SafeBus North Carolina north carolina means business when it comes to protecting its DANGER ZONE NEVER walk behind the school bus see the bus driver s eyes when boarding or crossing http://www.nccrimecontrol.org/safebus/
Extractions: Spearheaded by the North Carolina State Highway Patrol, Crime Control and Public Safety's new "SafeBus North Carolina" program seeks to change that. That's why we've created this web site to pass along some tips on school bus stop safety. Like the "SafeBus" logo says, it will take a team effort to make that happen. Parents, educators, children, and motorists everyone has to take an active part in making sure our kids stay safe in bus loading and unloading zones. "SafeBus" is particularly concerned with stranger danger. Even in our quietest country neighborhoods, we can no longer take for granted that our kids will be safe. In January 1998, a five-year-old Hoke County girl was kidnapped while waiting for the bus in front of her house. She was later found murdered.
Extractions: Capital honors Reagan In a slow, solemn procession punctuated by the staccato of muffled drums, six horses bore the body of Ronald Reagan to the nation's Capitol. There, the nation's 40th president was memorialized Wednesday as a "providential man who came to our nation when the world most needed him." Bond vote in November appears unlikely Momentum appears to have fizzled for putting a city bond referendum on the November ballot, with no clear consensus on where the money would be spent and little time remaining for a decision.
Anglicans Online | USA Education north carolina Christ School, Asheville St Marys School, Raleigh, Episcopal day or boarding school for girls, grades 9 12. St Timothy s School, Raleigh. http://anglicansonline.org/usa/edu.html
Extractions: Anglicans Online News Resources Basics ... Worldwide Anglicanism Anglican Dioceses and Parishes New this Week News Centre A to Z Start Here ... Official Publications B The Bible B B B B B Help support AO B B B B B B B B This page last updated 3 June 2004 Anglicans Online last updated 6 June 2004 THE EPISCOPAL CHURCH IN THE USA (ECUSA) is the American branch of the Anglican Communion. In addition to this page, you'll find these areas in our USA section:
FGC Library Friends For Three Hundred Years It S A Good Life! Imagine a north carolina without a Quaker remnant remaining after the Civil War was in Trinity, NC and heady by a New Garden boarding School graduate, Baritone http://www.fgcquaker.org/library/fosteringmeetings/0602.html
Extractions: An address by Max L. Carter, Guilford College, August 1997 on the occasion of celebrating the 300th anniversary of Quakers in North Carolina Three hundred years! That's longer than Dean Smith has been at UNC! Almost as long as Strom Thurmond has been in the Senate! 300 years ago! Pssst-don't tell anyone, Virginia, but Thomas Jefferson wasn't even alive then! 300 years of North Carolina Yearly Meeting-a common heritage leading to two distinct and vibrant communities of Friends by that name. Quakerism itself has an even longer history in the South. It has been a storied saga, one that will be celebrated in many ways during this climactic week of the five-year Tercentenary observance. Yet many Friends are hesitant to trumpet our own triumphs as a religious society-consistent with the Quaker virtues of meekness, humility, and understatement-if not of honesty and integrity! But this is a week to be proud and tell our story, not only to each other, to the world as well. As the scripture enjoins: time to take the light out from under the bushel. As my mother was wont to say, "She who tooteth not her own horn, the same shall not be tooted!" Think of what the world might be like without Quakers! Without the likes of religious visionaries: Margaret Fell, George Fox, Hannah Whitall Smith, Thomas Kelly, Elton Trueblood; social and political reformers: William Penn, John Woolman, Elizabeth Fry, Lucretia Mott, Susan B. Anthony; writers and poets: Jessamyn West, John Greenleaf Whittier, James Michener, Jan de Hartog; musicians and artists: Edward Hicks, Bonnie Raitt, Donald Swann, Fritz Eichenberg, Dave Matthews; business and industry-steel;, railroads, Barclays Bank, Lloyd's of London, Macy's; or beloved products like the Slinky, Monopoly, the Flexible Flyer sled, Cadbury's Chocolates, and Hires Root Beer! What untold human tragedies would there be without the American Friends Service Committee?
