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Vianney forms young men for college and careers.
Vianney forms young men for college and careers.

Business Journals

time30-07-2025

  • Business
  • Business Journals

Vianney forms young men for college and careers.

Located on a 37-acre campus in beautiful Kirkwood, Missouri, St. John Vianney High School prepares young men for college and careers by developing their curiosity and courage to learn. With 45 honor-level courses, including AP (Advanced Placement) and ACC (Advanced College Credit), students can earn more than 40 hours of college credit while attending Vianney, beginning as early as their freshman year with AP Human Geography. FAST FACTS ABOUT VIANNEY * Drawing from more than 60 grade schools, both public and private, students gather from 70 different zip codes. * With an enrollment around 550 students, Vianney offers a 12-to-1 student-teacher ratio which promotes a personal learning environment. * Vianney graduates have been accepted to more than 300 prestigious colleges and universities across the country. * Since opening in 1960, Vianney have won 32 state championships across nine sports. * Vianney awards $2.5 million in tuition assistance annually. VIANNEY ALUMNI Business * VP HR Lockheed-Martin, John Dierkes '66 (Retired) * VP, Emerson, Pat Sly '68 (Retired) * VP Investment, Morgan Stanley, Gary Agne '77 * CEO, Novus International, Dan Meagher '79 * CFO, World Wide Technology, Steve Pelch '82 * Senior VP, Stifel-Nicolaus, Mark Matthes '82 * President, World Wide Technology, Joe Koenig '83 * COO, Smuckers, John Brase '86 STEM | Science, Technology, Engineering, Math * Chief Medical Officer, Dr. Chris Bowe '73 (Retired) * Founder Clayton Sleep Institute, Dr. Joe Ojile '77 * Human Genome Project Scientist, Michael Wendl '84 * Production Engineering, Boeing, James Howard '01 * Corporate Information Security Engineer, Square, Joshua Delbert '08 * Civil Engineer, Brinkmann Constructors, Joe Hoffmann '18 Fine & Performing Arts * Founder, City Museum, Bob Cassilly '68 (Deceased) * Owner, Emil Frei Stained Glass, Steve Frei '72 * Photographer, Sports Illustrated, David Klutho '78 * Illustrator, Marvel, James Mahfood '93 * Actor, The Orville, J Lee '99 Professional Sports * President, Jacksonville Jaguars Mark Lamping '76 * NFL, Tom Mullen '70, Randy Frisch '73 (Deceased), Trent Green '88, Kyle Markway '15, Kyren Williams '19 * MLB, Neil Fiala '74, Cliff Politte '93, Nick Schmidt '04, Nick Allgeyer '14 * MLS, Connor Sparrow '12, Mark Segbers '14 * Olympics, Volleyball, Scott Touzinsky '00 * Exhibition Baseball, Savannah Bananas Noah Niznik '18 Visit to learn more!

DR Congo: Militia kill dozens of villagers in Ituri province
DR Congo: Militia kill dozens of villagers in Ituri province

Times of Oman

time12-02-2025

  • Politics
  • Times of Oman

DR Congo: Militia kill dozens of villagers in Ituri province

Kinshasa: Armed militants in an eastern border region of the Democratic Republic of Congo killed more than 50 civilians in attacks late on Monday, officials from the region reported on Tuesday. The head of the Djaiba cluster of villages, Jean Vianney, said CODECO militants were behind the attack. He said they set houses full of people on fire, also attacking with guns and machetes. "There are people injured, many burnt to death in their homes," Vianney said, putting the provisional death toll at 51 and saying he expected it to rise. Floribert Byaruhanga, a lawmaker for the wider Djugu territory, gave a similar death toll of 52, saying it included 18 children. Provincial army spokesman Jules Ngono said soldiers tried to help but arrived too late to avoid the carnage. "What happened to the Djaiba group is the worst in terms of the deaths of our people, and we strongly condemn it," he told Reuters news agency by telephone. The previous night, militants also carried out an attack on a local camp for internally displaced people before being repelled by the local UN peacekeeping force, MONUSCO. CODECO is one of a myriad of militias fighting over land and resources in east Congo. It has frequently targeted displacement camps. CODECO militia is a loose group of fighters from the Lendu community, accused by the UN in the past of violent attacks, often on the majority Hema community in Ituri province. UN mission spokesman Jean-Tobie Okala said in a statement that peacekeepers had managed to protect displaced people in the camp. "But they are limited, especially when the attackers come in large numbers, as they did last night [when attacking the nearby villages]," Okala added. Ituri, in the far east of the vast DRC, is thousands of kilometres from the capital Kinshasa. The country has been plagued by various conflicts, insurgencies and internal disputes for more than 30 years, not least in the east. More than 7 million people are thought to have been internally displaced in the country. Ituri is also situated just to the north of the provinces of North and South Kivu, the site of fierce fighting between Rwanda-backed M23 fighters and the Congolese army of late. The M23 has seized large chunks of territory in the mineral-rich east of the DRC since taking up arms in late 2021, with an uptick in fighting recently. Three days after a summit in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, where African leaders appealed for a plan for an "unconditional" ceasefire in the region to be completed by Thursday, renewed fighting was reported by local sources on Tuesday.

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