Self-Guided Walking Tour

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Self -Guided Walking Tour A visitor’s guide to the historic campus of the first Benedictine college in the United States

Saint Vincent Archabbey, College and Seminary



W E L C O M E

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his walking tour is designed to tell you the story of the founding and development of Saint Vincent College by sharing our rich history and heritage and by enhancing your knowledge of current day programs and activities. The numbered locations in the text correspond to the numbers located on the route map. Walking at a leisurely pace, the tour takes about one hour . . . but feel free to skip areas or to stay as long as you like!

Except for the Monastery and the student residence halls, which are private, you are welcome to enter any of the other buildings but we ask that you not disturb or distract classes, church services or other activities which may be under way. During times of special events or activities, some areas of campus may be restricted so please note signs and the direction of security personnel. If you have questions along the way, just ask anyone you meet – students, faculty, staff or monks – since the Saint Vincent community is always ready to assist visitors and is proud of its tradition of providing hospitality in the Benedictine tradition. If you have questions after you leave, please call us at 724-805-2010 or email info@stvincent.edu. Enjoy the tour! 1


INTRODUC TION

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ooking at Saint Vincent College today, it is easy to see the new – the smart classrooms, the state-of-the-art laboratories, the ubiquitous computers linked wirelessly to each other and to a fast-paced world. Look more closely, however, and you’ll also see evidence of times and technologies long past, clues that speak eloquently of the hard work and enduring devotion that raised a College, a Seminary, an Archabbey and a Parish on this spot. Look for irregular exposed bricks on some of the interior walls of the older campus buildings. Many were made by hand in the College’s early days by Benedictine monks who looked at empty fields and saw halls of learning. On surrounding farmlands, laboring brothers tended crops and herds, providing sustenance for the self-sufficient campus community. Other industries – a brewery, dairy farm, coal mine, print shop, carpenter shop and others – have come and gone, each in its era contributing to what Saint Vincent College has become. In 1846, Boniface Wimmer, a Benedictine monk from Bavaria, founded Saint Vincent as the first Benedictine institution in the United States. He came with a group of monks to provide education to the Germans who had emigrated to the United States and to live a monastic life according to the Benedictine Rule. Much of what you see today was built or rebuilt since the campus expansion of the 1960s and the campus is now a gateway to global opportunities and experiences unimaginable to the earlier generations that called this campus home. Yet the connection between the old and new is as real and as tangible as the bricks and mortar – ever-present reminders to all of us that the wonders of tomorrow will unfold from what we do at this Benedictine place today.

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1. Fred M. Rogers Center It was a beautiful day in this neighborhood when the Fred M. Rogers Center, a $14 million “green” building on the campus of Saint Vincent College, officially opened in the fall of 2008. The Center is named in honor of the late Fred Rogers, a native of Latrobe, who was the internationally popular host of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood on PBS and a lifelong friend of Saint Vincent College. The Center is a two-story, 36,500-square-foot, ultramodern building which houses the Fred Rogers Center for Early Learning and Children’s Media, the Fred Rogers Archive, the Foster and Muriel McCarl Coverlet Gallery, the Fred M. Rogers Conference Center, an Interactive Exhibit about Fred Rogers’ life and work, and WIM – the Upsidedown Mural by Roman Verostko. The Fred Rogers Center for Early Learning and Children’s Media was established by Saint Vincent College in September 2003 to serve as a national and international resource for addressing emerging issues affecting children and families. Staying true to the vision of Fred Rogers, and emulating the guiding principles of his life’s work, the Center’s mission is to help children grow as confident, competent and caring human beings.

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2. Welcome Center, Alfred Hall and Aurelius Hall Our first stop on campus is the College Welcome Center, a structure completed in the fall of 2004 that provides an impressive glass-walled entrance to the Alfred Hall administration building on the left and the Aurelius Hall McKenna School of Business, Economics and Government on the right. The Welcome Center also provides a comfortable and inviting reception area and interview rooms for the Office of Admission which assists new students or transfer students in the application and enrollment process. Alfred Hall, built in 1907, houses many of the college administrative offices including those of the president, human resources, institutional advancement, alumni, marketing and communications, student affairs, registrar, treasurer, financial aid, information technology, facility management, as well as some classrooms and faculty offices for criminology, law and society, modern and classical languages, and theology. Alfred Hall is named for Archabbot Alfred Koch, O.S.B., the fifth archabbot of Saint Vincent Archabbey, who died in 1951 at the age of 72.

