Extractions: After graduating from Fenster, I returned home to go to the University of Illinois. I am in my second year there and am hoping to get my degree in accounting. After living through two cold midwest winters, I am making tentative plans to move back to the Tucson area this summer. I am hoping to finish my education at the University of Arizona and stay in the Southwest.I still ride horses as much as I can and am hoping to be even more involved once I return to Tucson. Get in touch with me, I'd love to hear from you! Name: Emily Cothren
[UK Edition] OnTheWeb.co.uk: Military Schools Guard (World) missouri Army National Guard The missouri Army National boarding schools For Troubled Teens (World) boarding schools For Troubled Teens - We http://www.ontheweb.co.uk/uks/military-schools.html
STLtoday - News - Special Reports secluded sites across the state, religious boarding schools with policies and practices that most states wouldn t tolerate have found a haven in missouri. http://www.stltoday.com/stltoday/news/special/reform.nsf/0/46AD5C0817282CCF86256
Talking Hands Award -Deaf Links-Schools The Florida School for the Deaf and the Blind is a statesupported boarding school for eligible hearing Kansas School for Deaf. missouri School for Deaf. http://www.faeriekeeper.net/deaf_links-schools.htm
Extractions: @import "sample1.css"; Our singular purpose is to reward web site authors, who through their creative excellence provide a web site which teaches, contains teaching elements in sufficient detail, and otherwise leaves a visitor with something of significant value after returning to their normal daily activities. No greater gift can we give our children or children who are not of our family than a proper education. All parents question the wisdom of private versus public schools, oral versus signing schools, and home schooling compared to any of the above. Yet deep within the resources of our hearts and minds comes the realization that alternatives are the hallmark of great societies. Given the proper information we can make a wise choice. The schools shown below offer a choice, knowledge, wisdom, and above all understanding and compassion. Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind (AIDB) Alabama Institute for Deaf and Blind is the world's most comprehensive education and rehabilitation system serving children and adults who are deaf, blind and multidisabled. Austin Regional Day Care The Child Care Management Services (CCMS) program operates as a clearing house to process state-distributed child care vouchers for a ten-county region in central Texas. These vouchers help to cover the cost of child care for low-income families.
Extractions: Selected records primarily composed of financial and administrative correspondence to and from the Abbot and Benedictine priests and religious stationed on the Standing Rock Reservation of North and South Dakota. Included is a 40-year daily diary of the activities and observations of a priest; correspondence from Benedictine sisters and brothers operating reservation schools; correspondence from the Bureau of Catholic Indian Missions; federal correspondence and printed circulars regarding regulations affecting missionary activities; and correspondence, monographs, and printed material regarding the culture and history of the local Lakota and the history of the various Benedictine mission stations and a minority to about 1940 are written in German, reflecting the Swiss origins of the Abbey. Microfilmed in 1982 by Marquette University from originals borrowed from Conception Abbey, Conception, Missouri. Historical Note Conception Abbey was established in 1873 at Conception, Missouri by Abbot Frowin Conrad. As a Benedictine institution under the auspices of Engelberg Abbey, Einsiedeln, Switzerland, Conception originated as a potential relocation site for the parent institution, which was then experiencing intense persecution. In 1884, responding to the invitation of then Abbot Martin Marty of the Benedictine St. Meinrad's Abbey, St. Meinrad, Indiana, Conception priests and brothers joined the missionary effort on the Standing Rock Reservation of North and South Dakota.
