Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Santa Rosa Junior College (SRJC) is a public community college in Santa Rosa, California with an additional campus in Petaluma and centers in surrounding Sonoma County.Santa Rosa Junior College was modeled as a feeder school for the University of California system (a "junior" version of nearby University of California, Berkeley, with the Bear Cub mascot modeled after Oski). [2]
At Santa Rosa Junior College, the four-story Frank P. Doyle Library [58] houses the Library, Media Services, and Academic Computing Departments, as well as the college art gallery, tutorial center and Center for New Media, a multimedia production facility for SRJC faculty.
You are free: to share – to copy, distribute and transmit the work; to remix – to adapt the work; Under the following conditions: attribution – You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made.
Santa Rosa Junior College; Sonoma State University; U. University of San Francisco This page was last edited on 17 December 2016, at 06:36 (UTC). Text is ...
The Santa Rosa Library would be the ancestor of the Central Library of the Sonoma County Library system. Santa Rosa's second library building was dedicated in March 1904 with a Carnegie grant, [6] although the 1906 earthquake damaged it badly. The library was rebuilt as the Santa Rosa Free Public Library and served Santa Rosa until 1960, when ...
Members of the right-wing group Moms for Liberty called the police on a pair of school librarians over a young adult bestselling book that they claimed included “pornography”.. According to ...
Santa Rosa Junior College, a public community college in Santa Rosa, California; Serangoon Junior College, a former junior college in Hougang, Singapore, ...
Santa Rosa, 1911. LeBaron co-authored two books on the history of Santa Rosa: Santa Rosa: A Nineteenth Century Town (Historia, Ltd., 1985) and Santa Rosa: A Twentieth Century Town (Historia, Ltd., 1993). [2] She also taught Sonoma County history at Santa Rosa Junior College and at the Lifelong Learning Center at Sonoma State University. [8]