La Cimbali S39 Barsystem Manual High School

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Chicago Public Schools (CPS) is a large publicschool district consisting of primary and secondary schools within the city limits of Chicago, in the U.S. state of Illinois.

  • 1Schools
    • 1.1High schools
    • 1.2Elementary/middle schools
      • 1.2.3Zoned K-8
    • 1.3Elementary/middle schools by type
    • 1.4Magnet schools
  • 2Defunct schools

Schools[edit]

High schools[edit]

There are several types of high schools in the district, including neighborhood, career academy, charter, contract, magnet, military academy, selective enrollment, small and special education.[1]

* = Zoned High School

Alternative Learning Options (ALOP)[edit]

  • Bridgescape Schools
    • Bridgescape Academy Brainerd
    • Bridgescape Academy Humboldt Park
    • Bridgescape Academy Lawndale
    • Bridgescape Academy Roseland

Career and Technical Education (CTE)[edit]

  • Amundsen High School*
  • Austin Community Academy High School*
  • Bogan High School*
  • Bowen High School*
  • Chicago Vocational Career Academy*
  • Roberto Clemente Community Academy*
  • Curie Metropolitan High School*
  • Dyett High School*
  • Farragut Career Academy*
  • Fenger Academy High School*
  • Foreman High School*
  • Gage Park High School*
  • Harlan Community Academy High School*
  • Harper High School*
  • Hirsch Metropolitan High School*
  • Hyde Park Academy High School*
  • Benito Juarez Community Academy*
  • Julian High School*
  • Thomas Kelly High School*
  • Manley Career Academy High School*
  • John Marshall Metropolitan High School*
  • Mather High School*
  • North-Grand High School*
  • Wendell Phillips Academy High School*
  • Richards Career Academy*
  • Roosevelt High School*
  • Carl Schurz High School*
  • Solorio Academy High School*
  • Roger C. Sullivan High School*

Charter[edit]

  • Acero Charter Schools
    • Major Hector P. Garcia MD
    • Victoria Soto
  • ASPIRA Charter Schools
    • ASPIRA Business and Finance
    • ASPIRA Early College High School
  • Chicago International Charter School (CICS)
  • Institutio
  • Noble Network of Charter Schools
  • Youth Connection Charter School

Citywide-Option[edit]

Contract[edit]

  • Chicago Excel Academy (Camelot charter)

International Baccalaureate (IB)[edit]

Magnet[edit]

  • DeVry University Advantage Academy - Grades 11-12, with college credit
  • Harlan Community Academy High School (Engineering Program)
  • Senn High School (Fine and Performing Arts Program)

Military academies[edit]

Neighborhood[edit]

  • Amundsen High School*
  • Austin Community Academy High School*
  • Bogan High School*
  • Bowen High School*
  • Chatham Academy High School (no attendance boundaries)
  • Corliss High School*
  • Douglass Academy High School (no attendance boundaries)
  • Dyett High School*
  • Gage Park High School*
  • Harlan Community Academy High School*
  • Hirsch Metropolitan High School*
  • Infinity Math Science & Technology High School*
  • John Hope College Preparatory High School (no attendance boundaries)
  • Hubbard High School*
  • Kelvyn Park High School*
  • Kennedy High School*
  • Kenwood Academy*
  • Lake View High School*
  • Lincoln Park High School*
  • Morgan Park High School*
  • North Grand High School*
  • Orr Academy High School*
  • Senn High School*
  • Solorio Academy High School*
  • Tilden High School*
  • George Washington High School*

Selective enrollment[edit]

Small[edit]

Special education[edit]

Elementary/middle schools[edit]

Zoned Middle Schools[edit]

  • Albany Park Multicultural Academy
  • Evergreen Academy Middle School
  • Eugene Field Elementary School
  • Irene C. Hernandez Middle School for the Advancement of Science
  • Francisco I. Madero Middle School
  • Northwest Middle School
  • Robert J. Richardson Middle School
  • James Shields Middle School

Zoned 3-8[edit]

  • Joseph E. Gary School website

Zoned K-8[edit]