Missouri Military Academy - Boarding School Profile missouri Military Academy, boarding School Median. Overview School Focus, CollegePrep Military, College Preparatory. School Type, All-boys, Co-ed. http://www.boardingschoolreview.com/school_ov/school_id/299
Extractions: home new to boarding schools? research schools application help ... School Directory > Missouri Military Academy Missouri Military Academy 204 Grand Ave., Mexico, MO 65265 tel: (573)581-1776 http://www.mma-cadet.org Request Information School Notes: "Missouri Military Academys curriculum exceeds conventional academics, teaching students the skills needed to thrive in college and in the world of business. Here, cadets learn to develop personal discipline, organization and leadership abilities, while fostering good study habits and ethical behavior..." ...read more View Student Review: submit a review and get $7 Top 20 Placements: Boarding Focus - Highest percentage of boarding students Student Attention - Smallest average class sizes ... - Least expensive tuition Missouri Military Academy Boarding School Median Overview: School Focus College-Prep Military College Preparatory School Type All-boys Co-ed Religious Affiliation Year Founded Campus Size 288 acres 200 acres Student Body Enrollment (Grades 9-12) 200 students 270 students Percent Students of Color n/a Percent International Students n/a Percent Students Boarding Average SAT Score n/a Offers Post-Grad Year Yes Yes Academics and Faculty Saturday Classes No No Classroom Dress Code Formal Formal Average Class Size Teacher : Student ratio Number of AP Courses Offered ESL Offered Yes Yes % Faculty with Advanced Degree Summer Program Offered Yes Yes Finances Endowment Size n/a $15 million Tuition (Boarding Students) Tuition (Day Students) n/a Percent Students on Financial Aid
Dalia Acosta, Boarding-School System Increasingly Unpopular Nov 1998 144118 0600 (CST) From rich@pencil.math.missouri.edu (Rich Winkel) Organization PACH Subject EDUCATION-CUBA boarding-School System Increasingly http://www.hartford-hwp.com/archives/43b/190.html
Extractions: Worldwide distribution via the APC networks. HAVANA, Nov 4 (IPS) - Controversy over a system obliging high-school students in Cuba to go to boarding schools in rural areas has reached unprecedented levels. The government has reaffirmed its commitment to the policy but parents want better conditions in the schools and studies on the system's repercussions on the family, while the Church wants people to be able to choose where to educate their children. Besides the interview with Gomez, Granma ran, in October, an extensive and unusual series titled 'Scholarships under debate'. However, an article published in the Catholic magazine 'Vitral' on the autonomy of education defended the right of families and students to choose between boarding and day schools.
Insiders Tell Of Boarding School Past And Present Insiders Tell of boarding School Past and Present. Slaying in missouri Follows Some Troubles in Mississippi St. Louis PostDispatch/March 31, 1996 By Kim Bell. http://www.rickross.com/reference/mountain_park/mountain_park17.html
Extractions: By Kim Bell Parents from both coasts, with money and troubled children, descend on this town surrounded by rugged hills. Some arrive in private planes. A few rent Cadillac's and drive from Lambert Field in St. Louis. They drop off their children at Mountain Park Baptist Boarding Academy, a strict religious school that claims an 85 percent success rate in turning around unruly youths. It has about 200 boys and girls on its campus. Even the killing of a student last Monday didn't stop Vern Carson, of Castro Valley, Calif. He arrived Tuesday to drop off his granddaughter for a year's stay. Despite the slaying, Carson said he left her in good hands. "They were very upfront about what had happened," Carson said of the killing. "Education standards are so loose in the public schools in California. I'm hoping she gets good Christian training." Carson said he heard about the school from a friend who sent two daughters, one of whom was suicidal when she arrived. Carson said she now wants to stay and graduate. He said the $750-a-month fee includes food, board, and schooling. "The whole package seemed very good," he said. On Monday, William Andrew Futrelle II, 16, of Boca Raton, Fla., was found slain outside the boys' dormitory, his throat was slashed and his head beaten. A Highway Patrol investigator said Futrelle was killed by three students who feared that Futrelle wouldn't go along with their plans to take over the academy and get on network television.
3 Being Held In Boarding School Death The school has no connection with the missouri Baptist Convention country, especially from California, inquiring about the boarding school s reputation, said http://www.rickross.com/reference/mountain_park/mountain_park1.html
Extractions: Victor Holland and Reshma Memon Yaqun The Mountain Park Baptist Academy is known for its good choir, polite students and resort-like campus in the hills. It is not known for murder. Late Monday afternoon, deputies and paramedics arrived at the school and found the body of William Andrew Futrelle II lying in a wooded area outside the boys' dormitory. His throat had been slashed. The 16-yr-old student from Boca Raton, FL, also had been beaten in the face- possibly with both a club and brick, said Wayne County Prosecutor Jon A. Kiser, who declined to discuss a motive. On Tuesday, an 18-yr-old student from Bentonville, AR, Anthony Gene Rutherford, was charged with first-degree murder and armed criminal action. Two 15-yr-old boys from California were held for a hearing to decide whether to charge them as adults. Kiser said Deputies arrested the three suspects, who surrendered shortly after the body was discovered. Police say they found a pocketknife, a piece of firewood and a brick near the body. Rutherford was being held without bail in the Wayne County Jail in Greenville, said Wayne County Sheriff Nathan Hale. The young man is the son of Benton County Judge Bruce Rutherford of Siloam Springs, Ark. In Arkansas, a county judge is the county's chief administrator.
