Updated 04-May-2020.
Mondo shtuff from around the internet, all about WESTCHESTER COMMUNITY COLLEGE!
My botty best at summarizing from Wikipedia: westchester Community College (WCC) is a public community college in Valhalla . it is sponsored by westchester county and the state university of new york (SUNY) the five institutes were operated and financially supported by the some members of the westchester county board of supervisors objected to taking on the management of the New York Institute of Applied Arts and Sciences . community organizations voiced support and pledged scholarships . a deal was reached so the college began operating with a budget of $400,893 . original enrollment at the school was 550 men and women . westchester county billed home counties of non-Westchester students an additional $125. the salary range for faculty was $3,900-7,000, “somewhat higher than most public schools” in 1953 . no tenure was granted at the time, but required 12 months of work . the trustees of SUNY approved spending $25,000 to plan for a permanent site . sixteen properties had been examined, including lands located in parks, private estates, closed schools . by late in that year, sixteen properties the site committee chose to locate the college on the estate of Henry J. Gaisman . a northern westchester site was chosen instead of the gaisman estate . the state and county were sharing a capital commitment of $5 county board of supervisors voted to acquire 136 acre property by means of condemnation . 85% of college’s students lived in southern westchester and new york city . county turned attention to the 364-acre Val the county board voted 37 to 3 to purchase the Hartford site . some county officials objected to the large site being used exclusively for the college . Yale agreed to vacate its operations completely by august 31, 1958. county executive Hopkins vowed to expand the college into a 4-year school awarding bachelor’s degrees . he continued to serve as president of WCC for more than 40 years, the longest serving community college president in the united the land later belonged to the founder of Kensico Cemetery, Reiss Carpentar . he died in 1910, after being the victim of a swindle . the land was then acquired by Joseph Da daly used the property largely for breeding horses, and he later sold it to John Hartford. a master plan for the college was completed in 1961, with plans for the buildings on campus. the plan included 8 buildings, and they the updated building doubled the size of the building to over 100,000 square feet . the building’s architect, Aaron B. Schwarz, incorporated as much natural lighting as possible into the new design . Schwarz received a Design Award in the Gateway Center was designed by Ennead Architects and structurally engineered by Leslie E. Robertson Associates . the building has won two awards; National Winner, AISC Ideas2 Award (2011), and Excellence in Located in the entryway of the Center for the Arts, the gallery hosts professional local, regional, and national artists . exhibitions at the gallery are frequently accompanied by talks, lectures, and presentations from the featured artists, and draw the college offers a range of non-credit courses for students of all ages to sharpen their skills and broaden their interests . the college’s admissions office has a staff of counselors who work with students on their noteworthy clubs/organizations include: The Viking Newspaper, Alpha Beta Gamma, Drama Club, Dance Club, EMS Club, Urban Poets Society, Black Student Union, The Italian Club, The Brazilian Club, WARY