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Aurelius Hall, built in 1922, underwent a $3.2 million renovation in 2004 to house the Alex G. McKenna School of Business, Economics and Government. Distinctively designed by acclaimed ecclesiastical architect Carlton Strong, it was originally built as a residence for seminary students preparing for the priesthood. Later, it became the freshman residence hall. The building is named for Archabbot Aurelius Stehle, O.S.B., the fourth archabbot of Saint Vincent Archabbey, who died in 1930 at the age of 52. The Westmoreland County Chapter 555 of the Service Corps of Retired Executives (SCORE) is located on the ground floor, and the offices of the Small Business Development Center and the Center for Global Competitiveness are located on the first floor. The offices and meeting rooms for the McKenna School are located on the second and third floors. Students reside in spacious three-room suites on the fourth, fifth and sixth floors. They like to tell “ghost stories” that have been passed from one generation to the next about the spirits that reportedly visit the hall. 3. Robert S. Carey Student Center The central part of the Robert S. Carey Student Center, formerly known as Kennedy Hall, was completed in 1954. This building was originally named Sportsman’s Hall in honor of the former log cabin that was located nearby – the first building Boniface Wimmer found at Saint Vincent when he arrived in 1846 to accept responsibility for a parish – already named Saint Vincent – that had been established on the site in 1789. It was later renamed in honor of the late U.S. President John Fitzgerald Kennedy, who received an honorary Doctor of Letters Degree and was the main speaker at the College Honors Convocation on February 4, 1958, when he was the junior senator from Massachusetts.

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The Frank and Elizabeth Resnik Swimming Pool, named in honor of its donors, the late Frank Resnik, a Saint Vincent chemistry graduate and a native of the nearby town of Pleasant Unity, and his wife, Elizabeth, was added in 1993. Mr. Resnik was the president of Philip Morris USA, a leading manufacturer of consumer products. He contributed $1 million to build the pool, which is now home to SVC’s men’s and women’s swim teams. A student union was added in 1993 to accommodate the Shack snack bar, student government offices, bookstore and student lounge. In 2004, through the generosity of the family of the late Robert S. Carey, a graduate of Saint Vincent who was a successful developer of office buildings and shopping malls, a $12.5 million renovation and construction project was completed which provided new athletic department offices, locker rooms, fitness center, wellness center, gymnasium, performing arts center and the Mary, Mother of Wisdom Student Chapel. The Saint Vincent Gallery, art studios for the Department of Fine Arts, music practice rooms and the Education Department are also located in this building. Bob Carey was a personable and athletic man who could light up a room when he entered. He had an excitement for life and athletics so it is appropriate that the student section at Bearcat basketball games is known as the Carey Crazies.

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The Career Center is located in this building and provides students a comprehensive program of assistance during their years on campus as well as throughout their lives in determining vocational interests, planning educational programs, seeking admission to graduate or professional school and applying for full-time and part-time internships, cooperative education experiences and part-time and full-time jobs.

Across the road from the Carey Student Center is Melvin Platz – German for “Melvin’s Garden” – located on the site of a former gymnasium, Bede Hall, and providing a comfortable and scenic park in the center of the campus. It was designed and built by the late Fr. Melvin Rupprecht, O.S.B., who taught German to generations of college students. 7


4. Gerard Hall Gerard Hall, built in 1963, is a college student residence hall that provides housing for 230 students in double rooms. All residence hall rooms have wireless access and an updated cable TV package with 111 channels. It is named for Fr. Gerard Bridge, O.S.B., who was the Dean of Saint Vincent College from 1923 to 1927 and had been on the faculty and administration for 50 years. Students call this building “Gerry.�

5. Alcuin Hall Built in 1964, Alcuin Hall is used for student social events, dances and recreation. The second floor features a full glass wall that provides a dramatic view of the college athletic fields and the mountains to the east. The first floor provides spacious accommodations for the Bearcat football program as well as strength training facilities. Alcuin Hall was named for Blessed Alcuin, a learned Benedictine abbot who lived from 732 to 804.

