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Heartland was located in the Church of the Nazarene on Elm Street for four years as it grew from its original enrollment of 147 students to about 180 students. [3] In July 2000, Heartland purchased the former Columbiana High School , and performed renovations on the school and gymnasium in 2001.
The addition of three Ohio schools (Bluffton College, the College of Mount St. Joseph, and Wilmington College) and the departure of two Indiana schools (DePauw and Rose-Hulman) during the 1998–99 season prompted a change in name to Heartland Collegiate Athletic Conference. Wabash and Wilmington later departed in the 1998–99 and 1999–2000 ...
The station was assigned call sign KBOG on July 9, 1999. On January 19, 2000, the station changed its call sign to the current KXBR. [4] It initially programmed a modern Christian rock format for the International Falls and Fort Frances area. featuring bands like Skillet, P.O.D., 12 Stones, Sent By Ravens, Red, and others.
1999 - The Heartland Conference was founded. Charter members included Drury College (now Drury University), the University of the Incarnate Word, Lincoln University of Missouri, Rockhurst College (now Rockhurst University), St. Edwards University, St. Mary's University and Texas Wesleyan University beginning the 1999-2000 academic year.
The Heartland Collegiate Conference (HCC) was an NCAA Division II athletic conference that operated from 1978 to 1990. It was formed in June 1978 as the successor to the Indiana Collegiate Conference (ICC), after the ICC made up for membership losses by adding institutions from Ohio and Kentucky.
In Summer 1998, because of its financial problems and policy disagreements within the BBFI education establishment, the school moved to Oklahoma City, and was renamed Heartland Baptist Bible College. [5] Heartland also withdrew from its affiliation with the BBFI. Heartland was granted an exception to Title IX in 2018, which allows it to legally ...
Heartland Christian Academy was founded in 1995 [1] by Charles Sharpe, a millionaire businessman who worked with Ozark National Life Insurance Co. [2] Sharpe said he had a calling from God to found Heartland Christian as a nondenominational Christian school for children with a troubled past who had been through broken homes, foster care, and the juvenile court system. [3]
This situation changed in 1990 when Heartland Community College was established, with its first "campus" located in the Landmark Mall in the city of Normal, and a second location opened in Bloomington's Towanda Plaza in 1992. [2] The college moved to its current campus in north Normal in 2000, [2] and closed the last building in the strip mall ...