North Carolina Dog Trainers - K9 Trainers att.net Phone 336859-5530 north carolina s Dog Training and FAYETTEVILLE, carolina LAW DAWGS, LLC (See Lexington). 919-963-4000 We are a boarding kennel, and http://www.k9trainers.com/north_carolina.htm
Religious Diversity News -- Search Vietnamese Baptists Gather for Conference in north carolina, Jun 30, 2001. Jewish boarding School Planned to Include Students from All Branches, Oct 2, 1999. http://www.pluralism.org/news/search.php?st=NC
Pastemusic.com: Rob Seals Rob Seals taught at a boarding school near DC for seven years, all the while English teacher and champion track coach, he moved to north carolina to receive a http://www.pastemusic.com/artist/10120
Extractions: Artist Title Review Browse by category or region Category: Alt-Country/Roots Alt-Pop Americana/Traditional Electronic/Experimental Folk Rock Folk/Acoustic Indie Rock/Emo Rap/Hip-Hop Rock/Pop Sacred/Instrumental Singer/Songwriter Benefit CDs Compilations Apparel Books Periodicals Visual Art Other Region: Midwest Northeast Pacific Northwest Southeast Southwest West Canada Europe Australia Other Connection: $10 Or Less $5 Clearance Bin Added The Last 30 Days Christmas CDs Compilation CDs Founder's Favorites (Josh) Founder's Favorites (Nick) Live CDs On Sale Now! Paste Records Staff Selections (Joel) The Chicago Music Scene The Cincinatti Music Scene The North Carolina Music Scene Home Artists Rob Seals
Extractions: Online Highways North Carolina Creswell Historic Houses This site offers a view of life during the period before the Civil War. During its eighty-year existence as an active plantation (1785-1865), it encompassed as many as 100,000 acres and became one of North Carolina's most prosperous plantations. It was home to more than three hundred enslaved men, women, and children of African descent. Since the early 1950s archaeology has been used to reveal undocumented information about Somerset Place. The most recent digs enrich the African American aspect of the plantation's history. Hands-on educational programs introduce visitors to the plantation system and daily life at Somerset during the antebellum period. Participants learn the impact of African culture and traditions on Somerset's enslaved community and the Collins family. The main house is furnished with pieces from the period and a few from the Collins family. Outbuildings include the kitchen, the smokehouse, the dairy, and a boarding school for the Collins' six boys. Lowest rates and Free candid reviews for Creswell at Tripadvisor.com. Read opinions from travelers like you. Compare lodging prices from Expedia, Travelocity, and Orbitz.
Revolution31_15 and Negro Education in Virginia. north carolina Historical Review Response to the Presbyterian boarding School in the University of South carolina Press, 1991 http://www.zzbw.uni-hannover.de/HerbstHist/Herbst31_15.htm
Clyde Ellis's Homepage MA University of north carolina at Greensboro, 1986. To Change Them Forever Indian Education At The Rainy Mountain boarding School, 1893-1920 (University of http://www.elon.edu/ellisrc/
Extractions: Arrived at Elon in 1994 Research interests As an historian trained in ethnography, I'm interested in understanding how and why Indian people especially on the Southern Plains have adapted to change in order to maintain important cultural values and practices. My recent publications include works on boarding schools, powwow culture, and Christian missions. I have just completed a book-length ethnography of Christian missions at the Kiowa-Comanche Reservation in the late 19th and early 20th centuries to be published by the University of Nebraska Press in the fall of 2001, and am currently at work on an ethnography of Southern Plains powwow culture for the University Press of Kansas. Courses I regularly teach: Hst 121: United States History to 1865 Hst 122: United States History Since 1865 Hst 131: Being and Becoming Indian Hst 356: Early National America Hst 373: American Indian Religions Hst 375: Colonial America Hst 384: American Indian History Hst 390: American West Hst. 461: Senior Seminar
Guilford College - About Guilford By the 1830s the majority of Quakers in north carolina lived in and around basis that was chartered in 1834 and opened in 1837 as New Garden boarding School. http://www.guilford.edu/about/
Extractions: One of only 40 colleges in Colleges That Change Lives , by Loren Pope, former New York Times Education Editor Guilford College draws on Quaker and liberal arts traditions to prepare men and women for a lifetime of learning, work and constructive action dedicated to the betterment of the world. Toward that end the college provides: student-centered instruction that nurtures each individual amid an intentionally diverse community. a values-rich education that explores the ethical dimension of knowledge and promotes honesty, compassion, integrity, courage and respect for the individual. a challenging academic program that fosters critical and creative thinking through the development of essential skills: analysis, inquiry, communication, consensus-building, problem-solving and leadership. a global perspective that values people of other cultures and the natural environment in which we all live. access to work and service opportunities that forge a connection between thought and action.