Zoned K-8 A[edit]
  • Jane Addams School website
  • Louis A. Agassiz School website
  • Louisa May Alcott School website
  • Ira F. Aldridge School website
  • Ariel (formerly Shakespeare) School website
  • Phillip D. Armour School website
  • George Armstrong School website
  • Ashburn School website
  • Arthur R. Ashe School website
  • John J. Audubon School website
  • Avalon Park School website
  • Mariano Azuela School website
Zoned K-8 B[edit]
  • Alice L. Barnard School website
  • Clara Barton School website
  • Perkins Bass School website
  • Newton Bateman School website
  • Jean Baptiste Beaubien School website
  • Ludwig Van Beethoven School website
  • Jacob Beidler School website
  • Hiram H. Belding School website
  • Belmont-Cragin School website
  • Frank I. Bennett School website
  • James G. Blaine School website
  • Carrie Jacobs Bond School website
  • Daniel Boone School website
  • Edward A. Bouchet (formerly Bryn Mawr) School website
  • Myra Bradwell School website
  • Joseph Brennemann School website
  • Lorenz Brentano School website
  • Norman A. Bridge School website
  • Orville T. Bright School website
  • Brighton Park School website
  • Ronald Brown (formerly Samuel Gompers) School website
  • William H. Brown School website
  • Milton Brunson School website
  • Lyman A. Budlong School website
  • Luther Burbank School website
  • Edmond Burke School website
  • Augustus H. Burley School website
  • Burnham (formerly Luella) School website
  • Jonathan Burr School website
  • John C. Burroughs School website
  • Michael M. Byrne School website
Zoned K-8 C[edit]
  • Charles P. Caldwell School website
  • Calmeca School website
  • Daniel R. Cameron School website
  • Marvin Camras School website
  • Arthur E. Canty School website
  • Lazaro Cardenas School website
  • Andrew Carnegie School website
  • Carroll/Rosenwald Specialty School School website
  • Rachel Carson (formerly Gage Park) School website
  • William W. Carter School website
  • George Washington Carver School website
  • Pablo Casals School website
  • George F. Cassell School website
  • Willa Cather School website
  • Thomas Chalmers School website
  • Eliza Chappell School website
  • Salmon P. Chase School website
  • Cesar E. Chavez School website
  • Frederic Chopin School website
  • Walter S. Christopher School website
  • George Rogers Clark School website
  • Henry Clay School website
  • Grover Cleveland School website
  • Henry R. Clissold School website
  • Johnie Colemon School website
  • Edward Coles School website
  • Columbia Explorers Academy School website
  • Christopher Columbus School website
  • John W. Cook School website
  • John C. Coonley School website
  • Peter Cooper School website
  • Daniel J. Corkery School website
  • Mary E. Courtenay (formerly Stockton) School website
  • Crown School website
  • Paul Cuffe School website
  • Countee Cullen School website
  • George W. Curtis School website
Zoned K-8 D[edit]
  • Ricard J. Daley School website
  • Charles R. Darwin School website
  • Nathan S. Davis School website
  • Everett McKinley Dirksen School website
  • John C. Dore Elementary School School website
Zoned K-8 E[edit]
  • Christian Ebinger, Sr. School website
  • John F. Eberhart School website
Zoned K-8 G[edit]
  • Frank L. Gillespie School website
  • Goethe School website
  • Virgil Grissom School website
Zoned K-8 H[edit]
  • Charles G. Hammond School website
  • Helen M. Hefferan School website
  • John Hay School website
  • Robert Healy School website
Zoned K-8 J[edit]
Zoned K-8 L[edit]

La Cimbali S39 Barsystem Manual High School Online

  • Abraham Lincoln School website
  • Carl von Linné School website
Zoned K-8 M[edit]
  • Arnold Mireles School website
  • George Manierre School website
  • Oscar Mayer School website
  • Donald L. Morrill
Zoned K-8 N[edit]
  • Walter L Newberry Math & Science Academy School website
  • Florence Nightingale
Zoned K-8 O[edit]
Zoned K-8 P[edit]
  • Brian Piccolo (formerly Rezin Orr) School website
  • Ernst Prussing School website
Zoned K-8 R[edit]
  • Irma C. Ruiz School website
  • Ravenswood School website
Zoned K-8 S[edit]
  • Mark Skinner Elementary School School website
  • Washington D. Smyser Elementary School School website
  • South Loop Elementary School School website
  • Sidney Sawyer Elementary School

Zoned K-7[edit]

  • Helge A. Haugan School website
  • Patrick Henry School website

Zoned K-6[edit]

  • John Barry School website
  • Charles S. Brownell School website
  • Laughlin Falconer School website
  • William G. Hibbard School website
  • William P. Nixon School website
  • John T. Pirie School website
  • Beulah Shoesmith School website
  • Woodlawn School website