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6. Bonaventure Hall Bonaventure Hall, built in 1963, is a college student residence hall that provides housing for 230 students in double rooms. All residence rooms have wireless access and updated cable TV package with 111 channels. It is named for Fr. Bonaventure Reithmeier, O.S.B., who was dean of the College in the 1930s as well as a professor and director of dramatics. Students call this building “Bonny� for short.

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7. Rooney Hall Rooney Hall, built in 1995, is a residence hall named in honor of the late Arthur J. Rooney Sr., founder and chairman of the board of the Pittsburgh Steelers Professional Football Club from 1933 to 1988, who was widely known to players and thousands of friends as “Art” and “The Chief.” When he died on Aug. 25, 1988, at the age of 87, he left behind a legacy of kindness, loyalty and family that are legendary. During the academic year Rooney Hall houses undergraduate students, but during the summer it is home for the Pittsburgh Steelers who have held their summer training camp at Saint Vincent every year since 1966. This 66-room, 124-bed residence is a three-story structure designed by Tasso Katselas. On the first floor are 10 double rooms, a reception area featuring memorabilia and photographic displays honoring Mr. Rooney, a computer lab, meeting rooms and a self-service laundry. The second and third floors each have 24 double rooms, a resident director’s apartment and a television lounge and study lounge. The building is air-conditioned and all residence rooms have wireless access and an updated TV package with 111 channels. It was dedicated on Aug. 28, 1995. A $6.2 million expansion project in 20052006 added 15 four-person apartments. Each apartment features four 10 x 13 private bedrooms, two bathrooms, a 12 x 12 living room and a 12 x 12 kitchen and dining area equipped with microwave oven, sink, refrigerator and storage cabinets. The addition is air-conditioned and equipped with emergency sprinklers and automatic fire protection. It has been reported that when the Steelers head coach arrives each July for camp and moves into the apartment on the second floor, he finds a case of cold beer in the refrigerator, the gift of an anonymous donor, to welcome him to Latrobe, home of the City Brewing Company.

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8. Saint Benedict Hall ‘Benny’ opened in the fall of 2002 and provides community-oriented living for all Saint Vincent freshmen. An expansion project in 2005-2006 added 44 double rooms and eight single rooms in a new four-story tower on the southeast side. It is organized into 21 “pods” or neighborhoods which share living areas to encourage interdependence and cooperation among the residents. A computer lab, game room, kitchen, spacious lobby and wireless access and an updated cable TV package with 111 channels are featured in this air-conditioned residence that houses 400 freshman students. 9. Athletic Fields Saint Vincent is proud of its Bearcat athletic teams and provides well-groomed playing fields for each of them. The men’s baseball field is on the left. On the right are three regulation-size football fields (with computercontrolled underground sprinklers), the women’s softball field, and two activity fields for the men’s and women’s lacrosse and soccer teams. After a 45-year absence, Bearcat varsity football returned to Saint Vincent College in the fall of 2007 and plays in the 1,000-seat Chuck Noll Field which was constructed that year. It is named after legendary Pittsburgh Steelers head coach Noll.

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Construction was completed early spring 2008 on a synthetic grass athletic field along the entrance road near the large willow trees. In conjunction with the College’s long-range plan for enhancement of campus academic and recreational facilities, this project has greatly expanded use of the field by students during the academic year. The new field is regulation size and is used for soccer, football, field hockey, lacrosse and intramural sports. It offers all-weather playability, low maintenance and unlimited playing time. FieldTurf ’s fiber surface is soft and silky and similar to new blades of grass. It is composed of a blend of specially treated polyethylene fibers. The specific product Saint Vincent installed is known as FieldTurf Duraspine which is based on similar structures found in nature. The synthetic grass fibers are surrounded and stabilized by a special blend of smooth, rounded silica sand and rubber granules. The field is lighted with six light standards for extended use after dark. This field material is currently being used at nine National Football League stadiums including MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey; Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia; Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts; CenturyLink Field in Seattle, Washington; The Dome in St. Louis, Missouri; Paul Brown Stadium in Cincinnati, Ohio; Ford Field in Detroit, Michigan; Hubert H. Humphrey Metrodome in Minneapolis, Minnesota; and RCA Dome in Indianapolis, Indiana. The Pittsburgh Steelers prefer practice on the natural grass surfaces but have used the artificial surface when the fields are wet to prevent injuries and damage to the fields. 12


10. Barista Café (coffeehouse), Bookstore and Shack (snack bar) You are welcome to enter the Robert S. Carey Student Center to enjoy the Barista Café coffeehouse, to peruse the college bookstore which features a wide variety of college logo apparel and other souvenir merchandise, and the Shack snack bar for soft drinks, snacks and sandwiches. Saint Vincent students took their place in history in 1904 when they were served the world’s first banana split by Dr. David Strickler at Tassel’s Drug Store in downtown Latrobe. Later, students coined a slogan which is still heard today, “Have a snack at the Shack and you’ll always come back!” The Shack and the Bookstore both offer ice cream treats.

