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To: 2ndMostConservativeBrdMember; afraidfortherepublic; Alas; al_c; american colleen; annalex; ...
Catholic Higher Education Alert - 5/12/04

- College of New Rochelle (New Rochelle, NY): Earl Graves, honorary degree recipient, May 27.  Graves, an abortion rights advocate, is founder and publisher of Black Enterprise Magazine.  Just this month, in an open letter to Secretary of State Colin Powell published in the Boston Globe, NARAL Pro-Choice America chairman Kenneth Edelin reflects on Graves' participation in a Planned Parenthood outreach to African-American women. Graves and others helped place public service announcements supporting "a woman's right to choose" abortion in magazines targeted to a black readership.

CONTACT: Dr. Stephen Sweeny, President, College of New Rochelle, 29 Castle
Place, New Rochelle, NY 10805; (914) 654-5430

- DePaul University - School for New Learning (Chicago, IL): Anthony Lewis, commencement speaker and honorary degree recipient, June 12.  Until December 2001, Lewis was a columnist for The New York Times.  His columns sharply criticized Attorney General John Ashcroft for "ideological zealotry" because he promised to revoke the drug prescription license of any doctor who participates in physician-assisted suicide, President George W. Bush for refusing to fund family-planning organizations abroad that recommend abortion, and Ashcroft again for supporting a ban on all abortions except to save the mother's life.

CONTACT: Rev. John P. Minogue, C.M., President, DePaul University, 1 E.
Jackson, Chicago, IL 60604; (312) 362-8890; jminogue@depaul.edu

- Dominican College (Orangeburg, NY): Thomas Morahan, honorary degree recipient, May 22.  Morahan is a New York State Senator who strongly opposes abortion.  But in 2002, Morahan ignored the pleas of New York Cardinal Edward Egan and pro-life activists by supporting a bill requiring employers to cover contraceptives in employee health plans.  Morahan defended the Senate “compromise" that resulted in a bill that failed to include a broad "conscience clause" exempting all Catholic and other religious employers.  Dominican College is among the institutions forced by the law to violate its Catholic mission.

CONTACT: Sr. Mary Eileen O'Brien, O.P., President, Dominican College, 470
Western Hwy., Orangeburg, NY 10962; (845) 359-7800;
mary.eileen.obrien@dc.edu

- University of San Francisco - School of Business (San Francisco, CA): Gavin Newsom, commencement speaker, May 22.  San Francisco Mayor Newsom broke California state law by issuing marriage licenses to homosexual couples, a high-profile stunt to promote same-sex marriage.  Newsom has also conflicted with faithful Catholics by advocating abortion rights.  In August 2002 as San Francisco city supervisor, Newsom co-authored a resolution praising the National Organization for Women and supporting efforts to make the abortion pill RU-486 more available to women.  As mayor, he has allowed the City of San Francisco to join Planned Parenthood in a lawsuit seeking to overturn the federal ban on partial-birth abortion.

CONTACT: Rev. Stephen A. Privett, S.J., President, 2130 Fulton St., San Francisco, CA 94117; (415) 422-6762; privet@usfca.edu

- University of San Francisco - College of Professional Studies (San Francisco, CA): George McGovern, commencement speaker, May 22.  McGovern is the United Nations Special Ambassador on Hunger and a former U.S. senator and presidential candidate.  In his 1972 race for president, McGovern supported abortion rights but opposed involvement in the issue by the federal government and his campaign.  Nevertheless, because of the Democratic Party's platform which endorsed abortion as a constitutional right, McGovern was dubbed the candidate of "acid, amnesty and abortion." He has since maintained a "pro-choice" position on abortion, opposing legislation or a constitutional amendment to ban abortions.

CONTACT: Rev. Stephen A. Privett, S.J., President, 2130 Fulton St., San
Francisco, CA 94117; (415) 422-6762; privet@usfca.edu

CNS DEFENDS U. ST. FRANCIS ON CANCELED COMMENCEMENT SPEAKER

In communications with news media, Cardinal Newman Society publicly defended Fort Wayne-South Bend Bishop John D'Arcy and the University of St. Francis in Fort Wayne, Indiana, after former ABC News medical reporter Nancy Snyderman complained that university officials were too hasty to cancel her May 1 commencement address.