Zoned K-5[edit]

  • Peter Cooper School website
  • Edward Everett School website
  • Nathanael Greene School website
  • Henry D. Lloyd School website
  • Cyrus H. McCormick School website
  • Mary McDowell School website
  • Socorro Sandoval School website
  • Franz Peter Schubert School website
  • Enrico Tonti School website

Zoned K-4[edit]

  • New Field School website
  • Louis Pasteur School website
  • Ferdinand Peck School website
  • James Shields School website

Zoned K-3[edit]

  • Jackie Robinson School website

Zoned K-2[edit]

  • Josefa Ortiz De Dominguez School website

Elementary/middle schools by type[edit]

La Cimbali S39 Barsystem Manual High School

Chicago Public Schools offers a wide variety of choices for elementary school students, including neighborhood, academic centers, charter, classical, contract, international gifted program, magnet, regional gifted center, small and special education.[2]

Academic centers[edit]

Academic centers are housed in high schools and provide a college preparatory program for academically gifted and talented seventh and eighth grade students. There are seven academic centers:[3]

Charter Schools[edit]

  • Acero Charter Schools
    • Brighton Park
    • Cisneros
    • Clemente
    • De La Cruz
    • De Las Casas
    • Fuentes
    • Idar
    • Marquez
    • Paz
    • Santiago
    • Tamayo
    • Torres
    • Zizumbo
  • ASPIRA Charter Schools
    • Haugen Middle School
  • Catalyst Elementary Charter School
    • Circle Rock
    • Maria
  • Christopher House Charter School
  • Chicago International Charter School
    • Avalon/South Shore
    • Basil
    • Lloyd Bond
    • Bucktown
    • Irving Park
    • Loomis Primary
    • Prairie
    • Washington Park
    • West Belden
    • Wrightwood
  • University of Chicago
    • Woodson Middle School

Classical schools[edit]

The instructional program in classical schools is accelerated and highly structured for strong academic achievement in literature, mathematics, language arts, world language, and the humanities. There are seven classical schools:[4]

  • Decatur
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • McDade
  • Skinner North
  • Skinner West
  • Bronzeville
  • Sor Juana

International gifted program[edit]

Magnet schools[edit]

  • Black
  • Burnside (formerly Ambrose)
  • Clairemont (Zoned Magnet School)
  • Davis
  • Disney
  • Disney II
  • Drummond
  • Ericson
  • Franklin Fine Arts
  • Frazier Prospective
  • Galileo
  • Gunsaulus
  • Jackson, Andrew
  • Kershaw
  • LaSalle
  • LaSalle II
  • Murray
  • Newberry
  • Owen
  • Prescott Magnet Cluster School
  • Sabin
  • Saucedo
  • Suder
  • Thorp
  • Turner-Drew
  • Vanderpoel
  • Wildwood

Regional gifted centers[edit]

La Cimbali S39 Barsystem Manual High School

There are eleven regional gifted centers:[5]

  • Beasley
  • Beaubien
  • Carnegie
  • Coonley
  • Edison
  • National Teachers Academy
  • Pulaski International School
  • South Loop

Special schools[edit]

  • Daniel C. Beard Elenentary (K-3)
  • Blair Early Childhood Center
  • Moses Montefiore Academy (7-9)
  • Wilma Rudolph Elementary Learning Center (K-5)

Defunct schools[edit]

Former high schools[edit]