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11. Latimer Library, Prep Hall and Headmasters Hall Traditionally, Benedictine institutions have granted a place of honor to the library. At Saint Vincent, this climate-controlled facility is not only a repository of the institution’s bibliographic holdings but also a vibrant and functional component of the College’s overall teaching dynamic. The Library is open to patrons approximately 83 hours weekly. A central reference room provides access to more than 3,500 titles such as encyclopedias, abstracts, dictionaries, indexes, handbooks and atlases. The periodicals area displays 325 current magazine subscriptions. A video collection also comprises part of this section as well as the microfilm and microfiche collections with readers and printers. The adjoining stacks contain a quarter million volumes; the collection also includes a number of rare books, incunabula and unique Pennsylvaniana and Benedictina items. Carrels on each floor provide private study areas. Additionally, the Circulation Desk, an Academic Computing Lab and a rare/unusual

books exhibit area are also located on the main level. A lounge is located on the lower level. The collection is classified according to the Library of Congress classification system. Staff computers provide access to the Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) containing more than 39,375,000 bibliographic records from approximately 27,450 participating libraries for cataloging, acquisitions and interlibrary loan services. The Library’s online card catalog is accessible at terminals located throughout the library as well as on the web. The Library subscribes to 22 electronic databases, many with access to full-text peer-reviewed journals; the Library provides wireless connection (WiFi) for laptop access to the campus network and the internet. 16


Prep Hall, completed in 1998, is named in honor of alumni of the former Saint Vincent Preparatory School. This building houses the Department of Communication, which includes multimedia classrooms and a computer lab with the newest digital tools and a media suite. The Education Department and its excellent teacher certification program and graduate degree programs are located on the first floor. Formerly known as Benedict Hall, Headmasters Hall was built in sections from 1855 to 1877. It houses the Post Office, Academic Affairs, administrative offices and classrooms of the School of Humanities and Fine Arts, and the Psychology Department faculty offices and classrooms. It was renamed in honor of all of the Benedictine monks who had served as headmasters or directors of the Saint Vincent Preparatory School, an all-boys private high school. The headmasters of Saint Vincent were legendary for being strict disciplinarians. The campus post office and a banking machine are located on the first floor.

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12. Sis and Herman Dupré Science Pavilion The largest construction project in the college’s history, the $45 million Sis and Herman Dupré Science Pavilion, opened in the fall of 2010, provides a state-of-the-art home for the classrooms, laboratory and faculty offices of the Herbert W. Boyer School of Natural Sciences, Mathematics and Computing. Just down the hill on the right is the Saint Vincent College Environmental Education Center and its distinctive mesocosm, an outdoor laboratory where artificial wetlands are part of the Monastery Run Mine Drainage Coalition’s successful effort to cleanse the stream of impurities and coloration by filtering the water through layers of limestone. The Biology Department is the home for Saint Vincent College’s widely-known pre-professional programs in the allied health professions including medicine, chiropractic, dentistry, occupational therapy, osteopathy, optometry, pharmacy, physical therapy, physician assistant, podiatry and veterinary medicine. Since admission to graduate and professional schools is highly competitive, a pre-professional committee works with students throughout their four years of study to carefully plan their course of study and future goals. Placement into medical schools has averaged 81 percent of recommended students while admittance to other professional schools averaged 85 percent. Specialized laboratories are situated here for cell and molecular biology including microbiology and molecular genetics, organismal biology including anatomy and physiology, and population biology including ecology, evolution and systematics. An intensive senior research program is designed to introduce undergraduates to all facets of developing and completing a research project. One of the Biology Department’s most famous graduates is Dr. Herbert Boyer, a native of nearby Derry, who is the cofounder of Genentech and the inventor of modern gene splicing technology. A gift from Dr. Boyer provides scholarships to Saint Vincent biology majors annually. 18


The Life Sciences Research Laboratory houses laboratories for student and faculty joint research with live animals, instructional rooms and research labs for students studying biology and psychology. The James F. Will Engineering and Biomedical Sciences Hall, a new two-story, 11,260-square foot addition that opened in the fall of 2017, features a human anatomy laboratory, two research laboratories, an interdisciplinary classroom and an engineering laboratory.

