
Anna Maria College in Paxton put on notice by acceditation panel
Anna Maria, which has seen a drop in students in some areas in recent years, is readying for new leadership, with Sean Ryan, an administrator at Bellarmine University in Kentucky, due to replace Mary Lou Retelle in July.
The school recently underwent a review of its finances by the New England Commission of Higher Education, an accreditation source. On March 6, the commission determined that Anna Maria is in danger of not meeting its Standard on Institutional Resources.
In a joint statement by the commission and Anna Maria, the commission questioned whether changes made by the school "will be sufficient for the institution to return to financial stability and compliance with its debt service covenant."
The meeting ended with an agreement that the commission would monitor the school's standing through spring 2026.
"We will continue to work in partnership with NECHE concerning the Institutional Resources standard," Retelle, the outgoing Anna Maria president, said in a statement. "The strong work that has been conducted to address variables accentuated by the pandemic is ongoing. We continue to provide our students with a high-quality, service-focused education that advances the mission that has guided this institution for 79 years."
Anna Maria in 2022 announced it was discontinuing three of its music majors. At the time, the college said efforts to boost the number of students had fallen short.
In July 2024, Retelle, who became the head of Anna Maria in 2015, said that the current school year would be her last. She is retiring, she said.
On March 6, the same day as the meeting of the New England Commission of Higher Education, the school announced that Ryan would be the new president. He is a senior vice president at Bellarmine, a school of about 3,000 students in Louisville. Earlier in his career, he was chief enrollment officer at Daniel Webster College in New Hampshire.
The New England Commission of Higher Education accredits more than 200 schools that award degrees. Anna Maria's accreditation dates to 1955, not long after Sisters of Saint Anne, a Marlborough-based order, took over the 290-acre Paxton estate known as Mooracres.
More: Graphics explain: How has college enrollment changed in the past decade?
This article originally appeared on Telegram & Gazette: Anna Maria College put on notice by acceditation panel
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Business Insider
an hour ago
- Business Insider
Lyft is getting into the robotaxi game with a big Chinese company
Baidu and Lyft are joining forces to deploy Apollo Go robotaxis in European cities. Lyft is planning for thousands of robotaxis in Europe, starting in the UK and Germany by 2026. This comes as the robotaxi race is heating up globally. Lyft is teaming up with Chinese tech giant Baidu to bring its robotaxis to European streets. The San Francisco-based ride-hailing company will deploy Baidu's sixth-generation Apollo Go self-driving robotaxis in Europe starting next year, it said in a Monday press release. According to the release, Lyft will bring thousands of vehicles from Baidu across Europe in the following years. It said it would start with the United Kingdom and Germany in 2026, following regulatory approvals. "By integrating Baidu's cutting-edge autonomous driving technology with Lyft's platform reach and operational expertise, we're excited to deliver safer, greener, and more efficient mobility solutions to more users," Robin Li, Baidu's CEO and cofounder, said in the release. Lyft CEO David Risher added in the release that the partnership will bring the benefits of autonomous vehicles, such as safety, reliability, and privacy, to "millions of Europeans." Baidu, a Chinese internet search engine giant, launched its Apollo Go electric autonomous vehicles in 2020. According to its website, Apollo Go provides autonomous ride-hailing services in 11 Chinese cities. And earlier this year, Apollo Go announced it would expand its robotaxis to Dubai and Abu Dhabi in 2026. According to a July 2024 report by the Chinese state-affiliated news outlet Global Times, a 10-kilometre Apollo Go ride in Wuhan city costs between 4 and 16 Chinese yuan, or $0.60 to $2.20. On July 31, Lyft announced its acquisition of Freenow, a ride-hailing service operating in nine European countries, in a move to expand into the European market. robotaxi dominance. On July 31, Musk wrote on X that riders could hail a Tesla in the San Francisco Bay Area and Austin. However, a July report from HSBC analysts found that it could take years for driverless taxis to become profitable, and the market was "widely overestimated."


Business Upturn
2 hours ago
- Business Upturn
Azad Engineering shares surge nearly 6% as Q1 net profit jumps 74% YoY
By Aditya Bhagchandani Published on August 5, 2025, 09:23 IST Shares of Azad Engineering rose sharply by 5.96% to ₹1,589.60 in Monday's early trade following the announcement of robust Q1 FY26 financial results. The stock opened strong and hit an intraday high of ₹1,611.50, up from the previous close of ₹1,500.20, pushing its market capitalization to ₹10,190 crore. The Hyderabad-based precision engineering firm reported a 73.7% year-on-year increase in net profit to ₹29.7 crore, driven by strong revenue growth and operating efficiency. Total revenue rose 39.2% YoY to ₹137 crore. EBITDA also surged 50% to ₹49.2 crore, with the company's operating margin expanding to 35.9% from 33.2% a year earlier. Azad Engineering attributed the margin improvement to a favorable product mix and a reduction in consumption costs, which fell to 12.1% of sales from 15.6% in Q1 FY25. However, employee costs and depreciation rose due to facility expansion and salary hikes. Finance costs increased due to higher borrowings and forex losses. The stock has traded in a 52-week range of ₹1,159.45 to ₹1,929.80. Disclaimer: The information provided is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial or investment advice. Stock market investments are subject to market risks. Always conduct your own research or consult a financial advisor before making investment decisions. Author or Business Upturn is not liable for any losses arising from the use of this information. Ahmedabad Plane Crash Aditya Bhagchandani serves as the Senior Editor and Writer at Business Upturn, where he leads coverage across the Business, Finance, Corporate, and Stock Market segments. With a keen eye for detail and a commitment to journalistic integrity, he not only contributes insightful articles but also oversees editorial direction for the reporting team.

Business Insider
4 hours ago
- Business Insider
Palantir exec calls LLMs a 'jagged intelligence' and outlines the company's next steps in the AI race
A Palantir exec had some strong words for Large Language Models. The Denver-based AI software company reported its first-ever billion-dollar quarter in Monday's Q2 earnings report, and the executives opened the investors call with comments on LLMs and how it plans to win the AI race. " LLMs, on their own, are at best a jagged intelligence divorced from even basic understanding," Ryan Taylor, the company's chief revenue officer and chief legal officer, told shareholders on the earnings call. "In one moment, they may appear to outperform humans in some problem-solving task, but in the next, they make catastrophic errors no human would ever make." "By contrast, our ontology is pure understanding concretized in software. This is reality, not rhetoric," Taylor added, referring to a company approach to AI that is based on using logic and data to recreate a digital model of how an organization works. These comments came after the company smashed analyst expectations and nearly doubled its commercial revenue in the US since last year's second quarter to $628 million, mostly thanks to a 10-year, $10 billion consolidated contract with the US Army. Company executives also outlined how it plans to win the AI race and what kind of talent would thrive at Palantir. Shyam Sankar, chief technology officer, told investors that the Trump administration's new AI Action Plan, which promotes the deregulation of AI, has taken "all the brakes off" and that industry customers are "really excited to get to work." These comments are in response to a Bank of America analyst, who asked how Palantir plans to win the AI race both in innovation and in talent retention. "If you are a highly talented person and would believe that the West is superior or at least tolerant of me telling you it every day, you'll not find a place anywhere I've seen — and now over 20 years I've interacted with almost every agency in the West, many of the largest companies, many of the smaller companies — that is comparable on time of joining to full agency like Palantir," Karp said toward the end of the call. "If you come to Palantir, your career is set," he added.