  • Academy of Communications and Technology Charter School - closed in 2010, the school building at 4319 W. Washington Blvd. was built in 1906 as St. Mel Catholic grade school
  • Richards Vacational High School - located at 5516 S. Maplewood Ave. now houses Rachel Carson Elementary School since 1991. An annex was built in 1997
  • Calumet High School (1919–2006) - made way for the Perspectives Charter School, which currently occupies the building
  • Carter Harrison Technical High School (1912–1983) - now houses the Maria Saucedo Scholastic Academy[6]
  • Cecil Partee Academic Preparatory Center - occupied the old Hookway Elementary School
  • Chicago High School (1856–1880) - renamed Central High School in 1878, closed in 1880; building demolished in 1950 to make way for the Kennedy Expressway[7]
  • Chicago Talent Development High School (2009–2014)
  • Collins High School - the building at 1313 South Sacramento Drive (inside Douglas Park) now houses both the Collins Academy High School and the North Lawndale College Prep High School
  • Cooley Vocational High School (1958–1979) - subject of the film Cooley High; the school, located on the 800 block of West Scott Street, closed in 1979 when it was replaced by a newer high school nearby and was eventually razed; the area around the former school was zoned to nearby Lincoln Park High School
  • Cregier Vocational High School - closed at the end of the 1994-1995 school year
  • Englewood Technical Prep Academy (1873–2008) - closed due to poor performance; now houses TEAM Englewood Community Academy and Urban Prep Charter Academy
  • English High and Manual Training School - renamed to Crane High School in 1905
  • Forrestville High School - closed in 1971 when the nearby King College Prep High School was completed and students were sent there.
  • Harvard High School (1865–1962) - closed in 1962 due to declining enrollment; last used by St. George's School before the building was converted into condominiums and a family home[8]
  • Hibbard High School - closed in 1927 when the nearby Roosevelt High School was completed and students were sent there; remains in operation as an elementary school
  • Jefferson High School - closed in 1910 when the nearby Schurz High School was completed and students were sent there; the school was eventually razed and the Irish American Heritage Center was built on the site
  • Kinzie High School - renamed to Kennedy High School in 1965
  • Lake High School - renamed to Tilden Technical High School (now the Tilden Career Community Academy) in 1915
  • Las Casas Occupational High School (closed 2011)
  • Lewis Institute High School - closed in 1917; merged with Armour Institute of Technology in 1940 to form the present-day Illinois Institute of Technology
  • Loretto High School (Englewood) - closed in 1962 due to declining enrollment; the fate of the building is unknown
  • Lucy Flower Vocational High School (1911–2003) - named after Lucy Flower; present site of Al Raby School for Community and Environment[9]
  • Manual High School - renamed to University High School in 1904
  • Medill High School - 1300 block of W. 14th place. First built in the 1890s, buildings on that site housed various grade levels. The high school closed in 1948.[10][11]
  • Metropolitan High School - closed during the 1990s; the building, located on 160 block of West Wendell, now houses the Ruben Salazar Bilingual Educational Center, a CPS K-8 school.
  • Near North Career Metro High School - closed in 2001; the building is currently used as a training facility for the Chicago Police Department and Chicago Fire Department.
  • North Park University High School - closed in 1969 due to declining enrollment and rising costs; now serves as an administration building for an adjacent college
  • Parker High School - opened in 1901; closed in 1977 and reopened as Paul Robeson High School
  • Pullman Technical High School - closed in 1950 due to budget constraints; continued to operate as a private school until 1997 when it was converted to the Brooks College Preparatory Academy
  • Paul Robeson High School - closed in 2018 due to declining enrollment.
  • South Division High School - closed in 1905 and reopened as Wendell Phillips Academy High School
  • Spalding (1908–2004) - K through 12 school at 1628 W. Washington; building reopened as Hope Institute Learning Academy, a private school with a CPS contract emphasizing services for special-needs children
  • Tuley/Northwest Division High School - closed in 1974 to make way for the new Roberto Clemente Community Academy
  • Waller/North Division High School - renamed to Lincoln Park High School in 1979
  • Washburne Trade School - closed in 1993; reopened in 1994 as part of the City Colleges of Chicago[12][13] before closing again in 1996.[13] The culinary trade program continues as Washburne Culinary Institute of Kennedy-King College. Washburne school building at 3233 W. 31st St., built in 1910 as the Liquid Carbonic Co. factory and housing the school from 1958 until closing,[13] was considered for landmark status as a Prairie School industrial building but suffered a fire in Feb. 2007[14] and was demolished by 2009.[13] Converted to a vocational training school in 1919,[15] Washburne was home to Chicago trade union apprentice programs; students earned a high school diploma at the same time.[13][15][16]
  • (West Division) McKinley High School - closed 1954, now the site of Chicago Bulls College Prep
  • Westcott Vocational High School - renamed to Simeon Career Academy in 1964
  • Westinghouse Career Academy High School - closed in 2009 to make way for the new George Westinghouse College Prep (now selective enrollment) on the 3300 block of West Franklin Blvd.

Former middle schools[edit]

  • Canter Middle School - located at 4959 S Blackstone Ave; voted to be closed in 2013, allowed a 1-year reprieve so 8th graders could graduate. Reused by Chicago Public Schools as Kenwood Academic Center.

