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Central Catholic High School (CCHS) is a private, Roman Catholic, co-educational, college-preparatory school in Modesto, California, United States. It was established in 1966 and is part of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Stockton. [4]
University of San Diego High School: San Diego: 2005 campus was demolished; school moved to Del Mar and reopened as Cathedral Catholic High School: Ursuline High School: Santa Rosa: 2011 students were absorbed by Cardinal Newman High School: Venice Union Polytechnic High School: Los Angeles: 1935 renamed Venice High School
*California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo was founded as a vocational high school. It became a vocational school in 1924, and then started awarding bachelor's degrees in 1940. It became a vocational school in 1924, and then started awarding bachelor's degrees in 1940.
The state title match is set for 5 p.m. next Saturday at Wright State, about a three-hour bus trip from Central Catholic. Central Catholic's Sophia Keane celebrates a point in their regional final ...
The school began as St. Mary's Institute on March 25, 1852 in rented rooms above a blacksmith's shop on Military Plaza. [6] The original faculty consisted of Brother Anthony Edel (Founder, First Superior, and First Principal) from Ohio, three Marianist Brothers from Bordeaux, France (Nicholas Koenig, Jean-Baptiste Laignounse, and Xavier Mauclerc), and Timothy O'Neil, a layman from San Antonio.
Central Catholic High School students recently collected more than 6,000 donations during their annual holiday food drive
Central Catholic High School is a college preparatory school with an academic campus in Lawrence, Massachusetts and an athletic campus in Lawrence, Massachusetts associated with the Marist Brothers of the Schools and the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Boston and founded in 1935 by Brother Florentius.
Bishop Mora Salesian High School ("Salesian High School") is an all-boys Roman Catholic high school founded in 1958 and operated by the Archdiocese of Los Angeles in the community of Boyle Heights in Los Angeles, California. It is named after Francisco Mora y Borrell, Bishop of the former Monterey-Los Angeles Diocese.