Elementary school fort worth tx: Uh oh. We’re very sorry.

Опубликовано: November 4, 2022 в 3:24 am

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Fort Worth ISD / Homepage

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  • Dos Clínicas de Inmunización Programadas para el Otoño – Campaña Your Best Shot


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  • See live demonstrations featuring state-of-the-art technical equipment, medical labs, and more


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  • Welcome to the Fort Worth ISD website. Please let us know if you have any questions or comments! 


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  • THIS TAX RATE WILL RAISE MORE TAXES FOR MAINTENANCE AND OPERATIONS THAN LAST YEAR’S TAX RATE. THE TAX RATE WILL EFFECTIVELY BE RAISED BY 5.29 PERCENT AND WILL RAISE TAXES FOR MAINTENANCE AND OPERATIONS ON A $100,000 HOME BY APPROXIMATELY $-61.60.

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Burton Hill Elementary School / Homepage

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        • El Día de las Elecciones Ahora es Feriado para la Mayoría de los Estudiantes de FWISD


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        • FWISD Lanza Campaña para Asegurar que los Estudiantes Cumplan con los Requisitos Estatales de Vacunación


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        • Fort Worth ISD Amplía el Programa Búsqueda de Aprendizaje del Sábado en 2022-23


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        IN DALLAS – Our Texas – Russian Newspaper in Houston, Dallas, San-Antonio, Austin, Texas

        Residents of the Fort Worth Independent School District approved $490 million in trust funds for the school district. These funds will make it possible, among other things, to build 80 additional premises for pre-k classes. In addition, funds will go to projects ranging from creating academies focused on the arts or new technologies, to making campuses safer and improving school buses. There are currently about 84,000 students in Fort Worth Independent District schools.


        Arlington voters voted in a referendum to open liquor stores. The law allowing the sale of hard liquor in commercial and industrial areas of Arlington will go into effect on November 19th.

        The city must develop new rules for the location and operation of liquor stores.

        Now, under the old rules of the 1980s, these shops can be located within 100 feet of schools, churches, or hospitals. However, the city authorities are considering whether to increase this distance. Otherwise, a store selling alcohol may be directly opposite, for example, a school located on a wide street. One option is to increase the distance to 300 feet. Now the Arlington administration is working on new rules for stores selling liquor.


        When we go to a restaurant, we usually expect to spend about a hundred dollars. What do you think of a dinner worth over $7,000? Such a dinner was held in Seoul, South Korea, for Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport Board of Trustees member, Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings. He chose wine for 8 guests. The mayor preferred the French red wine Chateau Haut-Brion, which cost just over $1,500 a bottle. The mayor later stated that he thought the wine was worth $150, not $1,500 a bottle. At the same time, it turned out that he knew that such a bottle usually costs from 500 to 600 dollars in US liquor stores, but he was mistaken due to the conversion of the Korean currency into dollars.

        The delegation was in Seoul to meet with the leadership of Korean Airlines. The purpose of this trip was to increase the number of flights from 4 days a week to 7 days a week.

        In May 2013, Korean Airways launched two new flights via Dallas-Fort Worth International Airport (7 flights per week).

        After the wine incident drew media attention, the mayor apologized to taxpayers for wasting money despite the fact that the trip was a success for the airport, and wrote a check for the cost of the expensive lunch from his campaign fund.

        In 2012, airport representatives spent $2.2 million traveling the world to promote the airport’s business. According to the airport administration, the money goes to support partnerships and find new partners for the international airport.


        University of Texas at Arlington senior students help improve the city and start their careers at the same time. A former conference room in the lobby of Arlington City Hall is home to an urban design center. Here, undergraduates who specialize in design and engineering create their projects for the improvement of shopping centers, residential neighborhoods or urban infrastructure.

        Design is done free of charge for low-budget businesses and organizations that want to improve their territory. For example, they were approached by the administration of a residential complex for the poor, where there was no place for a playground. Now there is a fenced football field and benches, and soon there will be a playground.

        Often thankful businesses make donations to the design center later. But such work is also beneficial for students – it is much easier to find a job with a dozen or two really existing projects behind them.


        New meters installed in downtown Dallas. Here you can pay for parking using smartphones. The city administration, together with PayByPhone Technologies, said that now drivers will be able to pay for parking with a credit card using an application on their smartphone, or by calling a toll-free number. In addition, PayByPhone will send a text message to the driver 5 minutes before the parking payment ends and offer to extend the payment.

        This application can be downloaded to smartphones. In addition, drivers can create an account and give their credit card information toll-free at 1-888-680-7275. For each payment, a fee of 35 cents is taken.


        At an age when normal children are learning the alphabet and counting to 10, Dallas Independent School District kindergarten kids are learning Chinese.

        Previously, Chinese was offered to Dallas children only in middle and high schools, but this year the program has been expanded to more than 300 students in 5 elementary schools.

        The district’s goal is to gradually expand the language program so that by 2020 high school students will be fluent in three or more languages—English, Spanish, and one other language of choice.

        The Mandarin Chinese program is now available at Lanier George Washington Carver, Paul L. Dunbar, J.J Rhoads, and Stevens Park Elementary Schools. By 2020, 21 elementary schools, whose children will later attend Madison, Lincoln and Pinkston High Schools, will offer Chinese lessons.

