Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Angie Debo - author, historian, teacher at Enid High School; Jon Franklin - author, two-time Pulitzer Prize winner; Carol Hamilton - Poet Laureate of Oklahoma, 1995-1997; Marquis James - author, two-time Pulitzer Prize winner; Louis Jenkins - poet; D.L. Lang - Poet Laureate of Vallejo, California; Quraysh Ali Lansana - poet, civil rights historian
Whittlesey moved to San Francisco in 1907 and worked mainly there and in Los Angeles, becoming known for his early work in reinforced concrete. Whittlesey's son Austin C. Whittlesey (1893–1950) was also an architect, apprenticed in the office of Bertram Goodhue for seven years, and was active in Southern California in the 1930s.
This page was last edited on 13 September 2024, at 21:06 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Enid High School (EHS) is a public tertiary school in Enid, Oklahoma, U.S., operated by the Enid Public Schools school district. With a student body of about 2035 in grades 9–12, Enid High School has a matriculation rate of about 65 percent. The school district - Enid High's attendance zone - covers central-west Enid and some unincorporated ...
ENID, Okla. — Voters in Enid decided by a nearly 20-point margin Tuesday to remove a City Council member over his ties to white nationalist groups.
Glenwood Elementary is also notable as one of the region's oldest schools. Glenwood and the "Little Red Schoolhouse" was founded as a rural school district only weeks after the opening of the Cherokee Strip in 1893. The school was annexed to the Enid Public Schools in 1964. It was started in a dugout on the old Glenn farm west of Enid.
An Oklahoma student who died the day after a fight at school told police they threw water at three students who had been bullying them and that the students responded by beating them, according to ...
Phillips High School was created in 1907 as a preparatory school at the same time to prepare students for college-level courses, and continued operations until 1925. [5] The school became affiliated with the North Central Association of Colleges on March 23, 1919, and in the American Association of Colleges in 1920. [5]