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American River College

Community college in Sacramento, California, US

American River College

Summary

Community college in Sacramento, California, US

FieldValue
nameAmerican River College
image_size100
established
typePublic community college
presidentLisa Cardoza
students42,141 (2013–2014)
citySacramento
stateCalifornia
countryUnited States
campussuburban
colors
mascotBucky the Beaver
sports_nicknameBeavers
parentLos Rios Community College District
website

American River College (ARC) is a public community college in unincorporated Sacramento, California. It is part of the California Community Colleges System.

History

The college was opened in 1955 as American River Junior College (ARJC), on the site of the old Grant Technical College. It moved to its current location in 1958, occupying eight newly built office complexes and the original Cameron ranch house. In 1965 the college became a part of the Los Rios Community College District and became American River College. Today, along with Cosumnes River College, Folsom Lake College and Sacramento City College, ARC is directed by a seven-member board of trustees elected by voters residing in the district.

The climactic police showdown of the 1986 Emilio Estevez and Demi Moore film Wisdom was filmed on the American River campus, including in and around Beaver Stadium.

During the period of 2004–2013, the college opened a variety of new facilities, including buildings for Health Education, Theater & Music, Kinesiology, and Life Science and Fine Arts. In addition, the college also expanded its bookstore and library and opened a new Student Center and parking garage. In 2014 the college opened the 19,000 square foot Evangelisti Culinary Arts Center, which houses the college's hospitality management program and student-run Oak Cafe restaurant and bakery. In 2021 the college opened the 57,000 square foot Diane Bryant STEM Innovation Center, which houses a variety of academic programs.

In 2008, the student body association supported California Proposition 8 which sought to restrict marriage to opposite-sex couples. In 2010 the Board of Trustees lost a lawsuit against the student body association.

Campus

Natomas]] Center

The college occupies a 155 acre site on the old Cameron Ranch in northern Sacramento County.

Students

The college enrolls about 35,000 full-time and part-time students, making it one of the largest community colleges in California. ARC has published its own literary journal since 1984, the American River Review.

Student life

The campus has its own newspaper, the American River Current, and its own English as a Second Language newsletter, The Parrot.

Race and ethnicityTotal
White{{bartable36%2
Hispanic{{bartable32%2
Asian{{bartable10%2
African American{{bartable7%2
Unknown{{bartable6%2
Multiracial{{bartable5%2
Filipino{{bartable2%2
American Indian/Alaska Native{{bartable1%2
Pacific Islander{{bartable1%2

Athletics

The college athletics teams are nicknamed the Beavers.

Notable people

Main article: :Category:American River College alumni

  • Lloyd Connelly – California Superior Court judge and former California State Assembly member
  • Ward Connerly – Former UC Regent and political activist
  • Wally Herger – Member, United States House of Representatives (California, 2nd Congressional District)
  • Ewa Klamt – German politician and Member of the European Parliament for Lower Saxony
  • Adrian Lamo – Former grey-hat computer hacker, key figure in Chelsea Manning case, journalist
  • Joan Lunden – TV host/personality
  • Brian Posehn – Comedian, co-star of The Sarah Silverman Program
  • Anthony Padilla – Co-founder of Smosh
  • Ian Hecox – Co-founder of Smosh
  • Anthony Swofford – Author of Jarhead
  • Richard Trenton Chase – Serial killer

Notable sportspeople

  • Steve Andrade – professional baseball player
  • Dusty Baker – professional baseball player and manager
  • Devontae Booker – professional football player
  • Dallas Braden – professional baseball player
  • Jarrett Bush – professional football player
  • Tony Eason – professional football player
  • Joseph Fatu, professional wrestler better known by his ring name Solo Sikoa
  • Robert Hight – professional racecar driver
  • Steve Holm – professional baseball player
  • Mike Lincoln – professional baseball player
  • Don Lofgran – professional basketball player
  • Jim Loscutoff – professional basketball player
  • Bill McNulty – professional baseball player
  • Debbie Meyer – Olympic swimmer
  • Bob Oliver – professional baseball player
  • Manny Parra – professional baseball player
  • John Vukovich – professional baseball player and manager
  • Gerald Willhite – professional football player

References

References

  1. "2017 Student Success Scorecard".
  2. "Lisa Cardoza Named New President of American River College".
  3. "Protect Marriage - Yes on 8".
  4. Case 2:09-cv-02446-LKK-GGH UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
  5. (February 2022). "YouTube".
  6. "Annual/Term Student Count Report". California Community Colleges Chancellor's Office.
  7. Greene, Nelson. "Bill McNulty". Society for American Baseball Research.
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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