Extractions: During April 4-May 17, 1994, the largest U.S. measles outbreak since 1992 occurred among students in two communities that do not routinely accept vaccination. This report summarizes the investigation of and control measures for this outbreak. All cases met the measles clinical case definition (1) and were epidemiologically linked to the boarding school and/or college. Fourteen cases were serologically confirmed by detection of immunoglobulin M antibody. All cases occurred among persons not vaccinated before the outbreak. Eighteen prospective students from outside St. Louis County attended a carnival at the boarding school on April 16; eight developed measles after returning home (three to Maine, two to California, and one each to Missouri, New York, and Washington). Two cases of serologically confirmed measles occurred in persons outside the Christian Science communities. One case occurred in an unvaccinated 35-year-old physician who attended a tennis tournament on April 30 where students from the affected college competed. The other case occurred in a 9-month-old infant who visited a restaurant on April 30 where the college tennis team was eating. Control measures included offering measles vaccine to students in the affected communities and isolating persons with rashes and those considered susceptible to measles. On April 19, the boarding school and college began isolating persons with rashes in a separate building on each campus and placing 24-hour guards at campus entrances. Only persons with proof of immunity to measles were permitted to enter or leave the campuses. Isolation measures on both campuses remained in effect until 14 days after the appearance of rash in the last persons with measles for each school.
Interstate Measles Transmission From A Ski Resort -- Colorado, 1994 returned home to a community and school with many susceptible, unvaccinated persons; and 3) special events at the missouri boarding school that drew susceptible http://www.cdc.gov/mmwr/preview/mmwrhtml/00032422.htm
Extractions: During April 1-May 25, 1994, a chain of measles transmission began in Breckenridge, Colorado, and extended into nine additional states; a total of 247 measles cases were reported, representing 36% of all U.S. measles cases reported to the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System (excluding those reported from U.S. territories) through July 2 (week 26). The source of exposure was unknown but is believed to have been an out-of-state tourist who probably visited Breckenridge during March because 1) no measles cases had previously been reported in Colorado during 1994, and 2) the only common exposure appeared to have been at a ski resort visited by many out-of-state travelers. Persons associated with spread of measles from Breckenridge were predominately school- and college-aged. This report summarizes the investigation of this chain of interstate measles transmission. A total of 15 measles cases with rash onset during April 4-21 occurred in Breckenridge. Persons with measles ranged in age from 16 years to 46 years (median: 27.6 years). All cases met the CDC measles clinical case definition (1); 12 were serologically confirmed. All 15 ill persons either lived in Summit County (Breckenridge) or three neighboring counties (Arapahoe, Chaffee, and Park) or worked in tourism-related services in or near Breckenridge. Twelve of the 15 ill persons are believed to have been exposed to the unidentified source, and three cases resulted from secondary transmission. Two cases occurred among high school students; no further transmission in schools was reported.
INSIDERS TELL OF BOARDING SCHOOL PAST AND PRESENT Dispatch Staff. INSIDERS TELL OF boarding SCHOOL PAST AND PRESENT. SLAYING IN missouri FOLLOWS SOME TROUBLES IN MISSISSIPPI. Parents http://www.mountainparksurvivors.com/articles/INSIDERSTELL.html
Extractions: INSIDERS TELL OF BOARDING SCHOOL PAST AND PRESENT March 31, 1996 by Kim Bell and Tim O'Neil of The Post-Dispatch Staff INSIDERS TELL OF BOARDING SCHOOL PAST AND PRESENT SLAYING IN MISSOURI FOLLOWS SOME TROUBLES IN MISSISSIPPI Parents from both coasts, with money and troubled children, descend on this town surrounded by rugged hills. Some arrive in private planes. A few rent Cadillac's and drive from Lambert Field in St. Louis. They drop off their children at Mountain Park Baptist Boarding Academy, a strict religious school that claims an 85 percent success rate in turning around unruly youths. It has about 200 boys and girls on its campus. Even the killing of a student last Monday didn't stop Vern Carson, of Castro Valley, Calif. He arrived Tuesday to drop off his granddaughter for a year's stay. Despite the slaying, Carson said he left her in good hands. "They were very upfront about what had happened," Carson said of the killing. "Education standards are so loose in the public schools in California. I'm hoping she gets good Christian training." Carson said he heard about the school from a friend who sent two daughters, one of whom was suicidal when she arrived. Carson said she now wants to stay and graduate. He said the $750-a-month fee includes food, board, and schooling. "The whole package seemed very good," he said.
