Perryville High School (Maryland)

Perryville High School[2] is a public secondary school in Perryville, Maryland, United States. The school is operated by Cecil County Public Schools.[3] Enrollment for 2015 is reported as 810 students.[4]

Perryville High School
The front entrance of the building.
Address
1696 Perryville Road

,
21903

United States
Coordinates39.58223°N 76.06319°W / 39.58223; -76.06319
Information
TypePublic Secondary
MottoThe Panther Way
Established1978
School districtCecil County Public Schools
PrincipalTheodore Boyer
Grades9–12
Number of students802 (2016-17)[1]
CampusRural
Color(s)Blue and Gold
MascotPanther
Newspaper"Panther Patrol"
YearbookThe Pack
Websitehttps://www.ccps.org/pvhs

Clubs

Academic Team, Art Club, Chess, Concert Band, Concert Choir, Creative Writing Club, Drama, Fishing, FBLA, FCA, FEA, French Honor Society, Gay Straight Alliance, Marching Band, Men's Choir, National Honor Society, PYD, Spanish Honor Society, Student Council, Student Round Table, International Thespian Society, Women's Choir

Sports

  • Boys: Baseball, Basketball, Cross Country, Football, Golf, Lacrosse, Soccer, Tennis, Track and Field, Wrestling
  • Girls: Cheerleading, Dance, Basketball, Cross Country, Field Hockey, Golf, Lacrosse, Soccer, Softball, Tennis, Track and Field, Volleyball

In 2016, the Perryville Panthers completed an undefeated season in softball to win the state championship. June 7 was made the Perryville High School softball team day in honor of this accomplishment.

Perryville High School's marching band has 10 straight Maryland state 1A Championship titles[5] and many other awards.[6]

gollark: That is not what I'm talking about and I'm not aware of that happening.
gollark: That's currently all I have to say about Android opensourceness. I might come up with more later.
gollark: Banking apps use this for """security""", mostly, as well as a bunch of other ones because they can.
gollark: Google has a thing called "SafetyNet" which allows apps to refuse to run on unlocked devices. You might think "well, surely you could just patch apps to not check, or make a fake SafetyNet always say yes". And this does work in some cases, but SafetyNet also uploads lots of data about your device to Google servers and has *them* run some proprietary ineffable checks on it and give a cryptographically signed attestation saying "yes, this is an Approved™ device" or "no, it is not", which the app's backend can check regardless of what your device does.
gollark: The situation is also slightly worse than *that*. Now, there is an open source Play Services reimplementation called microG. You can install this if you're running a custom system image, and it pretends to be (via signature spoofing, a feature which the LineageOS team refuse to add because of entirely false "security" concerns, but which is widely available in some custom ROMs anyway) Google Play Services. Cool and good™, yes? But no, not really. Because if your bootloader is unlocked, a bunch of apps won't work for *other* stupid reasons!

References


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