Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
The 1885 high school building which, in 1909, became the first to take the name Lincoln High School. With an initial enrollment of 45 students, the school was established in 1869 as the Portland High School in the North Central School sited on Block 80 of Couch's Addition (bounded by NW 11th & 12th and Couch & Davis Streets).
Lincoln High School is a public secondary school located in Lincoln, Nebraska, United States. A part of the Lincoln Public Schools school district, it is the largest high school in the city. [1] More than 40,000 students have graduated from Lincoln High in its 153-year history. [2] The school colors are red and black, and the mascot is the Links.
It opened in 1907 and until 1971 was a three-year senior high school (grades 10-11-12, or sophomores/juniors/seniors), thereafter a four-year high school with grades 9 to 12. Lincoln High closed as a school in its own right after 74 years in 1981, and the building has been used several times since as a temporary holding location for other ...
Lincoln High School's Savanna Dulay is the Des Moines Register's Student of the Week. See which local high school students are vying for the title.
Lincoln Senior High School is a school located in Lincoln, Rhode Island (in Providence County). Opened in 1964, the school has served as the main public high school for the town since. The official nickname of the school's athletic teams is the Lions. Its current enrollment as of 2024 is 989 students.
Students from Lincoln and Southeast Warren high schools are vying to be picked as next week's Student of the Week. Lincoln High School senior is Register's Student of the Week. Voting open for ...
The Lincoln County School District is a public school district in the U.S. state of Oregon. The district serves the communities of Yachats , Waldport , Eddyville , Newport , Siletz , Lincoln City and Toledo .
The Lincoln High School student wanted to wear an item at graduation that she’d been gifted by the Nisqually Tribe: a sacred, black-and-red button blanket.