228:, took an interest in helping St. Teresa College pull through its crisis. Joint programs were established to help expand Saint Teresa's offerings but it was too little too late. At the very end, when closing the college seemed inevitable, DeThomasis proposed a full merger of the two colleges but was vetoed by his Board of Trustees. It was generally assumed that the trustees concluded that the serious financial problems of St. Teresa College were too great a burden, or at least too risky, for St. Mary's College to handle.
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And in a sense the college found itself in a vortex from which it could not escape. As enrollment fell cutbacks in spending were made which, in turn, made it more difficult to attract and retain students. A major layoff of faculty and cutbacks in programs in 1980 led to a large number of student
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In the 1980s a plan was developed to convert one the school's three large dormitories to a residence for older women who could have access to the college's programs in hopes of reviving St. Teresa
College's financial prospects. A model unit was built and prospective residents found but the school
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The closing of St. Teresa
College came during an era that saw a general decline in women's colleges and the closing of, or switch to coeducation at, many smaller Catholic women's colleges. By the 1970s the college felt the effects of the shifted dedication of smaller religious communities, such as
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Molloy was unique as the lay dean of a
Catholic college, but in 1923 she became a Franciscan Sister, then known as Sister Mary Aloysius Molloy, O.S.F., and in 1928 became the college president. As an educator, Molloy worked hard to improve the quality of women's education, wrestled with the unique
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transfers and a corresponding drop in revenues. This, of course, worsened the financial situation and invited further cuts in spending. St. Teresa
College might have survived with a reduced enrollment but as enrollment fell it was never able to stabilize at a consistent level.
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problems of
Catholic colleges, and carefully oversaw the development of her own school. By 1946, when she retired, the college was a firmly established institution producing outstanding graduate women. Molloy was one of the last among the founders of Minnesota women's colleges.
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221:. Ultimately Saint Teresa broke off the discussions. While this proved in the end to be short-sighted, at the time St. Teresa College had a larger enrollment, higher admissions standards and a superior physical plant.
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244:. The St. Teresa campus is owned and operated by two educational institutions; it is the location of Winona State University's West Campus and it of Cotter High School, a private Catholic high school.
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Recruiting was to some degree hurt by the school's insistence on maintaining a strict code of student conduct years after such things had been abandoned at other colleges. Such rules as nightly
97:. That same year, she began her career as a Catholic college educator in Winona, Minnesota, when she accepted a job with the Franciscan Sisters who, under the leadership of Sister Leo Tracy,
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went from male to coed in 1969 there were discussions between the two colleges about merger. The potential of such an arrangement is illustrated by the present relationship between the
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Since its closing, the college has been best known for its scholarship programs available to women attending other
Catholic colleges and universities, as well as its connection to the
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and bed checks for first-semester freshmen and a total, campus-wide ban on alcohol were not eased until the early 1980s, and then only slightly.
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The two schools then went their separate ways until the mid-1980s when a new president at St. Mary's
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immigrant parents in
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and graduated, in 1903, with more honors than anyone else up to that time. She went on to earn a
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The college was also hurt to some extent by over-reliance upon its signature
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305:'75 - Professor Nurse-Midwifery; Fulbright U.S. Scholar South Africa 2012-13
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program. Junior and senior nursing majors lived and studied in
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Defunct
Catholic universities and colleges in the United States
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was unable to find a bank willing to lend the necessary funds.
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330:(1901–2000), mathematics educator and historian of mathematics
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Karen Kennelly, "Mary Molloy: Women's College Founder," in
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the Sister of Saint Francis, to broader social service.
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Chapel and convent buildings on the old college campus.
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444:Alumnae Association of the College of Saint Teresa
299:, radio host, popular for decades in New York City
413:Women of Minnesota: Selected Biographical Essays,
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454:Sisters of Saint Francis of Rochester, Minnesota
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504:Catholic universities and colleges in Minnesota
489:Educational institutions disestablished in 1989
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238:Saint Teresa Leadership and Service Institute
484:Educational institutions established in 1907
163:Learn how and when to remove this message
73:(1880-1954) grew up as the only child of
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379:"Mary Aloysius Molloy"
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383:Women's History Month
328:Mary Leontius Schulte
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