        The Dallas Independent School District now offers English, Spanish, French, Latin, German, Japanese, Mandarin, and the language of the deaf language to children.


        Hundreds of Star-Telegram employees will lose their jobs in 2014. Starting next year, printing and distribution of this paper in Tarrant County will be taken over by the Morning News.

        75 full-time employees and 200 part-time employees will be out of work.


        University of Texas at Arlington students fear for their safety.

        After recent rapes, robberies and thefts on campus, the website of the student newspaper Shorthorn asked readers just one question: “Do you feel safe on campus?” 82% of students admitted that they do not feel.

        The police increased the number of patrols on campus. Several people have recently been arrested for confiscating mobile phones from students.

        University of Texas at Arlington Police advise:

        • Be aware of what is happening around you.
        • Do not walk alone, especially in the dark.
        • Walk through the illuminated areas.
        • Use the Maverick Safety Escort free of charge from 7pm to 3am. To request security at any time, call 817-272-3381.
        • Keep your belongings in backpacks to keep your hands free.
        • Never leave your belongings unattended.

        Texas Christian University (TCU) has decided to name the College of Journalism after Bob Schieffer, a university alumnus and famed journalist.

        The college will now be called Schieffer College of Communications, in honor of CBS News Chief Washington Correspondent Schiffer, a 1959 graduate of the university. He is also the host of the TV show Face the Nation.


        The City of Fort Worth has over 400 properties for sale in the Stop Six neighborhood with back taxes. Real estate for sale includes everything from houses and vacant residential lots to lots in commercial areas. The Fort Worth administration expects to sell everything at auction before the end of November.

        The minimum bid for this city auction is $25,000. The city will sell the property to anyone with the highest bid. The buyer who won the auction must also pay off the tax debt. The first auction will start on November 18th. And in December, the city council will approve the sale.

        Retro color | OMyWorld – all the sights of the world

        Retro photographs are most often presented to us in black and white. However, this is not quite true. To refute the common misconception, the US Library of Congress has presented to the public the richest collection of photographs, which depict the time of the Great Depression and World War II in the most vivid colors. We bring to your attention the first part of the review of color photographs depicting the daily life of Americans. All photos were taken between 1939 and 1944.

        Each of these photographs has its own story. They are the personification of an era that no longer exists.

        Surplus Merchandise Distribution St. Johns, Arizona. October 1940. Photo by Russell Lee.
        The distribution of commodity surpluses in the 30-40s of the 20th century became the norm in the United States. To avoid famine during the Great Depression, a series of laws and food programs were passed to redistribute, through the federal budget, surplus food to low-income categories of citizens, charities, school canteens and non-profit summer camps. Particularly during the Great Depression and World War II, commodity donations were a major source of support for school lunch programs.

        A series of photographs by photographer Russell Lee about Pie Town in New Mexico . The photographs were taken in 1940. At that time, the entire population of the city was approximately 300 inhabitants. Most of them were refugees from other places ravaged by the Great Depression. It is believed that Pai Tong was founded by a certain Clyde Norman, who opened a grocery store and organized cake baking. They say that Mr. Norman’s cakes were so famous that the new city got its name in honor of them.

        By the time Lee arrived in the town for filming, there were already several farm buildings, a coffee shop, a gift shop, a hotel, his own baseball team, and an elementary school. There was also its own Main Street, reminiscent of those shown in films about the Wild West. Passenger stagecoaches passed through the city every week.

        The garden adjoins the dugout of settler Jack Winnery’s home in Pye Town, New Mexico. October 1940. Photo by Russell Lee.

        The family of the migrant Faro Caudill have lunch in their dugout. October 1940 years old. Pai Town. Photo by Russell Lee.

        Faro draws water from his well. Pai Town, New Mexico. October 1940. Photo by Russell Lee.

        A woman in the Robestown laundry on a Saturday afternoon. Robstown, Texas. Photo by Arthur Rothstein. January 1942.

        A boy builds a model aircraft. Robstown, Texas. January 1942. Photo by Arthur Rothstein.

        The instructor explains parachute principles to student pilots. Meacham field airport, Fort Worth, Texas. January 1942 years. Photo by Arthur Rothstein.

        Here are the students themselves. January 1942. Photo by Arthur Rothstein.

        Pickers in the peach orchard. Delta County, Colorado. September 1940. Photo by Russell Lee.

        Transporting crates of peaches from the orchard to the barn. Delta County, Colorado. September 1940. Photo by Russell Lee.

        A worker pre-sorts oranges, picking out poor quality ones. California, March 1943. Photo by Jack Delano.

        Workers picking cotton. Near Clarksdale, Mississippi. November 1939. Photo by Marion Walcott.

        Cotton processing on leased land near White Plains, Greene County, Georgia. June 1941. Photo by Jack Delano.

        Child of migrant workers in the field during the harvest. State of Texas. January 1942. Photo by Arthur Rothstein.

        The boys are fishing in the creek. Shriver, Louisiana. June 1940. Photo by Marion Walcott.

        Live fish store near Natchitoches, Louisiana. July 1940. Photo by Marion Walcott.

        Vermont Fair, City of Rutland .