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:Six high schools opened in Germany in September/October '46 in Germany. They are Bremen, Berlin, Frankfurt, Heidelberg, Munich and Nurnberg. Heidelberg, the only one of the six still operating, opened on 20 October 1946 making it older than Kubasaki which according to this article opened in November. See [[Frankfurt American High School|Frankfurt]] article for reference.[[User:HokiePE|HokiePE]] ([[User talk:HokiePE|talk]]) 01:00, 16 August 2012 (UTC)
:Six high schools opened in Germany in September/October '46 in Germany. They are Bremen, Berlin, Frankfurt, Heidelberg, Munich and Nurnberg. Heidelberg, the only one of the six still operating, opened on 20 October 1946 making it older than Kubasaki which according to this article opened in November. See [[Frankfurt American High School|Frankfurt]] article for reference.[[User:HokiePE|HokiePE]] ([[User talk:HokiePE|talk]]) 01:00, 16 August 2012 (UTC)


This page doesn't sound very unbiased or encyclopedic. Information about the various natural disasters the school survived, if a prominent aspect of the school, should go into a separate section. The introduction should be less "this school is great, it's the oldest, it's survived a lot" and more "this is a school"

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Oldest DODDS High School?

There are multiple claims for oldest active DODDS high school. I am looking for references to substantiate the various claims. It appears that Heidelberg HS, Germany, opened in September of 1946 (along with Frankfurt, Nurnberg, Berlin and ???, which are now closed). WT Sampson HS, Cuba, claims its origins back to 1931. I have not seen a working/valid reference to any of these claims. My school, Frankfurt, closed so I don't have a dog in the race, but curiosity is killing me. Hope someone can shed some light. HokiePE (talk) 22:20, 15 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]


Six high schools opened in Germany in September/October '46 in Germany. They are Bremen, Berlin, Frankfurt, Heidelberg, Munich and Nurnberg. Heidelberg, the only one of the six still operating, opened on 20 October 1946 making it older than Kubasaki which according to this article opened in November. See Frankfurt article for reference.HokiePE (talk) 01:00, 16 August 2012 (UTC)[reply]


This page doesn't sound very unbiased or encyclopedic. Information about the various natural disasters the school survived, if a prominent aspect of the school, should go into a separate section. The introduction should be less "this school is great, it's the oldest, it's survived a lot" and more "this is a school"