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Villanova UniversityVillanova University is a Roman Catholic university in Villanova, Penn., a suburb northwest of Philadelphia. The campus is adjacent to Lancaster Avenue (U.S. Route 30) and Spring Mill Road (Pennsylvania Route 320). In 2004, Villanova was again chosen as the top university in the North region by U.S. News & World Report magazine. Villanova has topped the rankings in this category for 15 consecutive years. Villanova University was founded in 1842 as Villanova College by Augustinian monks Father Thomas Kyle and Father Patrick Moriarty. Villanova became an accredited university in 1953. Bachelors, Masters, and Doctoral programs are offered through the College of Liberal Arts and Science, the College of Commerce and Finance, the College of Engineering, and the College of Nursing. Law degrees are offered through the adjacent Villanova School of Law. Villanova University is also home to an NROTC unit which has commissioned more U.S. Navy admirals and Marine Corps generals than any institution besides the U.S. Naval Academy. The list includes former Commandant of the Marine Corps Gen. Paul X. Kelley, Gen. Anthony Zinni, Adm. Walter Doran, Adm. William J. Fallon, Rear Adm. Joseph Hare, and Brig Gen. Joseph J. McMenamin. In 2004, the commander of both U.S. Naval Forces Atlantic and U.S. Naval Forces Pacific were Villanova NROTC, meaning Villanova grads controlled virtually the entire U.S. fleet. Villanova maintains an active volunteering community, with several charitable organizations and a leading service trip schedule. The university is also a perennial home to the largest student-run volunteer Special Olympics in the country. Villanova has also produced such distinguished alumni as Charles M. Heimbold, American ambassador to Sweden and former chairman of Bristol-Meyers Squibb; Lawrence M. Waterhouse, founder of Waterhouse Securities; Herbert Ramrath, former chairman of GE Plastics; James Kim, chairman of Amkor Technologies; Francis Saul, president of Chevy Chase Bank; and James Curvey, former chairman of Fidelity; Villanova Law grad Ed Rendell, current Pennsylvania governor and general chair of the Democratic National Committee in 2000; and numerous other notable and successful graduates. Athletics The school's mascot is the Wildcat. Sports teams participate in the NCAA's Division I and in the Big East Conference, except for football, which plays as part of Division I-AA's Atlantic Ten Conference. It won its one and only men's basketball national championship in 1985 against defending champs and heavily favored Georgetown in what is considered one of the most exciting college basketball games in NCAA history. The Wildcats are also part of the Philadelphia Big 5, the traditional Philadelphia-area basketball rivalry. In the 2005 tournament, Villanova reached the Sweet 16 where they lost to #1 seed North Carolina by 1 point, under Coach Jay Wright. If the upset could have been completed, it would have been compared to their 1985 Championship Game win against Georgetown. Campus landmarks - Mendel Hall. Named for pioneering geneticist and Augustinian monk Gregor Mendel, this 1960 science center holds computer science labs and other science facilities. In 1998, the college commissioned a 7-foot bronze sculpture of Mendel by Philadelphia sculptor James Peniston, and installed it outside the hall's entrance.
- The Oreo. This large black-and-white sculpture by Jay Dugan, more formally known as "The Awakening," sits front and center along one of the most-travelled routes on campus. The nickname is appropriate given the sculpture's cookie-like appearance. A popular student meeting place, The Oreo is a frequent home to club events, alumni photographs, and warm-weather people-watching.
External links - http://www.villanova.edu/ Official university site
- http://www.law.villanova.edu/ Law School site
- http://www.villanova.com/ Official athletics site
- http://nrotc.villanova.edu/ Official NROTC site
- http://www3.villanova.edu/whiskeycompany Official Drill Team site
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