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In 2014 Rebekah Urban was the first student from Whitesboro to place in University Interscholastic League (UIL) extemporaneous speaking. That same year she was the first to qualify and place in UIL Student Congress from Whitesboro. In 2015 a policy team consisting of partners Adam Wilson and Cody Crowe won UIL state for the 3A classification.
Whitesboro is located in western Grayson County. [8] U.S. Route 82 passes through the northern side of the city, and U.S. Route 377 passes through the eastern side. US 82 leads east 17 miles (27 km) to Sherman, the county seat, and west 13 miles (21 km) to Gainesville, while US 377 leads north 15 miles (24 km) to the Oklahoma border on the Red River and south 41 miles (66 km) to Denton.
S&S Consolidated ISD has a total of three schools - two in Sadler and one in Southmayd. S&S Consolidated High (Grades 9-12, Sadler) S&S High won the UIL Current Issues and Events team competition for Class 2A for 15 consecutive years (the streak ended in 2009), winning eight state titles during this time.
Public elementary schools in Texas (6 C, 53 P) This page was last edited on 11 October 2023, at 16:07 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative Commons ...
The Field Elementary School at 120 Sacred Heart Lane in Louisville, Ky. on July 10, 2023. Field, the district's fourth-oldest school, opened in 1915 with five teachers and 155 students in ...
Civil Aeronautics administration officials named it the worst air disaster in Texas history at the time. After an engine failed, the pilot lost control of the plane.
Wilmer–Hutchins Independent School District (WHISD) was a school district in southern Dallas County, Texas serving the cities of Wilmer and Hutchins, a portion of Dallas (the district was last headquartered at 3820 East Illinois Avenue in Dallas [1]), and a small portion of Lancaster.
West Orange-Cove was ultimately formed from the West Orange, Cove, and Orange Independent School Districts. Shortly after West Orange and Cove consolidated (1965–1966), the new West Orange-Cove was forced to by the Texas Education Agency absorb Orange Public Schools, which had recently dropped its status as an ISD, and operated through the City of Orange.