Tennessee Overhill Experience - Shopping War II. 1946, Cherokee men and women allowed to register to vote. 1948, boarding school closes in Cherokee, north carolina. 194849, Unto http://www.tennesseeoverhill.com/cherokee_timeline.asp
Extractions: Cherokee towns with mounds De Soto expedition, first contact with Europeans Cherokee leaders to London with Cuming Smallpox epidemic French and Indian War Montgomery and Grant expeditions-the Cherokee War Cherokee leaders to London with Timberlake King Georges Proclamation Revolutionary War Smallpox epidemic End of Dragging Canoes war Broomestown Council Cherokee aid Jackson at Battle of Horseshoe Bend Cherokee Council approves Seqyouahs syllabary Cherokee Phoenix begins publication Gold discovered in Georgia Indian Removal Act passed Supreme Court rules on sovereignty Treaty of New Echota signed Treaty of New Echota ratified by Congress Removal and Trail of Tears Thomas Legion fights with Confederacy Eastern Band recognized by federal government, has voting rights, pays property tax
SERSAS Moricca and I just graduated from the University of north carolina at Chapel fees for secondary education at a reputable government boarding school in Zimbabwe http://www.ecu.edu/african/Zimbabwe.htm
Extractions: Dear Members of the African Studies Committee, My name is David Moricca and I just graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In the summer of 1997, fellow UNC undergraduate, Eric Farmer, and I traveled to Southern Africa to produce a multimedia documentary exploring some of the socio-economic obstacles faced by students in Zimbabwe. In the spirit of Jonathan Kozol, author of Savage Inequalities, we attempted to create a piece that was personal in nature by telling the stories of some individual students. Thus, we centered the project on six recipients of the Sally Mugabe National Scholarship, which is awarded to brilliant primary school students who may have been otherwise unable to continue with their secondary education. The scholarship was founded by two UNC undergraduate students, and provides tuition and fees for secondary education at a reputable government boarding school in Zimbabwe. For each Sally Mugabe scholar, we visited both their primary schools and their new secondary schools. At the schools, we interviewed headmasters and teachers, as well as observed classroom lessons and extracurricular activities. This provided an insight to the broader systematic challenges facing Zimbabwean schools since national independence in 1980. For the most part, these schools lacked resources that we consider basic and essential. For example, it is not uncommon to find three students sharing each textbook. At Mzilikazi High School, students carried desks and chairs between classes just to have a seat. Due to overcrowding and a lack of adequate classroom space, many primary school students come in two shifts, with each group spending one lesson-hour outside. In most Zimbabwean schools, typewriters rather than computers are still the norm.
1853-1934 acquired in 1900 by the Western north carolina Conference of In 1854, eight miles north of Asheville on was emerging, beginning as a boarding school known as http://www.brevard.edu/150thcelebration/1853.htm
Extractions: Brevard College was formed at its present location in 1934 through the merger of two Methodist colleges, Rutherford and Weaver, on a campus donated by the Brevard Institute. From the beginning, the purpose of all three schools had been to give young men and women in the mountains of western North Carolina an opportunity for an education, to help them make not a mere living, but a life. Our history begins in 1853 in Owl Hollow School, a one-room log cabin in the foothills of Burke County, under the leadership of The Reverend Laban Abernethy, a Methodist minister. The tradition that None Shall Ever Be Turned Away for Want of Means was the principle established by Reverend Abernathy. His school developed into Rutherford College and was later acquired in 1900 by the Western North Carolina Conference of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. A great number of men were trained for the ministry at Rutherford, and the school became known as the School of the Prophets, but the college was always coeducational. In 1854, eight miles north of Asheville on the Salem Camp Ground in the village of Weaverville, Weaver College was emerging, beginning as a boarding school known as the Masonic and Sons of Temperance High School. The school was unfortunately destroyed by fire in 1872. Montraville Weaver gave land for a new school, and Weaverville College was incorporated in 1873, independent of any religious denomination. However, in 1883, it was deeded to the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. When it became a junior college in 1912, the name was changed to Weaver College.
Extractions: Jewish Telegraphic Agency NEW YORK In most North American Jewish day schools, fund-raising is a major source of concern and the halls are lined with plaques honoring large donors. But at a Jewish high school slated to open in 2001 in North Carolina, all the bills have already been paid by a small group of donors who have taken Maimonides' principles to heart: They are giving anonymously. The American Hebrew Academy's unusual financial situation is not the only thing that will distinguish it from other Jewish schools. Located on 100 wooded acres in the donors' small Jewish community of Greensboro, N.C., the academy will be North America's first non-Orthodox Jewish boarding school. It expects to draw students from both North America and overseas. The mission of this coeducational institution, which describes itself as "liberal" and "pluralistic," is to "produce young adults whose strength of character and Jewish identity become lifelong resources for personal growth, commitment to the creative continuity of the Jewish people and the improvement of the world in which we live." Rabbi Alvin Mars, the American Hebrew Academy's headmaster, said the school will be "the ultimate day high school an all-day, all-week, all-school-year school."
