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There were a total of 1,321 students enrolled in the Kemper County School District during the 2006–2007 school year. The gender makeup of the district was 49% female and 51% male. The racial makeup of the district was 98.03% African American, 1.59% White, 0.23% Hispanic, and 0.15% Native American.
In 2010, the Mississippi Public Service Commission approved the construction of a lignite coal plant in Kemper County to be financed by electricity customers in twenty-three southeastern Mississippi counties being served by Mississippi Power Company. It is designed as a model project to use gasification and carbon-capture technologies at this ...
The school district was renamed Winton Woods when Greenhills and Forest Park High Schools were merged in 1991 for the 1991–92 school year. The district's general offices are located at 1215 W. Kemper Rd. in Forest Park, next to the high school. The current superintendent is Steve K. Denny.
In 2005, Robert Lichfield and the Utah-based holding company, Golden Pond Investments Ltd., made an offer to buy the campus of the Kemper Military School in Boonville, Missouri, to open a new school for adolescents needing help with discipline, responsibility and leadership skills. It was announced that the school would be directed by former ...
A parole officer who had seen the sketch told detectives that he believed the man they were looking for may be a contestant he spotted during a reality TV show re-run from the previous year.
I.H. Kempner High School, better known simply as Kempner High School, is a public high school in Sugar Land, Texas and a part of the Fort Bend Independent School District (FBISD). A small portion of the City of Houston is in the school's boundary. [2] [3] It also includes the former census-designated place of Town West (Townewest). [4]
1922: The Mississippi Legislature passed enabling legislation authorizing agricultural high schools to add the "13th and 14th grades." 1927: Kemper County Agricultural High School became the sixth agricultural high school to add the 13th grade, marking the beginnings of the present-day college. Twenty students were enrolled that first year.
Built to relieve overcrowding at Bradford High School, the original 272,786-square-foot (25,342.6 m 2) school was completed in the fall of 1964, with the first class graduating in June 1965. A successful referendum in 2005 gave the school a new, larger field house, team locker rooms, and a new weight room.