Private Schools, MS On Switchboard Yellow Pages CCA is a private, evangelical Christian boarding high school for grades 912. Private School Resource Catalog www.boarding-school-help.com http://www.switchboard.com/Schools-Private_And_Parochial/MS/18349-/yellowpages_s
Office Of Indian Education Programs: School Directory Maine Michigan Minnesota mississippi Montana Nevada Circle of NationsWahpeton Indian boarding School, ND, 832 8th Street North http://www.oiep.bia.edu/contact_school.html
Extractions: iisbdc.iis.bia.edu Tel Fax Black Mesa Community School AZ PO Box 97, Pinon, AZ 86510 Blackwater Community School AZ Rt. 1, Box 95, Coolidge, AZ 85228 Casa Blanca Community School AZ PO BOX 10940, Bapchule, AZ 85211 Chilchinbeto Day School AZ PO BOX 740, Kayenta, AZ 86033 Chinle Boarding School AZ PO Box 70, Many Farms, AZ 86538 Cibecue Community School AZ 101 Main Street, PO Box 80068, Cibecue, AZ 85911 Cottonwood Day School AZ Navajo Rt. 4, Chinle, AZ 86503 Cove Day School AZ PO Box 2000, Red Valley, AZ 86544 Dennehotso Boarding School AZ PO Box 2570, Dennehotso, AZ 86535 Dilcon Community School, Inc. AZ HC 63, Box G, Winslow, AZ 86041 Gila Crossing Community School www.gccs.bia.edu AZ PO Box 10, Laveen, AZ 85339 Greasewood Springs Community School Inc. AZ HC 58, Box 60, Ganado, AZ 86505 Greyhills Academy High School AZ PO Box 160, Tuba City, AZ 86045 Havasupai School AZ PO Box 40, Supai, AZ 86435 Holbrook Dormitory, Inc. AZ 1100 West Buffalo Street, Holbrook, AZ 86025 Hopi Day School AZ PO Box 42, Kykotsmovi, AZ 86039 Hopi High School AZ PO Box 337, Keams Canyon, AZ 86034
CBS News | Piney Woods: An Academic Oasis | June 29, 2005 22:00:03 Piney Woods is an academic oasis in rural mississippi that is the polar opposite At the Piney Woods Country Life School, an allblack boarding school in http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/06/27/60II/main704572.shtml
Theodore G. Bilbo Of Mississippi of law school to help run a girl s boarding school in Wiggins, mississippi. After leaving the girl s boarding school he returned to law school at http://www.applet-magic.com/bilbo.htm
Extractions: USA Theodore G. Bilbo of Mississippi Theodore G. Bilbo was born in Pearl River County, Mississippi in 1877. His father was a farmer and Bilbo grew up on the farm and attended school in Poplarville. In 1898 he married. Shortly after a daughter was born Bilbo's wife died. Soon after Bilbo went away to Nashville to study for the Baptist ministry at Peabody College, but later he switched to law at Vanderbilt University. In 1900 he dropped out of law school to help run a girl's boarding school in Wiggins, Mississippi. There was accusations of an affair with one the students, an orphan girl from Mississippi. Bilbo was accused of numerous affairs throughout his career. He never denied them and seemed to encourage the rumors as a way of enhancing his masculinity. He was relative short, five foot two inches tall and he may have had trouble getting people to accept him as an equal. After leaving the girl's boarding school he returned to law school at Vanderbilt. He attempted to win the position of circuit clerk of his home county in 1903 but failed. His opponent was a one-armed Baptist minister. Bilbo came to appreciate the power of a simpathy vote when he found himself thinking about the empty sleeve of his opponent when he went to vote. He then pursued his law studies at Vanderbilt, but there is doubt that he graduated.
