, of her time. Today, Scripps is a nationally top-ranked liberal arts integrity and creativity. Students major in humanities, fi ne arts, college with approximately 980 students. Th e college’s core social sciences and science. Th ey engage in undergraduate research, curriculum in interdisciplinary humanities provides a rigorous participate in study abroad and global education programs, earn exploration of critical thinking and engagement with contemporary prestigious internships and explore dual major opportunities. issues. Th e mission of Scripps College is to educate women to

Claremont McKenna College | Admission Offi ce: (909) 621-8088 | [email protected] | cmc.edu Founded in 1946. Enrollment — approximately 1,300. CMC internships and semester programs and more than 100 study abroad educates students for thoughtful, productive lives and responsible programs. Special majors and programs off ered in the humanities, leadership in business, government and the professions, and off ers social and hard sciences include: management-engineering, a comprehensive liberal arts education with a practical and pragmatic environment, economics and politics (EEP), philosophy, politics twist. Instead of dividing the liberal arts and the working world into and economics (PPE), leadership, science and management and separate realms, education at CMC is rooted in the interplay between more. CMC students are a geographically, socioeconomically and the world of ideas and the world of events. Students have unprece- ethnically diverse group. Th ey tend to be ambitious, social, active, dented opportunities through research institutes, Athenaeum pragmatic and leadership-oriented. Graduates of CMC typically speaker series, the sponsored internship program, superior career seek careers in business, education, fi nance, government, law, counseling, academic travel, Washington, D.C., and Silicon Valley medicine, politics, international relations and management.

Harvey Mudd College | Admission Offi ce: (909) 621-8011 | [email protected] | hmc.edu Harvey Mudd College (HMC) is a liberal arts college of undergraduate research opportunities on par with graduate engineering, science and mathematics, ranked high among institutions, a strong focus on the humanities, social sciences and the nation’s best colleges. Approximately 800 undergraduates the arts, an exceptional faculty who challenge students to achieve pursue bachelor of science degrees in biology, chemistry, beyond their expectations, one of the nation’s highest rates of computer science, engineering, mathematics and physics, graduates who go on to earn Ph.D.s and a high return on college plus dual degree programs in chemistry/biology, computer investment. Regardless of their majors, Harvey Mudd graduates science/mathematics, and mathematical/computational biology. are passionate problem solvers who think across disciplines, For 60 years, Harvey Mudd has led the way with interactive communicate, collaborate and understand their impact on society.

Pitzer College | Admission Offi ce: (909) 621-8129 | [email protected] | pitzer.edu Pitzer College is a nationally top-ranked liberal arts institution Sustainability and the Ferré/Marquet Vaccine Research Center. that emphasizes social responsibility, intercultural understanding, For 11 years, Pitzer has received more Fulbright Fellowships per interdisciplinary learning, student engagement and environmental 1,000 students than any other undergraduate institution in the sustainability. An innovative and fl exible curriculum allows students United States. Pitzer was the fi rst college in to design their own course of study or choose from more than to divest from fossil fuel stocks. On campus, the drought-tolerant 40 majors and 20 minors. Since its founding in 1963, Pitzer has landscape and LEED platinum- and gold-certifi ed residence halls pioneered academic programs such as environmental analysis, refl ect Pitzer’s environmental ethos. Pitzer attracts diverse domestic global/local studies and secular studies. Today, the college is home and international students who aspire to eff ect change and to both the Robert Redford Conservancy for Southern California transform the world.

Keck Graduate Institute | Admissions: (909) 607-8590 | [email protected] | kgi.edu Keck Graduate Institute (KGI) is dedicated to education and within the life sciences industry. Th e Postbaccalaureate Premedical research aimed at translating into practice, for the benefi t of Certifi cate (PPC) program helps students prepare for a career society, the power and potential of the life sciences. Founded in medicine. Th e Doctor of Pharmacy (PharmD) program will in 1997, KGI off ers a graduate education that integrates science prepare graduates to work at the leading edge of pharmacy practice and engineering with business and management coursework in in a variety of health care settings. Th e two-year MEng program a hands-on, team-based, project-focused curriculum. Th e Master is designed for students seeking a career in biopharmaceutical of Bioscience (MBS) degree and the Postdoctoral Professional processing and biomanufacturing. Founded in 2013, the Minerva Masters (PPM) degree help students acquire the business and Schools at KGI off er a unique four-year undergraduate program

management skills needed to pursue management positions to students from around the world. 16,500 9/16

2016-2017 MAP

Pomona College Claremont Graduate University Claremont University Consortium Scripps College

Claremont McKenna College Harvey Mudd College Pitzer College Keck Graduate Institute

cuc_7C-map-brochure_160915.indd 1 9/15/16 6:50 PM