Shawnigan Lake School Admissions Information Form Canada s boarding School, Vancouver Island Private boarding School BritishColumbia boarding School British Columbia boarding School http://www.sls.bc.ca/informationform.html
Extractions: Welcome SLS Facts Admissions Process Contact Us Fees Schedule Financial Aid Overview Academics Athletics Fine Arts Explore Our Campus Meet the Teachers Sample Programme SLS Today Residential Life Leadership Chapel Health Care Technology Facilities Our History Typical Day General Information School Calendar Alumni Calendar Travel Information Welcome Update Form Guestbook Alumni Mail Class Representatives Alumni Calendar Report Card Museum Project Advancement Office Giving for Shawnigan Annual Fund Planned Giving Major Gifts Departments Guest Book Academic Staff Newsletter Questions?
Little Rock Little Rock School was taken by Will Counts. The girl shouting is Hazel Massery . In 1957 Negroes at Little Rock, the capital of arkansas, won a court http://www.spartacus.schoolnet.co.uk/USAlittlerock.htm
Extractions: During the 1950s the main tactic of the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People was to use the courts to end racial discrimination in the United States. One of its objectives was to end the system of having separate schools for black and white children in the South. For example, the states of Texas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Missouri, Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia, Florida, South Carolina, North Carolina, Virginia and Kentucky all prohibited black and white children from going to the same school. In 1952 the National Association for the Advancement of Coloured People appealed to the Supreme Court that school segregation was unconstitutional. The Supreme Court ruled that separate schools were acceptable as long as they were "separate and equal". It was not too difficult for the NAACP to provide information to show that black and white schools in the South were not equal.
Chronicles Of Oklahoma Sequoyah moved to arkansas in 1828 with what was known as the Western Cherokees . 10Address delivered at Central High School, Tulsa, Oklahoma. http://digital.library.okstate.edu/Chronicles/v018/v018p077.html
Extractions: EDUCATIONAL HISTORY IN AND ABOUT TULSA, OKLAHOMA (1839-1939) Page 77 The Tulsa Historical Society of Central High School, Tulsa, was organized in February, 1938, by three class-groups of seniors who had been studying local affairs the preceding semester. They felt that organization would make their work more effective. Some five hundred students have enrolled in the Society. Public interest in local history has been increased through the society's open programs, exhibits and newspaper articles. The 1939-40 groups are preparing a high school text book analyzing the growth and needs of Tulsa. In this undertaking the members are assured community and newspaper support, and advice and criticism from a group of interested citizens. Before introducing the next speaker, the presiding officer explained that since the gift had featured a specimen of the Cherokee language, Bob Troutman would tell about Sequoyah, inventor of that alphabet, and about the Cherokee schools in Northeast Oklahoma. He spoke as follows:
Ozark Adventist Academy s and guide to this high school boarding academy sponsored by theSeventh Day Adventist. Staff and faculty information and updates to student http://www.ozarkacademy.org/
Extractions: randomImage(['images/frontpage_01.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_02.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_03.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_04.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_05.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_06.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_07.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_08.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_09.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_10.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_11.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_12.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_13.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_14.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_15.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_16.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_17.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_18.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_19.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_20.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_21.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_22.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_23.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_24.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_25.jpg',602,234,'images/frontpage_26.jpg',602,234]); Located in the foothills of the beautiful Ozark Mountains of Northwest Arkansas, this Seventh-day Adventist boarding high school offers a warm, friendly, and inviting atmosphere. It is owned and operated by the Arkansas-Louisiana Conference of Seventh-day Adventists and is fully accredited with the Accrediting Association of Seventh-day Adventist Schools, Colleges, and Universities and by the Arkansas Nonpublic Schools Accrediting Association. Choosing Ozark Adventist Academy for the high school years is a choice of belonging to a school family with a special