Acting upon D'Arcy's concerns about remarks Snyderman made on ABC's "Good Morning America" on October 30, 1997, the University of St. Francis withdrew its invitation to Snyderman just four days before its commencement ceremony.  University president Sr. M. Elise Kriss told Snyderman, now a vice president at Johnson & Johnson, that her comments "appear to be contrary to the teachings of the Catholic Church.  As a
Catholic university, we have no choice but to rescind our invitation."

But in interviews with the Chronicle of Higher Education, the Fort Wayne Journal Gazette and the Fort Wayne News-Sentinel, Snyderman claimed she only reports on medical issues objectively, and D'Arcy and the university had no inkling of her personal views.

"To assume you know what someone thinks or stands for is very dangerous," Snyderman said.  A Fort Wayne Journal Gazette editorial said the university acted "shamefully and based on questioned reasoning" in response to "neutral words on a long-ago newscast."  Other news articles seemed to accept Snyderman's claim that she had only reported objectively from a scientific point of view.

In fact, the ABC News transcript of Snyderman's 1997 report reveals Snyderman's opinionated exchange with "Good Morning America" host Charles Gibson about the news that Bobbi McCaughey of Des Moines, Iowa, was expecting seven children.

Asked by Gibson about the septuplets' chances of survival, Snyderman replied that technology is improving: "But I think it's really high time that we look at survivability with quality of life. .[T]he risk for neurological complications, heart complications, severe learning [sic] and mental retardation, those stakes climb higher and higher.  And at least for a mother and a doctor, I think the tradeoff is many times not worth it.  Now, I know it's an unsavory thought for a lot of people, but selective abortion, where you literally think about not which fetuses to get rid of but how many to get rid of, is something that we really need to talk about openly in situations like this."

Gibson noted that the McCaughey family had rejected abortion, stating, "No, we're going to leave this in the hands of God."  Snyderman responded by insulting the McCaugheys:

"But it's already out of the hands of God, Charlie, because in vitro fertilization is not something that God just sort of said, you know, 'Oh, well, here it is.'  This is modern technology created by man, pushing the envelope.  So I think it's foolhardy to suddenly throw, 'Well, it's God's will.'  That to me is a funny mix of medicine and religion and ethics and technology all in one."

It's not the only time Snyderman has offended pro-life viewers.  On September 15, 2003, Snyderman and bioethicist Jeffrey Kahn appeared on CNN's "Paula Zahn Now" show to discuss the impact of three-dimensional ultrasound technology on the abortion debate.  Kahn argued that vivid pictures of preborn children shouldn't change "what we think of as a fetus versus as a baby," because the morality of abortion depends on a child's
viability.

Host Paula Zahn asked Snyderman, "But certainly, Nancy, these advances in technology have got to change the way people look at a fetus versus a baby."

"Well, I think you have to continue the word, if you want to play the scientific role, to continue talking about a fetus as a developing embryo in utero," Snyderman replied.  "And once that fetus is delivered, it's then a baby.  And I know that's going to really irritate some people.  But I say that distinction for a real reason.  And that is, because medicine and technology continue to push the envelope. When I was a young pediatrician, babies didn't survive if they were born at 30 weeks.  Then it was 28.  Then it's 27.  Now it's 26.  So the viability aspect that Jeffrey talked about is absolutely right.  So I would caution both sides of this debate not to use the science for propaganda, but to understand the significance and the beauty of it all, and to talk about the interpretation of these movements with great caution."

D'Arcy's pro-life adviser also claims that Snyderman has referred to abortion as the "deliberate removal of fetal tissue."

KUDOS & THANKS: Sr. M. Elise Kriss, President, University of St. Francis, 2701 Spring St., Fort Wayne, IN 46808; (260) 434-3297; ekriss@sf.edu
____________________________

[Catholic Campus News]
U. NOTRE DAME PRESIDENT REPLACED AMID SCANDALS

Rev. Edward Malloy, president of the University of Notre Dame since 1987, has been replaced by the university's board of trustees amid scandals including a Queer Film Festival and "The Vagina Monologues" that upset Notre Dame alumni.

