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Jo Mendi II (c. 1939 – January 6, 1980) was a male chimpanzee and performer. He earned a reputation as "the greatest performing chimp of all time." [1] Mendi II was acquired by the Detroit Zoo in the fall of 1945. [2] He was a gift to the zoo from James S. Holden and his wife. [1]
Pages in category "1965 in Michigan" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. ...
For the 2011-2012 school year, the Flint Community Schools had both middle schools, four elementary schools and one high school placed in the bottom 5% of all schools in the State of Michigan based on student achievement and attendance. [12] In November 2012, Superintendent Linda Thompson announced her retirement. [13]
EAST LANSING — Ever wonder what Michigan State University looked like 100 years ago? These photographs from the United States National Archives give us a glimpse of life on campus during the ...
Benton Harbor and River Rouge repeating as Michigan's Class A and Class B high school basketball champions (the 1965 championship was the fifth straight at the Class B level for River Rouge); [16] The strong hitting of Willie Horton , playing his first full season in the major leagues, during the first half of the 1965 season (in his first 19 ...
Encompasses the area occupied in 1877 for the Michigan Military Academy, an all-boys military prep school established by Captain J. Sumner Rogers. The school closed in 1908 due to bankruptcy, and in 1910 the Polish Seminary of Detroit purchased the campus moved the school (now SS. Cyril and Methodius Seminary) there.
Bloom was built in 1896, making the large brick school 127 years old. Approximately 550 students attend the three-story school. Its walls are lined with red lockers below student art.
Samuel Wood was born in Stockport, Cheshire, England, in 1909, to a family of circus performers.He left school at an early age, only learning to read and write in his teens, [1] and worked in the family act as a tightrope walker in music hall shows and carnivals in England, where he was billed as "The Vagabond of the Wire". [2]