Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Vel Phillips Memorial High School (formerly James Madison Memorial High School (JMM) ) or simply "VPM" is a public high school on the west side of Madison, Wisconsin, United States. It was built in 1966 and is part of the Madison Metropolitan School District. It is home to the MMSD Planetarium.
Vel Phillips Memorial High School: 1966: Formerly named James Madison Memorial High School, renamed in 2021. [10] Madison West High School: 1930: A junior high school was built later but closed to accommodate space for the growing senior high school. Madison East High School: 1922: The oldest continuously running public high school in Madison. [11]
Madison Central High School (Wisconsin) ... Vel Phillips Memorial High School This page was last edited on 7 June 2023, at 21:33 (UTC). Text ...
Discover the latest breaking news in the U.S. and around the world — politics, weather, entertainment, lifestyle, finance, sports and much more.
Jerome I. Case High School opened on Racine's west side in 1966, and two others joined in 1967: James Madison Memorial High School [9] (renamed after Wisconsin politician Vel Phillips in 2021 [10]) on Madison's far west side and George S. Parker High School on Janesville's west side. [11]
The five public high schools are Vel Phillips Memorial, Madison West, Madison East, La Follette, and Malcolm Shabazz City High School, an alternative school. Among private church-related high schools are Abundant Life Christian School, Edgewood High School, [188] near the Edgewood College campus, and St. Ambrose Academy, a Catholic school ...
Madison East High School is one of four comprehensive four-year high schools in Madison, Wisconsin. It was established in 1922, making it the oldest public high school still operating in Madison. The school mascot is "Peppy Purgolder", an animal resembling a feline. Madison East athletes compete in the WIAA Big Eight Conference.
Madison West Rocket Club was started in 2003. In 2009, 2012, and 2019 it placed first in the American Rocketry Challenge (TARC) national finals. [6] [7] [8] In 2020, the club submitted a proposal to the Ken Sousa Memorial Grant Contest to study the effects of space flight on organisms by sending slime molds into suborbital flight. [9]