Extractions: St. Louis Post-Dispatch , November 19, 2002 Acting on Faith: Desperate Parents Unregulated Reform Schools in Missouri St. Louis Post-Dispatch Parents contract with faith-based programs for various reasons: They're believers, they can't afford other options or sometimes as a last resort. The two men Dale Knowlton hired to abduct his 16-year-old son showed up as planned at his home near Kansas City at 4 a.m. sharp. Because Knowlton was nervous, because he wanted the regrettable work over and done, he met the men in the middle of his yard, before they even reached his doorstep. As the father greeted the near strangers who would take away his defiant and suicidal son, he felt crushed by failure. That it had come to this. That he really was out of options. That no one not therapists, not insurance companies, not the juvenile justice system gave him any choice but to have his son taken by force to a religious reform school across the state.Knowlton had sought out the men from California after he first heard of "escort services" that do nothing but transport problem teens to treatment programs. He was relieved that the obscure industry could help but devastated to be one its clients. "It was the most horrendous decision of my life," he said. Several days and $2,500 later, he was letting the men in his home and going over the protocol they had discussed in numerous phone calls. He took them directly to his sleeping son, turned on the light, and repeated a rehearsed line that went something like: "Corey, I love you very much, but we both know that you need help. These guys are here to help you."
Catholic Boarding Schools Association s, Catholic boarding schools Association 1701 Hall Street, Hays, KS 676019908 785-625-6577.cbsa.org Catholic boarding schools Association. School http://www.cbsa.org/schoolDescriptions.html
TABS - The Association Of Boarding Schools Junior boarding schools. Click on a school name to see more information about that school. Academie Ste. Wolfeboro The Summer boarding School, Wolfeboro, NH. http://www.schools.com/directory/junior.cfm
Extractions: About Us Contact Us Search Site Map ... Arts Click on a school name to see more information about that school. Academie Ste. Cecile International School , Windsor, ON, Canada Admiral Farragut Academy , St. Petersburg, FL Albert College , Belleville, ON, Canada American Boychoir School , Princeton, NJ American International School - Salzburg , Salzburg, Austria The Andrews School , Willoughby, OH Army and Navy Academy , Carlsbad, CA Bement School , Deerfield, MA The Bishop Strachan School , Toronto, ON, Canada Bishop's College School , Lennoxville, QC, Canada Brandon Hall School , Atlanta, GA Brehm Preparatory School , Carbondale, IL Brush Ranch School , Tererro, NM Cardigan Mountain School , Canaan, NH CFS, The School at Church Farm , Paoli, PA Chaminade College Preparatory School , St. Louis, MO Cheshire Academy , Cheshire, CT Fox River Country Day School , Elgin, IL Eagle Hill School , Hardwick, MA Eaglebrook School , Deerfield, MA Fay School , Southborough, MA The Fessenden School , West Newton, MA Gilmour Academy , Gates Mills, OH Girard College , Philadelphia, PA The Glenholme School , Washington, CT The Gow School , South Wales, NY The Greenwood School , Putney, VT Grenville Christian College , Brockville, ON, Canada Hampshire Country School , Rindge, NH Hargrave Military Academy , Chatham, VA Hawaii Preparatory Academy , Kamuela, HI Hillside School , Marlborough, MA Howe Military School , Howe, IN Indian Mountain School , Lakeville, CT The Kildonan School , Amenia, NY Kingswood School , N.E. Somerset, UK
TABS - The Association Of Boarding Schools Coeducational boarding schools. Click MA; Wolfeboro The Summer boarding School, Wolfeboro, NH; Woodside Priory School, Portola Valley, CA; http://www.schools.com/directory/coed.cfm
Extractions: About Us Contact Us Search Site Map ... Arts Click on a school name to see more information about that school. Academie Ste. Cecile International School , Windsor, ON, Canada Admiral Farragut Academy , St. Petersburg, FL Albert College , Belleville, ON, Canada All Saints' Episcopal School , Vicksburg, MS American International School - Salzburg , Salzburg, Austria American Overseas School of Rome , Rome, RM, Italy Appleby College , Oakville, ON, Canada Ashbury College , Ottawa, ON, Canada Asheville School , Asheville, NC The Athenian School , Danville, CA Baylor School , Chattanooga, TN Bement School , Deerfield, MA Ben Lippen School , Columbia, SC Berkshire School , Sheffield, MA Bishop's College School , Lennoxville, QC, Canada Blair Academy , Blairstown, NJ The Bolles School , Jacksonville, FL Brehm Preparatory School , Carbondale, IL Brentwood College School , Mill Bay, BC, Canada Brewster Academy , Wolfeboro, NH Brooks School , North Andover, MA Brush Ranch School , Tererro, NM Buxton School , Williamstown, MA The Cambridge School of Weston , Weston, MA The Canterbury School , New Milford, CT Canyonville Christian Academy , Canyonville, OR Cate School , Carpinteria, CA Chapel Hill-Chauncy Hall School , Waltham, MA Cheshire Academy , Cheshire, CT Fox River Country Day School , Elgin, IL Choate Rosemary Hall , Wallingford, CT Colorado Rocky Mountain School , Carbondale, CO Concord Academy , Concord, MA Cotter High School , Winona, MN Cranbrook Schools , Bloomfield Hills, MI Crested Butte Academy , Crested Butte, CO The Culver Academies , Culver, IN
