St.Andrews/Now Limestone

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Go to their History Department webpage: History

They list no faculty except the chair.

I visit a great many college and university websites -- first and foremost because the search for birthdays for the Biorhythms has long required that I do that -- so I'm much more familiar with such things as most folks are. When a school does not list faculty AT ALL they are bottomed out academically.

BTW, before the BOG/NCGA attacked UNCG and UNCA they dispatched with ECSU in this manner.
 
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Go to their History Department webpage: History

They list no faculty except the chair.

I visit a great many college and university websites -- first and foremost because the search for birthdays for the Biorhythms has long required that I do that -- so I'm much more familiar with such things as most folks are. When a school does not list faculty AT ALL they are bottomed out academically.

BTW, before the BOG/NCGA attacked UNCG and UNCA they dispatched with ECSU in this manner.
Yikes
 
I think if they could go beyond the here's how you steer a drone to something a little more advanced like here's how you can use a drone or a fleet of drones to accomplish certain tasks automatically, it could be a pretty cool degree that would have some long-term implications but I'm guessing that sort of program doesn't come out of Elizabeth state.
If the program had a couple of courses on how to use drones to replace fireworks displays, then I think I would sign-up.
 
But thinking harder about it, many universities have many of their buildings paid for with donations and I would guess that is rarer at community colleges. They have to pay rent or a building note. But that new building is going to have significantly lower maintenance and utility costs than an 80 year old building at UNC. So I don't really know who would have an advantage.
Central Piedmont has a bunch of buildings with peoples' names on them. Four of their campuses in Newell (Cato,) Pineville (Harper,) Matthews (Levine,) and Airport area (Harris) are named for big donors. CPCC has been very good at raising money from rich folks in Charlotte.
 
My former SIL went to St. Andrews for a while (1970s)
She went to a lot colleges for a while She was a "smart" girl-lots of MH issues , and her well educated Father just kept trying to get her educated . Sad on many levels
 
I guess that's about it. They were in a tough spot for decades in a less desirable area as the college-age population declined and the market for a liberal arts degree declined.

I did read a story about the history of the place. Apparently the idea was to merge three single sex Presbyterian colleges into this brand new modern campus in the 1960s. Use the resources from those colleges to put St Andrews in a sustainable position but at the last minute Peace college in Raleigh backed out and since then, St Andrews has always been undercapitalized.
 
My sister, wife, and two of my wife's first cousins all went to St. Andrews. While they extolled its virtues, none of them were shocked or surprised at its passing. Gi Bill educational benefits, Baby Boomers, and the Vietnam War distorted post high school education in the US for almost 50 years. If I had it to do over again, then my first two years of college would have been at a community college, hopefully followed by the next two years at four year college.

I will be forever grateful for the four years of emotional maturity I got while in the Army. My parents did not hide their predictions of gloom and tragedy my decision foretold. But fortunately, as I was the seventh of seven children, I had plenty of examples of how college could go wrong. And as a bonus, every college course I took in the Army in Germany, except for that two month long--weekends only--course in wine tasting transferred.
 
I suspect that more and more smaller colleges are going to fold in future years as the eligible pool of students shrinks, the number of donors for small colleges shrinks, and they exhaust their relatively small reserves of money. I don't see how a lot of these smaller colleges complete already against much larger schools that have better facilities, more to do, more educational classes and options, and are simply more prestigious. And I like small colleges (especially liberal arts ones), but they're already in a difficult environment and as it gradually gets worse I don't think a number of them are going to make it. If we have a severe recession or depression many of them would likely go bankrupt quite quickly. I know in central NC that Guilford College, Bennett College, and Salem College have all had major financial and/or enrollment problems in just the last few years.
 
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