The Saint Vincent College Department of Physics prepares students to continue on to graduate work as well as for the teaching profession or research laboratories. In addition to well-equipped general physics labs, specialized laboratories are also provided for astronomy, physical geology, optics, acoustics, atomic and nuclear physics.

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The College’s core computer network is based here. It combines fiberoptic cabling between buildings and Level 5, 5e and 6 cabling in offices, classrooms, computer labs, the library, residence halls and other internal areas. All of the 64 classrooms are equipped with multimedia, and there are 25 lab classrooms. The campus computer network provides direct internet access, e-mail accounts for all students, faculty and administrative staff. Wireless internet access is available throughout all the buildings on campus. 20


Tennis, Basketball Courts The outdoor tennis and basketball courts are used for recreation by students and faculty as well as by the men’s and women’s tennis teams.

13. Sauerkraut Tower The Sauerkraut Tower, built in 1893, is a campus landmark that originally served as a water tower that distributed drinking water throughout the campus by gravity. The Benedictine Sisters from Eichstatt, Bavaria, who lovingly prepared and served the food in the Saint Vincent kitchens for nearly 50 years, also prepared homemade sauerkraut and stored it here to keep it cool as it aged, thus inspiring students to name it for that German specialty. Some students who thought they served too much sauerkraut in the cafeteria imagined the entire four floors of the tower filled with kraut! It serves today only as a unique campus landmark. 21


14. Placid Hall Placid Hall, built in 1885, contains dining rooms, the Foundations conference room which features flags depicting all of the daughter monasteries which were founded by Saint Vincent, and faculty offices for the Departments of English, History, Theology, Anthropology/Sociology and Philosophy. It is named for Saint Placidus, one of the first Benedictine disciples of Saint Benedict. Sebastian’s Garden and Wimmer Hall Sebastian’s Garden is a well-tended oasis bounded on four sides by, from left, Anselm Hall, Andrew Hall, John and Annette Brownfield Center (formerly Aquinas Hall) and Wimmer Hall. Featuring a goldfish pond and fountain, the area was designed by the late Fr. Sebastian Samay, O.S.B., a Benedictine monk who was a professor of philosophy. Monks still enjoy creating a beautiful space in the enclosed courtyard. Students who keep goldfish in their rooms during the school year will sometimes leave them here before heading home for the summer.

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The John and Annette Brownfield Center, a gift of Annette Brownfield and her late husband, provides “smart” classrooms and a liturgical laboratory where seminarians are able to practice liturgical rituals and preaching techniques in a demonstration setting.

Built in 1952, Wimmer Hall is a residence hall for college students in private and semi-private rooms on five floors. All residence rooms have wireless access and an updated cable TV package with 111 channels. Wimmer Hall’s name honors Boniface Wimmer, the first archabbot and founder of Saint Vincent in 1846. 15. Parish Center The Parish Center, built in 1997, provides an assembly room for parish activities, parish offices and conference rooms, and the Basilica Gift Shop. Access to the Basilica for the physically challenged is also provided through an elevator in the Parish Center. 23


16. Basilica Constructed over a 13-year period from 1891 to 1905, Saint Vincent Basilica, which observed the 100th anniversary of its completion in 2005, and celebrated the 225th anniversary of its parish’s founding in 2016, dominates the campus of Saint Vincent. The cornerstone was laid in 1892 and the consecration took place Aug. 24, 1905. The interior and exterior of the Basilica were completely restored in conjunction with the sesquicentennial of Saint Vincent in 1996. Two 55-foot spires and a trio of bells, symbolizing the gratitude of the Saint Vincent community for the blessings of the past and their commitment and hope for the new millennium, were installed in a challenging architectural project which was completed in the fall of 1999. Every year some students climb to the top of the spiral staircases inside the towers just so they can say they did! Beneath the Basilica is the Crypt, renovated in 2010, which contains altars and many works of modern art in glass, wood, stone and acrylic and oil paintings. Across the road from the Basilica are several buildings which are used for maintenance support, and one which houses the Saint Vincent Fire Department, one of the few collegesponsored fire departments in the country which provides educational services, inspections and first-response protection to the campus.

