La Salle High School is the name of several educational institutions affiliated with the Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, also known as the Lasallian Brothers, a Roman Catholic religious teaching order founded by French Priest Saint Jean-Baptiste de la Salle:
- Lasallian educational institutions
La Salle High School may also refer to the following educational institutions:
In Canada:
- LaSalle Community Comprehensive High School, in LaSalle, Quebec
- La Salle Secondary School, in Greater Sudbury, Ontario
- La Salle Secondary School, in Kingston, Ontario
In Latin America:
- La Salle High School, in Buenos Aires, Argentina
- La Salle School, Bolivia
In Malaysia:
- La Salle School, Brickfields in Brickfields, Kuala Lumpur
- La Salle School, Klang, Selangor
- La Salle High School (Petaling Jaya), in Petaling Jaya, Selangor
- La Salle Secondary School, Kota Kinabalu, Sabah
In Pakistan:
- La Salle High School Faisalabad, in Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan
- La Salle High School Multan, in Multan, Punjab, Pakistan
In the Philippines:
- La Salle Green Hills High School, in Mandaluyong City
- De La Salle-Santiago Zobel High School, in Muntinlipa City
In the United States:
- La Salle High School (Albany, New York) in Albany, New York
- La Salle High School (Pasadena, California)
- La Salle High School (Cincinnati, Ohio)
- La Salle High School (Miami, Florida)
- La Salle High School (Milwaukie, Oregon)
- La Salle High School (Niagara Falls, New York)
- La Salle High School (Louisiana), in Olla, Louisiana
- La Salle College High School, in Wyndmoor, Pennsylvania
- LaSalle-Peru High School, in LaSalle, Illinois
- La Salle High School (Union Gap, Washington)
- La Salle High School in Iowa, now Xavier High School (Cedar Rapids, Iowa), following a merger with Regis High School in 1998
Famous quotes containing the words salle, high and/or school:
“Green, green is El Aghir. It has a railway station,
And the wealth of its soil has borne many another fruit:
A mairie, a school and an elegant Salle de Fetes.
Such blessings, as I remarked, in effect, to the waiter,
Are added unto them that have plenty of water.”
—Norman Cameron (b. 1905)
“An epic of worry rather than of high tragedy.”
—E.M. (Edward Morgan)
“The scope of modern government in what it can and ought to accomplish for its people has been widened far beyond the principles laid down by the old laissez faire school of political rights, and the widening has met popular approval.”
—William Howard Taft (18571930)