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Belk Tower to Be Torn Down and Rebuilt

Belk Tower to be torn down The most visible and recognizable structure on the St. Andrews campus is the Katherine MacKay Belk Bell Tower that is next to the causewalk, half way between the residential and academic sides of Lake Ansley C. Moore.  Last September during Hurricane Florence, the tower was severely damaged and now poses a significant safety risk. Based upon strong recommendations from the architects, engineers and safety inspectors, the tower poses such a significant safety risk that it must be torn down as soon as possible and then reconstructed using a

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Dr. Mary Louise Bringle returns to deliver NetVue Lecture

Dr. Mary Louise Bringle, who taught Religious Studies and chaired the Humanities and Fine Arts Division at St. Andrews from 1983-2000, is returning to present a lecture as part of the national program NetVUE (Network for Vocation in Undergraduate Education).   Her speech will be in Avinger Auditorium on Monday, August 12, 11 a.m. and is titled “Sustainable Strengths: A Liberating Education for the 21st Century.”  Dr. Bringle is Professor of Philosophy and Religious Studies and coordinator of the Integrated Studies major at Brevard College.  Her Ph.D. in Theological Studies is from Emory

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SAU Summer Countdown

Countdown #10 Countdown #9 Countdown #8 Countdown #7 Countdown #6 Countdown #5 Countdown #4 Countdown #3 Countdown #2 Countdown #1

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Fifty-five years of teaching Physics is quantum achievement for Dr. Allen Dotson

Perhaps it was inevitable or some predictable physics formula that would dictate what Allen Dotson would do or become.  Born in Badin, NC, his father was a chemist;  his brother was a mathematician. And so he became an amalgamation of sorts—a physicist—having once considered biology and even the lure of astronomy (which he continues to dabble in). But eventually the enticement of quantum mechanics inspired him to look at physics and the rest of that narrative led him to a B.S. at Wake Forest (1960) and a Ph.D. at UNC

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St. Andrews Alum and Her White House Letter

For a few days in late May, a St. Andrews University alumna was creating a stir nationally with her grammatical critique of a White House letter.  Yvonne Mason, class of 1978, and similar to what she had done for 17 years as a high school English teacher, took purple pen to paper, circled mistakes, wrote notes, highlighted redundancies and generally “graded” the letter for its syntax and rhetorical style. And then, she mailed it back to the White House.  It went viral, and Ms. Mason began to be interviewed by

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Athletic Trainer Kaitlin Speaks at Mid-Atlantic Association Athletic Training Association Meeting

When Kaitlin Griego came to St. Andrews University five years to begin working as an athletic trainer, she knew amid all of her training how to tape and assess injury, but it was another evolving task that recently gained attention at a symposium for athletic trainers:  working with international student-athletes, specifically the SAU men’s soccer team. In other words, as she says, “I had to learn so much more than I knew about patience, about describing body parts such as there are no words for toes in some Spanish speaking

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Black Mountain Scholars continue the traditions

As meticulously noted in “The Mythic School of the Mountain: Black Mountain College” (Our State magazine, Joseph Bathanti, NC poet laureate, April ’14), a small and rural college became known as perhaps the boldest and most progressive educational experience in American history.  “The purpose of the college is to lead on to creative consciousness a carefully selected group of young men and women who are eager to know, to will and to do.” And it was revolutionary:  no directors or trustees;  not accredited;  hand-made diplomas (for those who actually graduated, perhaps

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St. Andrews University 122nd Commencement Ceremony

St. Andrews University, a branch of Webber International University, celebrated its 122nd Commencement ceremony on Saturday, May 11, on the DeTamble Library Terrace, as 116 graduates were joined by their families and friends. Piper and instructor William Caudill ’89 and the St. Andrews Pipe Band led the Class of 2019 and faculty across the cause walk to the platform set next to Lake Ansley Moore. This year’s class came from 17 countries and 17 states.  Degrees included Bachelor of Arts, Bachelor of Fine Arts, Bachelor of Science and Master in Business.

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Baccalaureate and Commencement Speakers

St. Andrews University 2019 Baccalaureate and Commencement Speakers Baccalaureate, Friday, May 10, Avinger Auditorium Commencement, Saturday, May 11, DeTamble Library Terrace   Rev. Dr. John Cleghorn is pastor of Caldwell Presbyterian Church in Charlotte, N.C. Caldwell is an urban, diverse and missional faith community of about 325 that intersects a wide range of people in worship, formation and service in the community. John is married to Kelly and they have two daughters, one a teacher in the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Schools and the other a student at Wellesley College in Massachusetts. Prior to

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Rina Susuki’s painting selected for Circle Foundation publication

St. Andrews University senior Rina Suzuki (Japan) and her painting titled “Closure” was recently selected for publication in the Circle Foundation for the Arts, based in Lyon, France.  The foundation is an international organization currently representing over 300 artists in their online gallery. According to their website, Circle Foundation is “a platform for the active artist, orchestrating the development of a variety of visual arts projects.”  Their goal is to provide a stage for the remarkable visual artist who can use this platform to publish, exhibit, win grants and awards,

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Spring classes begin January 7th!