Extractions: Government Treaties on Ojibwe Education Teacher Resources Developed for the Teacher Institute seminar that took place February 6-7, 2004. (See also our resource list from our seminar "Beauty, Honor, and Tradition: The Legacy of Plains Indian Shirts Web Sites and Primary Documents Online Treaties with Minnesota Indian Tribes This project was begun in 1992 by Prof. E.A. Schwartz to develop methods for making documents of federal Indian policy history accessible by computer. Includes allotment data and a transcription of the Dawes Act. The American Indian of the Pacific Northwest Collection, at the University of Washington
Extractions: United Methodist News Service Features Video Stories Photo Gallery ... Weekly Digest Related Articles Pastor challenges Native Americans to use culture in worship Deere did 'holy work' for all Native Americans General Conference continues funding for Native American Ministries Native Americans celebrate new Phoenix fellowship ... Racism poses Indians' biggest challenge Resources The Advance General Conference 2004: Native American News Book of Resolutions: Human Rights of Native People Youth Service Fund ... July Native Americans suffer from 'historical trauma,' researcher says July 27, 2005 By Edna Steinman* REDLANDS, Calif. (UMNS) - The treatment given to American Indians as the United States pushed its boundaries westward has resulted in an ongoing emotional condition that a Native American social worker-researcher calls "historical trauma." Maria Yellow Horse Brave Heart, research associate professor in the Graduate School of Social Work at the University of Denver, described her work at the 2005 Native American Family Camp, held July 19-23 at the University of Redlands. The annual event is sponsored by the United Methodist Church's Native American International Caucus. Historical trauma has a layering effect and is the "cumulative emotional and psychological wounding over the life span and across generations, emanating from massive group trauma," she said.
Extractions: Midwest Academy located just north of Keokuk, Iowa, provides a great location. It is only a few-hour drive from many major cities in the Central United States. Rich in history, culture and natural beauty, Keokuk boasts exceptional infrastructure, healthcare facilities, neighborhoods, entertainment and recreational options for the entire Tri-State area. Keokuk owes most of its growth and past to the Mississippi River. Today about 11,000 call this beautiful city home. Visitors remark on the beauty and friendliness of the people in this area. Interestingly enough, Iowa sets many standards in education and personal growth. Keokuk, Iowa was named in honor of the Sauk/Fox chief, and is a place of great history and bright future. It is considered "Americas Heartland" where values and the importance of family are still paramount. Behavioral Modification High standards exist. Inappropriate behavior is confronted, consequences are assessed, and the behavior is redirected. Appropriate behavior is reinforced and rewarded. A merit system is used requiring rewarded. A merit system is used requiring each teen to earn their status and privileges through a standard program using a level system.
Pearl River College 1928 Catalog In 1817 mississippi was organized into the present State of mississippi. This boarding school drew students from all over the southern part of the state http://www.prcc.edu/history/ctyhistory1882-1927.html
Extractions: This history was taken from the winning essay in a medal contest held by the Wade Hampton Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution. The essay was written by Frankie B. Stewart. Ms. Stewart was the great-granddaughter of "Poplar" Jim Smith, founder of Poplarville, Mississippi. At the time of the writing, Ms. Stewart was a Junior at PRCAHS. She attended Pearl River College in 1929-1930. In the early 1800's pioneers, venturing from the crowded conditions of the Eastern United States, found their way to the Mississippi Territory. In 1817 Mississippi was organized into the present State of Mississippi. Mississippi was divided into far fewer counties than now. As the state grew, these counties were subdivided into the number of counties that are evident today. In the southern portion of the state, in the area between Marion and Hancock counties, the people began efforts to organize another county. The plan was to take land from both counties to make up a third county. The land area chosen for this new county was occupied by a tribe of Native Americans (Choctaw) called Caesar (after their chief). A large percentage of the people attempting to organize this county were from Virginia and North Carolina. The county of Pearl was organized by legislation passed in the state house and senate in 1872. Jim Smith, an early county landholder, was said to have given one of the Native Americans ten bushels of corn for his claim. Much of the land was public land. Pearl county's existence was brief. After the courthouse (located in the Masonic Lodge at Byrd's Chapel) burned, destroying all important records, and because there was not enough taxable land to pay required debts inherited from Marion and Hancock counties
[ Home Page :: The Academy Of The Sacred Heart ] they are residents of Louisiana, Texas, mississippi, Maryland, The Director of the boarding School and three houseparents care for each student in http://www.ashcoteau.org/admissions/admissions.html
