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The Saint Edmond's Academy campus includes 25 acres (100,000 m 2) of land.It has 30 classrooms, a state-of-the-art science lab, a field house, an art room, chapel, a library, a model train room, choral room, band room, cafeteria, two gymnasiums, extended day care facilities, a 450-seat auditorium, a baseball field, soccer field, and a 400-meter all-weather track.
St. Matthias School (Bala Cynwyd) – Closed in 1999 [89] St. Philip Neri School (East Greenville) – Closed in 2012. [2] St. Rose of Lima School (North Wales) – Consolidated into Mater Dei Catholic School in 2012. [2] St. Stanislaus School – Consolidated into Mater Dei Catholic School in 2012. [2]
Beneficial Mutual Bancorp, Inc. operated Beneficial Bank, a full-service bank whose assets totaled approximately $5 billion upon its acquisition by WSFS in 2019. Founded in 1853, Beneficial was the oldest and largest bank headquartered in Philadelphia, with more than 58 locations throughout Pennsylvania and South Jersey. [1]
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St. Edmund's was founded as an all-boys diocesan school in 1947 by a group of parents associated with the Episcopal Church of the Redeemer in Squirrel Hill. [3] The school came to occupy its current location in 1954 when Pauline Mudge, widow of prominent Pittsburgh industrialist Edmund W. Mudge, [4] donated a plot of land adjacent to the parish house of the Church of the Redeemer.
The bank spent millions of dollars modernizing the building and converting the former department store floors to banking space. [15] [16] Among the changes was the addition of a sign with the bank's initials in 1955. [17] The bank officially opened in what was now called the PNB Building on January 16, 1956.
Cincinnati, OH 45220-1698 39°08′54″N 84°31′12″W / 39.148332°N 84.519944°W / 39.148332; -84.519944 ( St John's Unitarian Universalist Cincinnati, Ohio
The suffix-gate derives from the Watergate scandal in the United States in the early 1970s, which resulted in the resignation of US President Richard Nixon. [2] The scandal was named after the Watergate complex in Washington, D.C., where the burglary giving rise to the scandal took place; the complex itself was named after the "Water Gate" area where symphony orchestra concerts were staged on ...