La Cimbali S39 Barsystem Manual High School 2

Former elementary schools[edit]

The former Crispus Attucks Elementary School, Bronzeville, Chicago
The former Florence B. Price Elementary School, North Kenwood, Chicago
  • R.S. Abbott Elementary School - located at 3630 S. Wells; opened in 1881 and closed in 2008; the building currently houses Air Force Academy High School
  • John D. Altgeld Elementary School - located at 1340 W 71st St.; closed in 2014. Renamed Daniel S. Wentworth Elementary School after moving to the site of this school.
  • Louis Armstrong Elementary School - located at 5345 W Congress Pkwy; voted to be closed in 2013. The Board of Education approved a sale to Rivers of Living Water Ministries International on April 26, 2017 for $250,000. Slated for use as community center.
  • Crispus Attucks Elementary School (formerly John Farron Elementary School) - located at 5055 S State St; voted to be closed in 2013, phased out in summer 2015. The Board of Education approved a sale to KMIS Developers on May 24, 2017 for $100,000.
  • Katharine Lee Bates Elementary School - opened in 1960 and closed in 1979; in 1981 Tabernacle Christian Academy moved into that same building at 1203 W. 109th Place, and is currently in operation.
  • Blair Elementary School - located at 6751 W 63rd Pl; converted into Blair Early Childhood Center.
  • Arna Bontemps Elementary School - located at 1241 W 58th St.; voted to be closed in 2013. The Board of Education approved a sale to IFF on Jun 28, 2017 for $50,000. School slated to become mixed-use workforce housing development with at least 46 affordable units. Gym will be converted to commercial leased space. Outdoor area will become urban farm. Offer contingent on receipt of low-income housing tax credits from city.[17]
  • Kate S. Buckingham School - located at 9207 S. Phillips Ave; voted to be closed in 2013. For sale.
  • Daniel H. Burnham School - located at 1903 E 96th St.; voted to be closed in 2013. For sale, main building and annex are being sold separately.
  • Calhoun North Elementary School - located at 2833 W Adams St.; voted to be closed in 2013. The Board of Education approved a sale to Heartland Housing on May 24, 2017 for $200,000. Slated for use as affordable housing. Use restriction: Must be used as housing. Gym and auditorium must be preserved and made available for community programming and partnerships. Cannot be used as any kind of K-12 school or for commercial, retail or industrial development. Owner must provide and maintain a playground for neighborhood children. Sale price will also include about $360,000 in donation tax credits.[18]
  • Zenos Colman Elementary School - located at 4655 S Dearborn St.; closed in 2005. Converted to the School district's Administration office
  • Cornell Elementary School - located at 7525 S. Maryland Ave, closed in 1975 and demolished in 1980.
  • Dodge Elementary School - Now served as Chicago Public Schools, Garfield Park Office.
  • Ana Roque De Duprey School - located at 2620 W Hirsch St.; voted to be closed in 2013. The Board of Education approved a sale to IFF Von Humboldt on Jul 22, 2015 for $3,100,000. Main building slated to become mixed-use community for teachers. Annex and adjoining playground to be sold to Puerto Rican Cultural Center for $1 and converted into a day care center.
  • Farragut Elementary School - Became a Junior High School and then a High School which is now known as Farragut Career Academy.
  • Froebel Elementary School - Demolished in 1980 for housing.
  • U.S. Grant Elementary School
  • Hardin Elementary School - closed in 1950's, homes built on that site.
  • Herman Felsenthal Elementary School - Demolished in 1983.
  • Henry Horner Elementary School - building converted into residential condos in 2013.
  • Amelia Dunne Hookway Elementary School - closed in 1981 due to underenrollment. A transitional high school for ninth graders, Cecil Partee Academic Preparatory Center was later housed in that same building. Partee was later relocated to Chicago Vocational Career Academy. In 1988, Lenart Regional Gifted Center opened a selective admissions elementary school in that site.
  • Jefferson Elementary School
  • Jirka Elementary School - building converted to Pilsen Community Academy.
  • John V. LeMoyne Elementary School (formerly Theodore Herzi Elementary School) - Merged with Inter-American Magnet School.
  • Lafayette Elementary School - Located at 2714 W. Augusta Boulevard. Became Chicago High School for The Arts in 2015.
  • Langland Elementary School - Located at 2230 W. Cortland Street. This School was demolished in 1960 to make way for Ehrler Park.
  • Longfellow Elementary School - Razed in 1987 to make way for McKinley Branch Library.
  • Mayfair Elementary School - merged with Irish American Heritage Center in 1985.
  • Moseley Elementary School - Demolished in 2009.
  • Nathaniel Pope Elementary School - Closed in 2014 as part of the closure of 54 schools.
  • Florence B. Price Elementary School - Located at 4351 South Drexel Boulevard. Opened in 1964 and closed in 2013, houses a local church.[citation needed]
  • Raymond Elementary School - reopened as Perspectives/IIT Math & Science Charter Academy.
  • Jacob Riis Elementary School - demolished in 2008.
  • Rosenwald Elementary School - Became Carroll-Rosenwald Specialty School after Carroll moved to this School.
  • Betsy Ross Elementary School
  • Rowland Elementary School - Merged to North Lawndale College Prep Charter High School in 1998.
  • Thomas Scanlan Elementary School - (Later rename Songhai Learning Institute) Closed in 2014.
  • Shedd Elementary School - located at South Side, Chicago.
  • Jesse Spaulding Elementary School - closed in 2006, merged to Hope Learning Academy.
  • Spry Elementary School - building was converted into the Spry Community School.
  • Stewart Elementary School - closed in 2013 for lofts.
  • Stockton Elementary School - renamed Courtenay Language Arts Center in 2013[where?]
  • Tennyson Elementary School
  • Alexander von Humboldt Elementary School - located at 2622 West Hirsch Ave. At the beginning of the 2008-2009 school year, Ana Roque de Duprey School moved its operations to the Von Humboldt building.
  • Willard Elementary School - closed in 1992. homes were built on that site.
  • Richard Wright Elementary School - opened in 1971 and closed in 2004 due to fire[19]
  • Yale Elementary School - closed in 2013.