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17. and 18. Andrew Hall and Leander Hall Andrew Hall, built in 1892, connecting Anselm Hall with the Archabbey Basilica, houses the monastic dining room. It is named for Archabbot Andrew Hintenach, O.S.B., the second Archabbot of Saint Vincent Archabbey, who died in 1927 at the age of 83. Built in 1913, Leander Hall is a residence hall for seminary students and guests. It is named for Archabbot Leander Schnerr, O.S.B., the third archabbot of Saint Vincent Archabbey, who died in 1920 at the age of 83. The Chapel of St. Gregory the Great, named in honor of Gregory, a sixth-century pope who was a member of the Benedictine Order, is used by the seminarians and guests for daily mass and prayer. The parklet and fountain area is known as Ludwig Platz and is named in honor of King Ludwig of Bavaria, one of the early benefactors of Saint Vincent, who contributed paintings, books and other cultural amenities to the early campus.

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19. Monastery (PRIVATE) The Monastery, built in 1967, is the residence for nearly 200 monks of Saint Vincent Archabbey, one of the largest Benedictine monasteries in the world. It was designed by Tasso Katselas who sought to create a living environment that would serve the monks well in their search for values in their community way of life. Each monk has a private room.

Maur Hall, Elizabeth J. Roderick Center and the Community Center Dining Hall Maur Hall, which serves as a reception area for the monastery, is named after Saint Maurus, one of the earliest Benedictine disciples of Saint Benedict. It also houses the Office of the Archabbot. Completed in 1998, the Elizabeth J. Roderick Center, named for the late wife of former U.S. Steel chairman David Roderick, a member of the Seminary Board of Regents, houses Seminary and Archabbey Offices, Seminary residence rooms and guest rooms. 26


The Community Center Dining Hall, completed in 1979, adjoins Anselm, Headmasters and Placid Halls and houses the main college dining room and food preparation facilities. It can seat more than 350 persons and features six different preparation areas including Paparazzi Pizza (with a wood-fired pizza oven), Bravissimo (demonstration cooking), Salad Sensations, Park CafĂŠ, Parkside Diner and Parkside Deli. It has bright natural lighting provided by two large skylights and is decorated with flags from many countries representing the homes of international students.

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20. Gristmill, Environmental Education Center, Gristmill General Store Before you leave Saint Vincent, we encourage you to stop at the Gristmill to explore the mini-museum at this structure which was built in 1854, watch a video about the making of stone-ground flour, explore the Environmental Education Center and enjoy the gift shop at the Gristmill General Store. The Bearcat B.E.S.T. (Building Excellence through Skills Training) program, which provides transitional support for 18- to 21-year-olds with intellectual and developmental disabilities, is based here. 21. Winnie Palmer Nature Reserve The Winnie Palmer Nature Reserve is a 50-acre reserve at Saint Vincent College. The Nature Reserve, nestled between the busy U.S. Route 30 corridor and PA Route 981, is a beautiful recreation area filled with more than two miles of trails, native plantings, an Environmental Learning Barn, the Historic Lochry Blockhouse and much more. Winnie Palmer, wife of Golf Legend Arnold Palmer, had served on the board of directors for Saint Vincent College for years and she loved looking out across the overgrown field from Route 981 to see the Saint Vincent Basilica and College, a place where she had fostered many friendships through her involvement with philanthropic endeavors over the years. The parcel of land could easily have been developed, but to her, developing the land would indelibly smudge the scenery. After her death, her family and friends raised the funds to make her dreams come true and help preserve the view of Saint Vincent that she loved so much. In 2000, the Winnie Palmer Nature Reserve was incorporated and became a reality. 28



For further information, contact: Office of Marketing and Communications Saint Vincent College 300 Fraser Purchase Road Latrobe, Pennsylvania 15650-2690 Phone 724-805-2010 FAX 724-805-2019 info@stvincent.edu www.stvincent.edu

8596–1M–6/2017


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