Is that associated or affiliated with Post University in Connecticut?
I don't know about that one.
And I didn't know (until I just read it) that C.W. Post College was founded by the founder of the Post cereal company.
True. The campus was the residence of C. W. Post and we students were known as "Post Toasties." The enormous property was donated to Long Island University for a new campus.
The campus had a lot of interesting things related to its being a residence of the rich. There was a dollhouse for Marjorie Merriweather Post which was about 3/4 scale throughout, including even the specially-made sink fixtures and stove, etc. in the tiny kitchen. I remember feeling like some kind of giant in it. Since i was among the first students there, before they started locking things up, my GF and I could wander around through it. They also had a tower for some reason which we climbed up and made out at the top, and an underground pistol range. They also had an outdoor range with a railroad tie backstop, and I don't know why they had both. The outdoor one might have been for archery; I don't remember.
The main building had a great staircase worthy of the movies and the fencing club would have mock duels up and down the stairs --again before the administration started cracking down on that kind of fun stuff. I got into fencing a little bit, but it really wasn't my cup of tea.
With such a ritzy area (the "Gold Coast" or North Shore of Long Island), it might not be surprising that my English teacher was "Winnie" (Winthrop) Palmer of the Colgate-Palmolive-Peet business conglomerate. She lived on an estate not far from the campus in Oyster Bay. Her uniformed Chauffeur would drive her to the classes and wait around for her to be done with her class, then drive her home again.
"We" had one of the first business computers, an IBM 1620, on which I cut my teeth with Fortran. Funny story about that, but it will wait for another time.
Terry, 230RN
REF (Lest ye get the wrong Winthrop Palmer):
https://library.syracuse.edu/digital/guides/print/palmer_w_prt.htm