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Page 5 text:
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Administration PLO1 I TNG A COl RSE through a school year that required many wartime adjustments was the difficult task given to SJC’s Administration and Faculty Council, pictured be low. Consisting of Administrative Officers and represen¬ tatives of the faculty-at-large, the Council had to weigh problems, to make suggestions, and to consider such varied programs as war production training for women, flight training for future officers, and a Cooperative Education Plan whereby students could work part time and go to school part time. Much of the wartime adjustment was facilitated by a faculty committee set up for the purpose of coordinating war activities. Acting as a kind of central bureau through which all plans for war training could clear, this group helped to convert SJC into a war factory for the production of skilled technicians. Pictured below is the Administrative Council. Reading from left to right standing: Faculty Representative Peter Walline Knoles, Dean of the Adult Division John E. Carpenter, Dean of Extracurricular Activities Edward I. Cook, Dean ot Men Henry M. Skidmore, Registrar Michael J. Brickley. Seated: Vice President Dr. Henry T. Tyler, Vice President and Dean ot Women Belle Cooledge, President Dr. Nicholas Ricciardi, Library Representative Marie Erwin, and Dean of Vocational Education Warren P. Dayton.
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Page 4 text:
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yi% b 73 ) %3 A Message from The Pilot (jJinqA, OvslTl. $achammijo QunitfL QollsqsL There are wings now over the nation and over the world, as well as over the Sacramento Junior College. How may we interpret their significance? Wings are making the world a neighborhood. We now measure distances in hours instead of miles. We can fly from Chicago to any area on the face of the earth, in twenty-four hours. The world is, indeed, a neighborhood! But wings over the Sacramento Junior College suggest, also, that the world can be made a brotherhood. Being in intimate physical contact makes the world a neighborhood; being in intimate mental contact can make the world a brother¬ hood. Planes can now wing their way from place to place. Ideas can wing their way from mind to mind, anywhere in the world, and make the world a brother¬ hood ; but the ideas must be such as to promote international trust and under¬ standing. Whether or not the world is made both a neighborhood and a brotherhood will depend on you, on youth everywhere in the world; for it cannot be denied that the ideas of the youth of this generation will determine the character of the next generation and the kind of world we shall have. I have faith in you. I am sure that you can use Wings to help in establishing both a neighborhood and a brotherhood, in order that the world may be “a home to live in instead of a place to fight and freeze and starve in. ” Very cordially yours, NICHOLAS RICCI A RDI
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Page 6 text:
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Fall Semester Piloted by a carefully written new constitution, the Associated Students of the past school year have had wonderful opportunities to practice genuine democracy in student government. With the combined efforts of the Cabinet, the Senate, the Supreme Court, and the Precincts, the semester progressed un¬ der the leadership of Ted Scarborough, pictured upper right hand corner, who was replaced when he resigned by capable Lochlan Richards. Rallies, assemblies, dances, tomato picking to help the farmers, and other activities of the semester were well organized by vivacious Kaye Barnes, Women’s ice President, and active Wilbur Green, Men’s Vice President. The two vice presi¬ dents are pictured in the upper right photo. Important generators of student activities are the Booster and Rally Com¬ mittees, traditional pep committees on the campus. The Booster Committee under the guidance of the Women’s Vice President and the Rally Committee under the leadership of the Men’s Vice President were important in the pro¬ moting and sponsoring of student activities in both the Fall and Spring semes¬ ters. RALLY COMMITTEE Front row, left to right: Jack King, Dean Higenbotham, Jimmy Hickman, John Larson. Back row: Harvey West, Jack Pefley, Jim Long, Dave DeLancey, Earl Andersen, Doane Cook.
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