Talk:North American NA-64 Yale

SAIT
according to the SAIT website, Shortly after the outbreak of World War II, PITA began delivering courses under the federal War Emergency Training Program. At the height of the war-effort training, classes ran around the clock to accommodate regular students as well as vocational training for the armed forces. In 1940, PITA's facilities were taken over by the Royal Canadian Air Force to serve as the No. 2 Wireless Training School of the Commonwealth Air Training Plan. hence the link. NiD.29 (talk) 04:58, 10 May 2014 (UTC)


 * But the link offered something that it didn't deliver. If the link is piped as No.2 Wireless School" then at the very least on the target page, the reader expects the article to contain the words No.2 Wireless School. Which it doesn't, and so the guidance/policy over intuitiveness of links is appropriate. It seems that the wireless school was at the PITA site rather than PITA became in its entirety the Wireless School. The history link says "Most regular classes moved to the Calgary Stampede grounds, while the art department and women's programs relocated to a Mount Royal mansion the city had repossessed for back taxes...". A better link would have been No. 2 Wireless School (PITA, Alberta and even then "Provincial Institute of Technology and Art" doesn't appear in the article. GraemeLeggett (talk) 07:10, 10 May 2014 (UTC)