Public School (UK) -- Facts, Info, And Encyclopedia Article school where students are lodged and fed as well as taught) boarding school, Many (A private secondary school) prep schools in the (North American http://www.absoluteastronomy.com/encyclopedia/p/pu/public_school_(uk)2.htm
Extractions: A public school , in common (An Indo-European language belonging to the West Germanic branch; the official language of Britain and the United States and most of the Commonwealth countries) English and (A Celtic language of Wales) Welsh usage, is a (usually) prestigious (An educational institution) school , for children usually between the ages of 11 or 13 and 18, which charges fees and is not financed by the state. It is traditionally a single sex (A private school where students are lodged and fed as well as taught) boarding school , although many now accept day pupils and are (Click link for more info and facts about coeducational) coeducational . The majority date back to the 18th or 19th centuries, and several are over 400 years old. By contrast, a government-maintained school, where instruction is provided free of charge, is called a (Click link for more info and facts about state school) state school The English usage of the term "public school" is in direct opposition to what any foreign English speaker would expect. In countries such as (A nation occupying the whole of the Australian continent; aboriginal tribes are thought to have migrated from southeastern Asia 20,000 years ago; first Europeans were British convicts sent there as a penal colony)
WLBT 3 - Jackson, MS: Look Around Mississippi It s time for look around mississippi, and Walt Grayson it taking us to school. We re a Christian military boarding school, and our mission is pursuit http://www.wlbt.com/Global/story.asp?S=2083494&nav=2CSfBK6j
Clark Davis Adams She kept my custody and still had me enrolled in the boarding school. My current job (and the fact that I am living in mississippi again) prevent me http://www.infidels.org/electronic/email/ex-tian/Clark_Davis_Adams.html
Extractions: From: Clark Davis Adams ( cadams@infidels.org ) Subject: Here's My Story... Date: 29 Dec 1995 Okay, my turn. A couple of years ago I won an honorable mention prize in FFRF's college essay contest for my essay, "Growing Up an Atheist in the Religious Mid-South." In 1994, I gave a similar speech at the Fourth of July Lake Hypatia Monster Gala. Of course, I can't find the electronic version of either (I just moved), so I get to shoot from the hip :). Here is the story of my intellectual development, and the consequences which followed. I apologize for the length, but I think all of the information is important to the story. I also apologize for the informal style, as much of the stuff here is very emotional to me and nobody besides myself proofread it before I submitted it: I was born in July, 1969 (Space Baby :) in Louisville, KY, USA, a typical Midwestern town to a typical Midwestern middle class family (with two kids instead of two-and-a-half). My father was, and still is, a non-practicing Presby-Methodist who never attends church. My mother was a Roman Catholic who saw fit I be reared as such. FWIW, she now attends a liberal Methodist church because the minister, a female, is a close friend of hers. I was carried to church and "CCD" classes (that's what we called catechism classes) from the start. I didn't mind them at first, because it was just "play time," and when you are a toddler, toys rule. When I was 6, we moved to Indianapolis, Indiana. I still was treated to weekly, and sometimes, semi-weekly doses of religious instruction. I gradually began to dislike them because it appeared to me that they were becoming more indoctrinating, and less playing. I remember my first hint of skepticism: We learned of the bible fable of Sodom and Gomorrah (not in any detail as we were quite young). When I was told that Lot's wife was turned into a pillar of salt for looking back at the city, my first reaction was that god was like a "bully." Even at a pretty early age, I knew that bible-god's punishment did not fit the crime.
Clarionledger.com That s when the federal courts ordered mississippi public school officials to would be looking for a strong academic boarding school for their children. http://www.clarionledger.com/news/9912/21/21deltaprivateside.html
Extractions: And today, both white parents and a handful of black parents enroll their children there. Elliott Crawford, 9, has been at private school since she was old enough to sit in a classroom. "What's public school?" she asks, looking at her mother. She and brother Nicholas, 14, are among the predominantly white student body at Washington School, founded in 1970 during a time of intense racial turmoil in Mississippi. That's when the federal courts ordered Mississippi public school officials to put both black and white students in the same public schools. And that's also when many school districts across the state, particularly in the Delta, became predominantly black. If Washington School were to suddenly close, Nick and Jane Crawford say they would be looking for a strong academic boarding school for their children. Washington School is across the street from Our Lady of Lourdes Elementary, a Catholic school. Even though the Crawfords are Catholic, they don't think they would choose Catholic schools.