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^'High School Types'. CPS. Retrieved October 20, 2015.
  2. ^'Elementary School Types'. Chicago Public Schools. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  3. ^'Academic Centers'. Chicago Public Schools. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  4. ^'Classical Schools'. Chicago Public Schools. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  5. ^'Regional Gifted Centers'. Chicago Public Schools. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  6. ^'Chicago Carter Harrison Technical High School'. Illinois HS Glory Days. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  7. ^'Chicago Central High School'. Illinois HS Glory Days. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  8. ^'Chicago Harvard School'. Illinois HS Glory Days. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  9. ^'Chicago Lucy Flower Vocational High School'. Illinois HS Glory Days. Retrieved November 3, 2015.
  10. ^'Medill High's Alumni Plan 30th Reunion'. Chicago Tribune. March 31, 1960. p. 78. Retrieved October 19, 2016.
  11. ^'Plaque in School Honors Service of Medill to Nation'. Chicago Tribune. January 9, 1960. p. 9. Retrieved October 19, 2016.
  12. ^Gordon, Danielle (September 1994). 'Washburne Update: Restraint of Trades'. The Chicago Reporter. Retrieved September 26, 2009.
  13. ^ abcde'The Last Days of Washburne'. Forgotten Chicago. January 8, 2009. Retrieved September 26, 2009.
  14. ^'Chicagoland Watch List Property Suffers Damaging Fire'. Landmarks Illinois. 2007. Archived from the original on July 18, 2011. Retrieved September 27, 2009.
  15. ^ abLynch, La Risa (September 1994). 'Washburne's Checkered Past'. The Chicago Reporter. Retrieved September 30, 2009.
  16. ^Worthen, Helena (January 4, 2002). Joint Labor–Management Apprenticeship Programs: The Issue of Access to Multi-Employer Training Programs in Chicago’s Construction Industry. Industrial Relations Research Association: Proceedings of the 54th Annual Meeting. Archived from the original on September 6, 2003. Retrieved October 20, 2015.
  17. ^Belsha, Kalyn; Kiefer, Matt. 'What happened to the closed school in your neighborhood?'. Chicago Reporter. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
  18. ^Belsha, Kalyn; Kiefer, Matt. 'What happened to the closed school in your neighborhood?'. Chicago Reporter. Retrieved January 6, 2019.
  19. ^Foley, Marybeth (December 2004). 'Richard Wright Elementary dies by fire'. Substance: the newspaper of public education in Chicago. Retrieved September 26, 2009.

La Cimbali S39 Barsystem Manual High School Denver

External links[edit]

La Cimbali S39 Barsystem Manual High School

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