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It added a contemporary music program in Nashville and a film studies program in Los Angeles, as well as international study abroad programs in Australia, Latin America, the Middle East, Northern Ireland, Oxford, England, and Uganda. Over 14,500 students and growing have benefitted from these academically rigorous, Christ-centered, experiential ...
CUNY Senior Colleges and Graduate Schools. Baruch College, Gramercy Park; Brooklyn College; City College, Harlem; College of Staten Island; CUNY Graduate Center, Fifth Avenue at 34th Street
Gibbs College, New York City/Melville (1911–2009) Globe Institute of Technology , Manhattan (1985–2016) Long Island Business Institute, Flushing (2001–2024) [ 10 ] [ 11 ]
Mannes College of Music; Marist College; New York University, Steinhardt School; New York University, Clive Davis Institute of Recorded Music; Roberts Wesleyan University; Syracuse University Setnor School of Music; The New School for Jazz and Contemporary Music; City College of New York; Purchase Conservatory of Music; Hunter College; Stony ...
Church of Christ college Town Abilene Christian University: Abilene, Texas: Amridge University (formerly Southern Christian University) Montgomery, Alabama: Bear Valley Bible Institute of Denver: Denver, Colorado: Crowley's Ridge College: Paragould, Arkansas: Faulkner University: Montgomery, Alabama: Florida College* Temple Terrace, Florida ...
Concordia College: Bronxville, New York: 1881–2021 LCMS Concordia Senior College: Fort Wayne, Indiana: 1957–1977 LCMS Prepared men for study in the LCMS seminaries
The King's College (TKC or simply King's) is a private non-denominational Christian liberal arts college in New York City. The King's College was founded in 1938 in Belmar, New Jersey, by Percy Crawford. The college re-located to the State of Delaware in 1941 and then to Briarcliff Manor, New York in 1955. Following its loss of accreditation in ...
In 1968, [16] the New York College of Music, which was an American conservatory of music originally founded in 1878 and located in Manhattan, [17] closed and merged with NYU, leading to the music department of the School of Education to serve both in its original capacity and as the spiritual continuation of the New York College of Music. [18]