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La Salle began in 1858 at St. Michael's School at 2nd and Jefferson Streets in the West Kensington section of Philadelphia. Initially the Select School, it was soon renamed the Christian Brothers Academy. In 1863, it became the preparatory school to La Salle College (now La Salle University).
La Salle TV is a student run, [51] public, educational, and government access (PEG) cable television station that offers an Educational-access television channel run by La Salle and carried within Philadelphia's city limits on the Comcast cable system. The station reaches over 300,000 homes and serves La Salle students and its neighbors with ...
John Glaser Arena is a 3,000-seat multi-purpose venue in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The arena is situated inside TruMark Financial Center on the campus of La Salle University. It is home to the La Salle Explorers men's and women's basketball teams. Opened in 1998, the arena was originally known as Tom Gola Arena. After undergoing renovations ...
La Salle committed a couple of penalties before Sam Perry found Bearden on his second read down the middle. Their connection and Grey Iannitti’s 2-point rush gave the Rams an 8-0 lead. “That ...
La Salle University began at the St. Michael’s School at Second and Jefferson Streets in Philadelphia when the Christian Brothers opened a school there and taught their first classes on July 20, 1858. Initially known as the “ Select School,” it eventually took the name “Christian Brothers Academy.”
La Salle Academy, in Philadelphia; La Salle College High School, in Wyndmoor; La Salle University in Philadelphia; Saint Gabriel's System, including St Gabriel's Hall and De La Salle Vocational, for court-adjudicated youth, Philadelphia [32] Saint Thomas College, Scranton. Administered by the Lasallians 1897–1942, then transferred to the Jesuits.
All pages with titles containing De La Salle University Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about schools, colleges, or other educational institutions which are associated with the same title.
Leadership within the Archdiocese of Philadelphia envisioned a continued comprehensive education for secondary students. The first free Catholic high school in the United States was the "Roman Catholic High School of Philadelphia", founded for the education of boys in 1890.