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Southwest Texas Junior College (SWTJC) is a public community college with four campuses serving 11 counties in southwest Texas: unincorporated Uvalde County (next to Uvalde and on the site of Garner Field), [2] Del Rio (northwest portion), next to Del Rio International Airport, [3] unincorporated Maverick County (near Eagle Pass), [4] and Crystal City, the seat of Zavala County.
Paris Junior College: Paris Greenville Sulphur Springs 1924 4,323 Ranger College: Ranger 1926 2,479 San Jacinto College: Central North South 1961 31,494 South Plains College: Levelland 1957 8,864 South Texas College: McAllen (main) Rio Grande City Weslaco 1993 8,864 Southwest Texas Junior College: Crystal City Del Rio Eagle Pass Hondo Medina ...
The Texas Junior College Conference (TJCC), also known as the Texas Junior College Athletic Association (TJCAA) and the Texas Junior College Athletic College (TJCAC), was a junior college athletic conference with member schools located in Texas.
This is a list of junior colleges in the United States. Most of these institutions are private; public two-year community colleges are excluded. This list is incomplete ; you can help by adding missing items .
The Southwest Junior College Football Conference (SWJCFC or SJCFC) is a football conference for National Junior College Athletic Association (NJCAA) teams located in the Southwestern United States. The conference formed in 1963 with nine junior colleges located in Texas , and began operation in 1964. [ 1 ]
The South Texas Conference, also called the South Texas Junior College Conference, was a junior college athletic conference with member schools located in Texas that operated from 1947 to 1955. It was formed on February 26, 1947, at the Hotel Alice, in Alice, Texas .
Texas man used to spend $9,000 a month partying, now refuses to work more than 15 hours a week to pay off debt Car insurance premiums in America are through the roof — and only getting worse.
Recognizing the need for a university presence in Downtown Houston, the board of regents acquired the assets of South Texas Junior College on August 6, 1974 and opened the University of Houston–Downtown College (UH/DC) as a four-year institution under the organization and control of the University of Houston. By August 1979, it became a stand ...