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Frank Couzens was born in Detroit on February 28, 1902, [1] [2] the son of businessman (and later mayor of Detroit and United States Senator) James J. Couzens. [3] He went to Newman Preparatory School in New Jersey, then returned to Detroit to attend high school. [3]
The first University Preparatory Academy middle school opened its doors in Detroit in the fall of 2000 with 112 6th graders. Founded by former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Labor and Michigan State Senator Doug Ross, the school was established as a public charter school with a mission of graduating its open-admission Detroit students from high school and enrolling them in college at rates ...
Carver Elementary School; Clark J.E. Preparatory Academy; Davison Elementary School The school is located in two buildings, around 100 years old, in proximity to Highland Park and Hamtramck. Dixon Educational Learning Academy; Earheart Elementary/Middle School; Fisher Magnet Academy Fisher Magnet Lower Academy (PreK-4) Fisher Magnet Upper ...
Blanche Kelso Bruce Academy was the name given to several charter schools within the Detroit Public Schools in Detroit, Michigan, serving students in grades 5-12. [1] They functioned as alternative schools for Youth Outside the Educational Mainstream (YOEM).
Carl Levin was Michigan's longest-serving senator (1979–2015). Four Michigan senators have risen to the position of President pro tempore, and one (Thomas W. Ferry) served as President of the Senate from November 22, 1875 to March 3, 1877 (as acting Vice President of the United States). [1]
Austin Catholic Preparatory School was a boys, non–residential, college preparatory Catholic school in Detroit, Michigan. Austin was "one of the city's most widely respected schools." [1] The school was founded in 1951 and operated by the Augustinians. Its first class graduated in 1956.
Moody moved to Detroit, Michigan and worked from 1923 to 1951 as a reporter covering Washington, D.C., [1] for the Detroit News, [2] a newspaper owned by his uncle, William Scripps. He was a correspondent for Barron's Financial Weekly from 1934 to 1948 and wrote for the North American Newspaper Alliance and the Bell Syndicate. [2]
St. Mary's was founded in 1885 on Detroit's east side on the corner of Forest and St. Aubin by Rev. Joseph Dabrowski as a school for Polish-American boys to train for the priesthood. The school moved to the 125-acre (0.5 km²) campus of the former Michigan Military Academy on the shores of Orchard Lake in 1909 and is still there today. St.