BRISTOL TOWNSHIP ONLINE The schools are in the Bristol Township School District 2005 SOUTHEASTERN pennsylvania HOUSEHOLD HAZARDOUS WASTE AND OLD COMPUTER COLLECTION PROGRAM http://www.bristoltwp.com/
Extractions: Median house value: $89,900 (year 2000) New: Shippensburg, PA residents, houses, and apartments details Races in Shippensburg: Ancestries: German (36.0%), Irish (12.0%), United States (9.1%), Italian (7.5%), English (6.4%), Scottish (3.0%). For population 25 years and over in Shippensburg For population 15 years and over in Shippensburg borough Never married: 45.6%
Extractions: Median house value: $104,900 (year 2000) New: Lititz, PA residents, houses, and apartments details Races in Lititz: Ancestries: German (39.7%), Irish (14.9%), United States (10.0%), English (8.8%), Italian (6.3%), Swiss (3.1%). For population 25 years and over in Lititz For population 15 years and over in Lititz borough Never married: 19.3% Now married: 59.3% Separated: 1.8% Widowed: 11.3% Divorced: 8.3%
ABOUT ASAP Provider The Girl Scouts of Southeastern pennsylvania Program Most Blessed Sacrament School Provider parochial School Contact 215727-1863 http://db.phillyasap.org/list.cfm?cat=ALL&zip=19143
ABOUT ASAP Provider The Girl Scouts of Southeastern pennsylvania Program Our Lady of the Rosary School Provider parochial School Contact 215474-4011 http://db.phillyasap.org/list.cfm?cat=ALL&zip=19139
Schools George Junior Republic in pennsylvania offers a wide continuum of services The Wilmington Area School District includes the Townships of Plain Grove, http://www.merlink.org/educate/mcs.htm
Extractions: George Junior Republic in Pennsylvania offers a wide continuum of services for children and adolescence. A family atmosphere serves as the foundation for George Junior living experience, which provides each youth with a structured, firm, fair and consistent program. Individual success of our youth is measured through an innovative five-step motivational system. This behavioral/educational model rewards positive behaviors and consequates negative actions. The system is used to empower our students with structure, discipline, and valuable social skills. Greenville Area School District 9 Donation Road, Greenville, PA 16125 (724) 588-2500
Extractions: Visitors since 7/15/1998 Links Webrings Guest Book Contact Us This site is eye friendly: Use your browser's view options to increase or decrease font size The following table references Supreme Court cases dealing with religion and education. Cases are arranged by date. Table compiled by Susan Batte Note: in the final column, "S" designates a ruling favoring separationism, "A" designates a ruling favoring a non-preferentialist or accomodationist position, and "N" designates a neutral ruling. Date Case Vote Issue Raised Holding/Rationale S/P/N Lemon v. Kurtzman and Early v. Dicenso 8:0 and 8:1 Does a state statute that provides for direct aid to parochial schools while restricting the use of such aid to secular instruction violate the Establishment Clause of the 1st Amendment. The Court held that such plans cause excessive entanglement of civil authority and religion and recognized that the relatively few religious institutions that would benefit from such direct appropriations would promote divisiveness along religious lines S Tilton v. Richardson
Resident Resources: Organizations (Educational) C. Private and parochial schools. Abington Friends School 215-886-4350 St. David s parochial School - 215-659-4251 Easton Road and Cedar; Willow Grove http://www.abington.org/resident/organizations_edu.htm
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Pennsylvania A parochial school was established in that parish in 1782. In Western pennsylvania the first Catholic school was established at Sportsman s Hall, http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/11638c.htm
Extractions: Home Encyclopedia Summa Fathers ... P > Pennsylvania A B C D ... CICDC - Home of the Catholic Lifetime Reading Plan God , and provides that all members of the Assembly, as well as those who voted for them, should be such as believed Jesus Christ to be the Son of God , the Saviour of the World. The Great Law prohibits swearing, cursing, drunkenness, health-drinking, card-playing, scolding, and lying in conversation. In the preface to the "Frame of Government" may be found the key to Penn's fundamental views on political questions. Thus he wrote: "Governments rather depend upon men than men upon governments; let men be good, and the government cannot be bad; if it be ill they will cure it. Though good laws do well, good men do better; for good laws may want [i.e. lack] good men and be abolished or evaded by ill men; but good men will never want good laws nor suffer ill ones. That, therefore, which makes a good constitution must keep it, viz. men of wisdom and virtue; qualities that, because they descend not with worldly inheritance, must be carefully propagated by a virtuous education of youth. For liberty without obedience is confusion, and obedience without liberty is slavery." Penn was far in advance of his time in his views of the capacity of mankind for democratic government, and equally so in his broad-minded toleration of differences of religious belief. Indeed, it has been well said that the declaration of his final charter of privileges of 1701 was not alone "intended as the fundamental law of the Province and declaration of religious liberty on the broadest character and about which there could be no doubt or uncertainty. It is a declaration not of toleration but of religious equality and brought within its protection all who professed one
Extractions: then hit the "back" button on your browser to return to this page. First graduating class (1941) of Mount Aloysius College, Cresson. Photo submitted by Betty Mirovich 1924-25 class picture, No. 9 School in South Spangler Photo submitted by Linda Fulton. Reade High School class of 1955 Photo submitted by Kenneth Stallard. This is a photo of the children from the Syberton, PA (Cambria County) school in 1920. This was a one-room school house with 13 children in grades one through five. The children's names are not listed, but one of my ancestors, Helen Waltz, was the teacher. In this picture with her students, she is 19 years old. Her duties not only included teaching, but since she ran the school herself, she also had to build the fire and clean. She walked several miles each day from Gallitizen to teach at the school. Helen taught in the public system for 45 years, and then after she "retired" she taught kindergarten at St. Patrick's for over 25 years. She received an award in 1989 for being the teacher who has taught the longest amount of time in the country. Photo submitted by Linda Braund Blandburg School, about 1913
Extractions: may be forced to close at end of school year by Roma Hadzewycz PARSIPPANY, N.J. - Another Ukrainian parochial school may be forced to close its doors soon due to financial considerations. Teachers and parents at St. John the Baptist Ukrainian Catholic School in Northhampton, Pa., were informed in January that the school will close at the end of the current academic year. Teachers were called to a meeting on January 6, after Epiphany services, by the Very Rev. David Clooney and told of the closing. Faculty, staff and parents also received a brief three-sentence letter from the pastor of St. John's Church. "It is with regret that I have to announce that St. John the Baptist School will not be able to continue in operation beyond the end of this school year (2003-2004), that is June 9, 2004," the Rev. Clooney wrote in the January 6 letter. "After extensive consultation regarding the finances of St. John's Parish, Archbishop Stefan Soroka has given his permission to close the school. I share with you in the sadness of such a decision and its necessity, given the tremendous financial burden on the parish." The general public learned of the school's imminent closing from the February 3 issue of The Morning Call of Allentown, Pa., which carried a story by Kathy Lauer-Williams headlined "Northampton parish shocked that school is closing this year; Ukrainian Archdiocese of Philadelphia cites financial reasons."