Active Projects At The Film Study Center allure of cigarettes and their troubling legacy for the State of north carolina. an international group of seventh and eighth grade girls at a boarding school. http://www.filmstudycenter.org/projects.html
Extractions: Bright Leaves is the title of Ross McElwee's film about the tobacco culture in his home State of North Carolina. North Carolina produces more tobacco than any other State in the Union. This film describes a journey taken across the social, economic, and psychological tobacco terrain of North Carolina by a native Carolinian whose great-grandfather created the famous brand of tobacco known as "Bill Durham." Bright Leaves is a subjective, autobiographical meditation on the allure of cigarettes and their troubling legacy for the State of North Carolina. But on perhaps a deeper level, its about legacy - what one generation passes down to the next - and how this can be a particularly complicated topic when the legacy under discussion is a Southern one and is tied to tobacco. Premieres at Cannes Film Festival, May 2003. This is a large ongoing endeavor which consists largely in the gathering together of materials relating to the Grand Valley of the Baliem in the Central Highlands of Irian Jaya (formerly Netherlands New Guinea). The idea at the moment is to think of the Valley as a subject composed of many historical parts starting with the prehistory and going on through historical time to include the Archbold Expedition in 1938, the Airforce DC 3 crash in 1945, Missionary activities starting in about 1950, the Harvard Expedition in 1961, visits by Robert Gardner in 1986 and again in 1996. Once the parts are assembled, there is the possibility of presenting the history they describe in an as yet undetermined format (book, book and DVD, film, book and film, DVD alone etc.)
Cary North Carolina Real Estate In the late 1800s, a prestigious, private boarding school was started in Cary and later became the first public high school in north carolina. http://www.relocate-america.com/states/NC/cities/cary.htm
Extractions: Cary is located in Wake County. Cary is located near the center of North Carolina. The closest surrounding cities are Raleigh and Apex, however Chapel Hill, Durham, Garner, Fuquay Varina, Morrisville, Sanford, Wake Forest, and Pittsboro are all within a 40-minute drive. Cary, North Carolina T oday's Cary began in 1750 as a settlement called Bradford's Ordinary. About 100 years later, the construction of the North Carolina Railroad between New Bern and Hillsborough placed Bradford's Ordinary on a major transportation route. Soon after, Allison Francis Page, a Wake County farmer and lumberman, bought 300 acres of land nearby and established a sawmill, general store, inn and post office. He called his development Cary, after Samuel Fenton Cary, a prohibition leader from Ohio whom Page admired.
Hhh103 meet all legal requirements for such a school, DNPE notifies the local public school superintendent that the north carolina compulsory school attendance law is http://www.doa.state.nc.us/dnpe/hhh103.htm
Extractions: HOME SCHOOL INFORMATION North Carolina law defines a home school as a non-public school in which the student receives academic instruction from his/her parent, legal guardian, or a member of the household in which the student resides. Two household schools are permitted. The North Carolina Division of Non-Public Education is authorized by state law to receive home school notices of intent to begin initial operation and to terminate operation, and to annually inspect the schools student attendance and nationally standardized achievement test result records. Parents/guardians residing in North Carolina and desiring, in lieu of conventional school attendance, to home school their children who are at least age 7 but not yet age 16 must: Send to the Division of Non-Public Education (DNPE) a Notice of Intent to Operate a School. The notice must include the name and address of the school along with the name of the school's owner and chief administrator; Hold at least a high school diploma or its equivalent; Elect to operate under either Part 1 or Part 2 of Article 39 of the North Carolina General Statutes as a religious or as a non-religious school;
Extractions: google_ad_client = "pub-5065222204833094"; google_ad_width = 300; google_ad_height = 250; google_ad_format = "300x250_as"; google_color_border = "FFFFFF"; google_color_bg = "FFFFFF"; google_color_link = "0000FF"; google_color_url = "008000"; google_color_text = "000000"; google_ad_type = "text_image"; Site Map 1016 Business Listings Home Contact Us Are you considering a career in art? Are you looking for the right art school to provide you with the necessary training needed to not only get a job but a career? Art School can take up years of your life and thousands of dollars so there are things one should consider when looking for the Art School that is right for them. Consider what type of job you will be looking for and where you will want to live once you graduate. Contact companies in the area to see what the job market is like and how often jobs become available.