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Academic departments at MWC include ] and ]; ]; Historic Preservation; ] and International Affairs; ]; ]; ] and American Studies; ]; ] Administration; ], ], and Speech; ]; ] and ]; ]; ] and ]; Modern Foreign Languages; ] and ]; Classics, ], and ]; ]; ]; ]; ] and ]; and ]. | Academic departments at MWC include ] and ]; ]; Historic Preservation; ] and International Affairs; ]; ]; ] and American Studies; ]; ] Administration; ], ], and Speech; ]; ] and ]; ]; ] and ]; Modern Foreign Languages; ] and ]; Classics, ], and ]; ]; ]; ]; ] and ]; and ]. | ||
In 2003, MWC was in the process of moving to university status to simplify and streamline administration of the MWC campus and its graduate/professional school, the ] ]. Nominees for naming the new university include "Mary Washington University," "University of Mary Washington," and "Washington & Monroe University." | In ], MWC was in the process of moving to university status to simplify and streamline administration of the MWC campus and its graduate/professional school, the ] ]. Nominees for naming the new university include "Mary Washington University," "University of Mary Washington," and "Washington & Monroe University." | ||
== External links == | == External links == |
Revision as of 01:26, 10 September 2003
Mary Washington College (MWC or Mary Wash for short) is a coed, state-funded, four-year liberal arts college in Fredericksburg, Virginia about 50 miles north of Richmond and 50 miles south of Washington, DC. MWC has about 3500 students and is about 70% female.
Founded in 1908 as an all-girls school, MWC is named for Mary Washington, mother of the first president of the United States of America, George Washington. Most of the architecture on the Mary Washington College campus can be described as neo-classical, Georgian, or Jeffersonian (because of its similarity to Thomas Jefferson's design of the University of Virginia).
Academic departments at MWC include Art and Art History; Economics; Historic Preservation; Political Science and International Affairs; Biological Sciences; Education; History and American Studies; Psychology; Business Administration; English, Linguistics, and Speech; Mathematics; Sociology and Anthropology; Chemistry; Environmental Science and Geology; Modern Foreign Languages; Theatre and Dance; Classics, Philosophy, and Religion; Geography; Music; Computer Science; Health and Physical Education; and Physics.
In 2003, MWC was in the process of moving to university status to simplify and streamline administration of the MWC campus and its graduate/professional school, the James Monroe Center for Graduate and Professional Studies. Nominees for naming the new university include "Mary Washington University," "University of Mary Washington," and "Washington & Monroe University."