Boulder Community Network Education Center Faith Baptist School, 833 15th Ave., Longmont, 7765677. Friends British Primary School, 5465 pennsylvania Ave, Boulder 80303, 449-1999 http://bcn.boulder.co.us/univ_school/other/oth.html
Extractions: Select a State Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware District of Columbia Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming "Finally - someone putting the web to good use!"
067 Pa. Code § 171.2. Definitions. Converted school busA vehicle not originally manufactured to be a school bus. and titled to a public, private or parochial school on or before March 1 http://www.pacode.com/secure/data/067/chapter171/s171.2.html
Extractions: School bus (i) Type A school bus (ii) Type B school bus . A school bus constructed utilizing a stripped chassis, with the entrance door behind the front wheels. This definition includes two classifications: Type B1, with a GVWR less than or equal to 10,000 pounds; and Type B2, with a GVWR greater than 10,000 pounds. (iii) Type C school bus (iv) Type D school bus . A school bus constructed utilizing a stripped chassis with the entrance door ahead of the front wheels.
History parochial expansion also characterized his tenure; new parishes were In1908, Ryan announced the establishment of a free central high school for girls http://www.archdiocese-phl.org/history.htm
Extractions: William Penn's "holy experiment" of religious toleration (1682) in his colony of Pennsylvania was a refuge for persecuted Catholics as well as other religions. There were Catholics in the Philadelphia area from the beginning of its colonization. The Mass was celebrated publicly as early as 1707. Old Saint Joseph's Church, the first Catholic church in Philadelphia was built in 1733. The Catholic population increased from forty people at that time to about eight thousand by 1790. On April 8, 1808, Michael Egan, O.F.M. (d. 1814), was appointed the bishop of the new diocese of Philadelphia, which at that time included the entire states of Pennsylvania and Delaware, and the western and southern parts of New Jersey. At this time, the diocese included about 30,000Catholics attended by eleven priests. Old Saint Mary's Church was selected as the cathedral. Trustee problems at Old Saint Mary's persisted during Egan's entire tenure as bishop. After Egan's death in 1814, it was five years before Henry Conwell (1748-1842), Vicar General of Armagh, Ireland, was appointed the Bishop of Philadelphia. In an attempt to compromise, Bishop Conwell signed a pact with the trustees giving them the right to veto his appointment of their pastors. This pact was rejected by Pope Leo XII in 1827. Francis Patrick Kenrick (1747-1863) was eventually appointed in 1830 the coadjutor to Bishop Conwell with the right of succession. Kenrick was consecrated on June 6, 1830. The trustee problem at Old Saint Mary's continued until Kenrick closed the church and the cemetery on April 16, 1831, after which the trustees capitulated to episcopal authority.
School District Of Philadelphia A national record 45000 volunteers are expected to participate in school and Citizens Bank of pennsylvania will sponsor this years Kids Carnival, http://www.phila.k12.pa.us/offices/communications/press_releases/2005/01/05/mlk_
Extractions: or (cell)215-266-0214 AID INITIATIVE FOR TSUNAMI DISASTER VICTIMS ANNOUNCED ANNUAL CITIZENSHIP AWARD PRESENTED, AREA STUDENTS UNVEIL MURAL A NATIONAL RECORD 45, 000 VOLUNTEERS EXPECTED FOR 10TH ANNUAL GREATER PHILADELPHIA MARTIN LUTHER KING DAY OF SERVICE PHILADELPHIA Organizers, sponsors, and community partners joined together today to announce plans for the upcoming Greater Philadelphia Martin Luther King Day of Service. A national record 45,000 volunteers are expected to participate in school and community service projects throughout the region on Monday, January 17. The seven-county Greater Philadelphia Martin Luther King Day of Service includes Philadelphia, Montgomery, Delaware, Bucks, and Chester Counties in Pennsylvania and Camden and Burlington Counties in New Jersey. Participants will include students of all ages from public, private, and parochial schools and colleges, senior citizens, members of community, religious civic and non-profit organizations, businesses, elected officials and government agencies, individuals, and families. The national King Day of Service was created in 1994 through federal legislation co-authored by former Pennsylvania U.S. Senator Harris Wofford and Atlanta Congressman John Lewis, both veterans of the civil rights movement with Dr. King. Last year's Philadelphia area King Day service event drew some 40,000 volunteers participating in nearly 600 service projects.