Extractions: Holy Cross Evangelical Lutheran Congregation Welcome to Holy Cross , a member congregation of The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod . Our pastor is the Rev. Walter P. Snyder . You are welcome to phone Holy Cross at or email us for more information. Even before you visit, we invite you to come inside and take a look around. Holy Cross is easy to find. We're located about half-way between Kansas City and Columbia, Missouri on Interstate 70. We're less than a quarter mile south of the Emma exit (#62) on the interstate. We welcome guests to our services. We follow the Biblical practice of closed Communion . Thus we ask that our guests please check ahead and then meet with Pastor Snyder before services. Normally, members of LCMS congregations are welcome to partake, as are people from churches in fellowship with the LCMS. Currently, the Lord's Supper is celebrated on the first two Sundays of each month, as well as on the major festivals of the Church Year. Our primary hymnal is
America At Work / America At Leisure, 1894-1915 Some attended reservation day schools, while others attended boarding schools where children were removed from their parents, sometimes forcibly, and from any http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/awlhtml/awlscho.html
Extractions: F rom 1894 to 1915, the goals of Progressive reformers influenced education in the United States, since education was seen as a way to teach children the proper values needed to be a productive American citizen. It was thought that society's ills could in part be alleviated by education for all classes that would fit children for their proper role in society. Public education was also seen as a way to "Americanize" the vast number of immigrant children flooding into cities. Compulsory attendance laws were enacted to ensure that children from all classes received a basic, "common," education in elementary grades. [End of School Day at Coeducational School] Fewer children attended high school, however, since immigrant and working-class families often had to rely on their children working to support the family. High schools were typically attended by middle- and upper-class students who aspired to white-collar jobs or a higher academic education. As an improved economy brought slightly higher wages after 1900, more working-class families started sending their children to high schools in the hope that they, too, could achieve better jobs. Vocational and industrial programs in high schools were offered by reformers during this period in large part to entice the working class and poor to stay in school and to prepare them adequately for what the reformers thought was their appropriate role in society.
HIGH SCHOOL BOARDING day and boarding high school. Saint Paul is a distinctly Christian, collegepreparatory school. Located an hour from Kansas City, missouri, the student body is http://www.blueglobus.com/cgi-bin/search/search.cgi?searchtype=Web&keywords=HIGH
Colorado State Archives Smith, Ethel, 1883 ? missouri, 2, GR89. Fort Lewis Indian boarding School Baseball Team (Photo courtesy of Fort Lewis College Center of Southwest Studies). http://www.colorado.gov/dpa/doit/archives/Indians/Indians.htm
Extractions: (Photo courtesy of Fort Lewis College Center of Southwest Studies) The Colorado State Archives volunteer, Connie Ryan, has extracted names from the Fort Lewis and Grand Junction Indian Industrial Schools 1900 Federal Census. These enumerations were slightly different from the usual 1900 Census entries or the Federal Indian Census as there was a special section, "Special Inquiries Relating to Indians." The main section included the headings found on the 1900 Federal Census. In addition, however, this special section listed the tribe of the Indian as well as the tribe of his/her father and mother. There is also a heading entitled "Mixed Blood" which asked if the Indian had any white blood and how much. In the Grand Junction index several additional headings are usually filled out including, "Conjugal Condition," "Citizenship" and "Dwelling" ("Is this Indian living in a fixed or in a movable dwelling?"). The information found in these indexes is especially helpful since the Federal Indian Census before 1930 provided only information on the person's name, date of birth, gender, and relationship to the head of the family. After 1930 the Census provided information on the individual's degree of Indian blood, marital status, ward status, place of residence, and also included miscellaneous commentary. For a further explanation of the Federal Census and the Indian Census from 1885-1944, please see