Carlisle Indian Industrial School Child, Brenda J. boarding SCHOOL SEASONS, AMERICAN INDIAN FAMILIES 1900Child, Brenda J. boarding mississippi University Press of mississippi. 1993. http://home.epix.net/~landis/secondary.html
Extractions: Adams, David Wallace. EDUCATION FOR EXTINCTION: AMERICAN INDIANS AND THE BOARDING SCHOOL EXPERIENCE 1875-1928. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. 1995. Recently released in paperback, Adams treats the history thoroughly, with respect and honesty, yet avoids the trap of over-sentimentalizing the assimliation story. Includes very good accounts of the personnel associated with the boarding schools of the period. Lays out the events that led to the final demise of Carlisle. This book is a good basic Indian Education primer with strong emphasis on Carlisle. Archuleta, Margaret L., Brenda J. Child, and K. Tsianina Lomawaima AWAY FROM HOME: AMERICAN INDIAN BOARDING SCHOOL EXPERIENCES, 1879-2000. Phoenix, Arizona: Heard Museum,2000. Ball, Eve. INDEH: AN APACHE ODYSSEY. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press. 1988. This collection includes interviews with Asa Daklugie with his stories of the Chiricahua Apaches who were imprisoned at Ft. Marion after Geronimo's capture, and whose children were sent to the Carlisle Indian School. Among those were the friends and relatives of Daklugie Frank Mangus, Chapo, Kanseah, Zhunni, and Ramona Chihuahua, who became his wife. Among the 186 Native American children buried in Indian Cemetery at Carlisle, 54 are Apache children. Many of these were the Chiricahua who spent their last days at the Indian School.
Riverside Military Academy Boarding School. College preparatory school that provides young men in grades 712 a challenging Anastasio left the University of Southern mississippi, where he was http://www.cadet.com/news/archive01.html
Extractions: RMA Honor Societies Induct New Members December 20, 2001 On Tuesday, December 18, Cadets were inducted into the following honor societies at a ceremony with staff, faculty, and cadets in attendance. Congratulations to these fine young men. National Art Honor Society Cadets Belles, Cook, Etheridge, Haskell, Helton, Hewitt, Hsu, Konev, Lee, K, Maki, Matos, May, Nash, Platt, Pun, Richards, S., Rogers, M., and Salters Cadets Bacon, Buckles, Choi, Graue, Jones, J., Misel, Richards, S., Richards, D., Seymore, C., Smothers, and Swaitek. National Honor Society Cadets Donovan, Etheridge, Haskell, and Merville Cadet Donovan HOBY recognition Cadet Davis, B
Urban45_21 The Federal Indian boarding School A Study of Environment and Response, at School, 18501930 (Jackson, MS University Press of mississippi, 1993). http://www.zzbw.uni-hannover.de/HerbstHist/Herbst45_21.htm
Office Of Management And Budget BIA provides support for 185 elementary and secondary schools, Fort Wingate Elementary boarding School Dormitory and Santa Fe Indian boarding School in http://www.whitehouse.gov/omb/budget/fy2002/bud10.html
Extractions: Spending: Discretionary Budget Authority Mandatory Outlays: Existing law Proposed legislation Credit Activity: Direct loan disbursements Guaranteed loans Tax Expenditures: Existing law Federal support of community and regional development helps build the Nation's economy and helps economically distressed urban and rural communities secure a larger share of America's prosperity. The Federal Government spends nearly $12 billion a year, and offers about $1.4 billion in tax incentives to help States and localities create jobs and economic opportunity, and build infrastructure to support commercial and industrial development. Federal programs have helped to stabilize and revitalize many of these communities, allowing them to expand their economic base and support their citizens, particularly those in need. Housing and Community Development The Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) provides communities with funds to promote commercial and industrial development, enhance infrastructure, and develop strategies to provide affordable housing close to jobs. HUD also provides grants and sponsors research to reduce the hazards created by lead-based paint in housing.
Women's History Performers In Mississippi Velma is a native of the mississippi Delta. Her presentations excite the through the struggle to maintain her culture in governmentrun boarding school. http://www.nwhp.org/tlp/performers/mississippi-performers.html
Extractions: Performance Description: Women Masters . Celebrating women, art and life, these programs use the magic of theatre to bring these artists to your audience. While displaying reproductions of their work, the artists discuss their subjects and style. Often in their own words, they describe the people and events that shaped their lives and art. Mary Cassatt , known for her frankness, describes her life in France during the birth of Impressionism. Georgia OKeeffe conducts a tour through her sensational flowers and abstracts to the vastness of the American West. Lilla Cabot Perry discusses her friendship with Claude Monet and the story of Giverny, the cradle of American Impressionism.
Who Here Moved A Lot As A Kid? Until my mom became a faculty member at a boarding school. between birth and high school graduation. columbus, mississippi starkville, mississippi http://ilx.wh3rd.net/thread.php?msgid=6089783