Islip Public Schools
Islip Union Free School District, also known as Islip Public Schools, is a school district in Long Island, New York. Its headquarters are in the Administration Building in the hamlet of Islip in the Town of Islip.[1]
The school district's mascot is the Buccaneer.
The school district includes some territory within the adjacent areas of Bay Shore and Central Islip.[2]
In 1986 voters rejected a proposal to spend $247,321 ($577000 in today's terms) to fund after school activities and sports programs on a 704 to 586 basis.[3]
Schools
- Islip High School
- Islip Middle School
Elementary schools:
- Commack Road Elementary School
- Maud S. Sherwood Elementary School
- Wing Elementary School
gollark: You could get a raspberry pi and one of their cameras? It wouldn't be very good but ought to *work*.
gollark: Also, on the topic of terrible device security, an old router I had had a similar security problem. There was a telnet management interface thing which I noticed had a `ps` command, and it seemed that some lazy/stupid programmer had just made it pass the arguments straight to `system` or something, because you could do `ps ; sh` and... get a root shell...
gollark: IIRC there were cheaper variants but the Raspberry Pi Foundation have some sort of DRM scheme in place for the newer modules.
gollark: `Hi @blitz , according to datasheet, it will be able to take maximum 3288 x 2512px @ 30fps`
gollark: I think someone answered that up a bit...
References
- "Central Administration." Islip Public Schools. Retrieved on April 5, 2013. "Administration Building 215 Main Street Islip, NY 11751"
- "Islip School District map" (PDF). "Map of hamlets, according to Town of Islip".
- "Islip School Vote: No." Newsday. August 13, 1986. News p. 18. Retrieved on April 6, 2013. "Islip school district residents yesterday turned down, 704 to 586, a proposal to spend $247321 to fund sports programs and after-school activities in the district, school officials said last night."
Further reading
- Gray, Katti. "Islip School Budget Going Before Voters." Newsday. September 26, 1989. News p. 31.
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