Immaculate Conception High School

Immaculate Conception High School may refer to:

In the United States
  • Immaculate Conception High School (Elmhurst, Illinois), Elmhurst, Illinois
  • Immaculate Conception Ukrainian Catholic High School, Warren, Michigan
  • Immaculate Conception High School (Mississippi), Clarksdale, Mississippi
  • Immaculate Conception High School (Lodi, New Jersey), Lodi, New Jersey
  • Immaculate Conception High School (Montclair, New Jersey), Montclair, New Jersey
  • Immaculate Conception High School (Celina, Ohio), Celina, Ohio
  • Immaculate Conception High School (Tennessee), Memphis, Tennessee
Elsewhere
  • Immaculate Conception High School (Jamaica), Kingston, Jamaica

Famous quotes containing the words high school, immaculate conception, immaculate, conception, high and/or school:

    Young people of high school age can actually feel themselves changing. Progress is almost tangible. It’s exciting. It stimulates more progress. Nevertheless, growth is not constant and smooth. Erik Erikson quotes an aphorism to describe the formless forming of it. “I ain’t what I ought to be. I ain’t what I’m going to be, but I’m not what I was.”
    Stella Chess (20th century)

    I know that there are many persons to whom it seems derogatory to link a body of philosophic ideas to the social life and culture of their epoch. They seem to accept a dogma of immaculate conception of philosophical systems.
    John Dewey (1859–1952)

    The poem refreshes life so that we share,
    For a moment, the first idea . . . It satisfies
    Belief in an immaculate beginning
    And sends us, winged by an unconscious will,
    To an immaculate end. We move between these points:
    From that ever-early candor to its late plural....
    Wallace Stevens (1879–1955)

    The only conception of freedom I can have is that of the prisoner or the individual in the midst of the State. The only one I know is freedom of thought and action.
    Albert Camus (1913–1960)

    The house one story high in front, three stories
    On the end it presented to the road.
    Robert Frost (1874–1963)

    The difference between de jure and de facto segregation is the difference open, forthright bigotry and the shamefaced kind that works through unwritten agreements between real estate dealers, school officials, and local politicians.
    Shirley Chisholm (b. 1924)