Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Christian Brothers’ College Kimberley (“CBC”), the first Christian Brothers’ College (School) in South Africa, was founded by the Christian Brothers from Ireland, UK on 8 September 1897. It is situated in Kimberley, Northern Cape, South Africa. The founder was E.I.Rice. It is a Catholic High School. [1]
Christian Brothers College, Leederville (established in 1942, joined with St Mary's College for Girls to become the co-educational Aranmore Catholic College in 1986) Christian Brothers College, Perth (established in 1894, closed when headmaster, staff and students moved to the new Trinity College campus in 1962) Christian Brothers High School ...
This page was last edited on 7 November 2017, at 23:25 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Fifth Boys Gymnasium of Thessaloniki (closed) A non-profit public secondary school in the city of Thessaloniki's Analipsi neighborhood, comprised 3-year junior high school and 3-year high school (six-grade), and also Higher Education entrance education.
Boksburg High School is a public high school in Boksburg, a suburb of Ekurhuleni, South Africa. The school was founded in 1920 as the Rand East Training and Preparatory College under its first Principal, Mr Charter. [1] In 1925, the school changed its name to Boksburg High School.
Missouri football state championships. CLASS 6. Quarterfinals. Christian Bros. College 35, Jackson 23. Liberty North 38, Oak Park 7. Rockhurst 38, Nixa 14
The Kimberley location of St. Boniface High School was for years a mission church and school run for native Africans by German priests and nuns. By 1950, the St. Boniface Mission School, which included elementary through high school grades, had grown so large that the parish leadership had decided that a male religious order would be better suited to the size and stature of the school.
A Pretoria campus later became the University of Pretoria. In fact the first two years were attended at colleges elsewhere, in Cape Town, Grahamstown or Stellenbosch, the third year in Kimberley and the fourth year in Johannesburg. Buildings were constructed against a total cost of 9,000 pounds with De Beers contributing on a pound for pound basis.