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St. Louis Park High School is a four-year public high school located in St. Louis Park, Minnesota, United States. St. Louis Park High School is ranked by Newsweek as #290 in their "List of the 1500 Top High Schools in America," #3 among Minnesota schools on the list in 2012. [2] In 2001, the high school began participation in the International ...
The Reunion district of downtown Dallas, Texas is an area in western downtown anchored by the Hyatt Regency Dallas and Reunion Tower. The name "Reunion" originates from the mid-nineteenth century commune La Reunion. The district included Reunion Arena from 1980 to its demolition in 2009. The arena was originally intended to be an economic ...
June 8, 2011 (201 E. 9th St. Dallas: 5: Alcalde Street-Crockett School Historic District: Alcalde Street-Crockett School Historic District: March 23, 1995
Norman Robert Crozier Technical High School (the school was known by many names) Dallas High School 1907–1916; Main High School 1916–1917; Bryan Street High School 1917–1928; Dallas Technical High School 1928–1942; Crozier Technical High School 1942–1971 (school closed in June 1971, next year most went to Skyline HS 7777 Forney road.
Cristo Rey San José Jesuit High School ; Cristo Rey High School (along with 1 other congregation) Jesuit High School ; Loyola High School (Los Angeles) St. Ignatius College Preparatory (San Francisco) Verbum Dei Jesuit High School (Los Angeles) Xavier College Preparatory (Palm Desert) (Jesuit-endorsed, as in Ignatian tradition)
The white students would attend Crozier Tech High School. In 1983, the Forest Avenue High School Alumni Association donated scholarly items from the school to Dallas Public Library. The association had previously given Madison students scholarships, but stopped due to lack of funds. The association had 800 members as of October 2012.
This is a list of high schools in Greater St. Louis. It includes public and private schools and is arranged by state, county and then by school district for public schools, or by affiliation for private schools.
The Louis Wagner Home (RHTL #6910, [24] 1979), 5320 Live Oak St.—This house was built in 1884 by German immigrant and Dallas businessman Louis Wagner with his wife Anna, the daughter of early Swiss Avenue settler Jacob Pretz. The house was originally located at 2917 Bryan St. but was relocated to the district in 1977 to avoid demolition. [25]