Malloy told a campus newspaper that he asked the trustees to review his tenure and offered to remain in the position.  But in an unusually swift manner, the trustees announced that Malloy would step down in June 2005 and named his replacement, Rev. John Jenkins, a Notre Dame vice president and philosophy professor who raises no objections from Cardinal Newman Society's contacts at the university.

University chairman Patrick McCartan said Jenkins' "suberb academic credentials... will be of critical importance to the realization of our aspiration to become one of the great research universities of the world with a distinctly Catholic character."
____________________________

[Catholic Campus News]
SETON HALL REBUKED FOR HONOREE, HOSTS PRO-ABORTION GOVERNOR

Soon after Newark Archbishop John Myers publicly rebuked Seton Hall University School of Law in South Orange, New Jersey, for honoring a pro-abortion judge in April, the school featured New Jersey's pro-abortion governor at its 50th anniversary celebration.

The School of Law presented its 11th annual Sandra Day O'Connor Medal of Honor to Third U.S. Circuit Judge Maryanne Trump Barry.  In 2000, Barry authored the court's opinion striking down a New Jersey ban on partial-birth abortion because "a woman's constitutional right to obtain an abortion would be impermissibly chilled."  The award was presented by Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O'Connor, who wrote the majority opinion in Planned Parenthood v. Casey in 1992, claiming a constitutional right to abortion.

The award is sponsored by three student clubs: the Seton Hall Women's Law Forum, the Seton Hall Law Review, and the Seton Hall Legislative Bureau. It honors women who have "distinguished themselves in the fields of law and public service."   Past recipients of the award include pro-abortion Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton, Marian Wright Edelman, and former New Jersey Gov. Christine Todd Whitman.  Although Seton Hall demanded that students present Whitman's 1998 award off-campus because of her support for abortion rights, the event has since returned to the law school.

"I find this action profoundly offensive and contrary to the Catholic mission and identity of Seton Hall Law School, Seton Hall University and the Archdiocese of Newark," Myers wrote in the Newark archdiocesan newspaper, opposing the award to Barry.  He said that he is proceeding to "clarify the situation and see that it does not occur again."  University spokeswoman Natalie Thigpen concurred, stating that "the conferral of awards to people who publicly espouse views that are contrary to the university's fundamental Catholic identity is a serious lapse."

But the O'Connor Award has been presented repeatedly to pro-abortion honorees, and the university presented an honorary degree to abortion-rights advocate Dolores Cross in 2001.  Pro-abortion campus speakers in recent years have included Secretary of State Colin Powell, United Nations Secretary General Kofi Annan, U.S. Rep. Ellen Tauscher, former U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno, political consultant James Carville and U.S. Sen. John Corzine.

Pro-abortion Gov. James McGreevey of New Jersey was a featured speaker and received a standing ovation at the law school's 50th anniversary celebration on April 24, just days after Myers chastised the school.  In 2002, a "town meeting" featuring McGreevey at Seton Hall on January 22, the anniversary of Roe v. Wade, was moved to another location following complaints.

CONTACT: Rev. Msgr. Robert Sheeran, President, Seton Hall University, 400 S. Orange Ave., S. Orange, NJ 07079; (973) 761-9620; sheeraro@shu.edu
____________________________

[Catholic Campus News]
ASSOCIATION OF HOMOSEXUAL ALUMS OF CATHOLIC COLLEGES LAUNCHED

An 850-member organization of homosexual graduates from the University of Notre Dame announced plans to sponsor a national association last week in Philadelphia.  The Gay Lesbian Alumni/ae Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities seeks to link graduates of Catholic colleges nationwide, beginning with a recruiting effort in the Philadelphia area.  Leaders also hope to network with students on Catholic campuses.
____________________________

[Catholic Campus News]
LA ROCHE, U. SCRANTON TRY TO CLEAN UP CAMPUS NEWSPAPERS

Officials at La Roche College in Pittsburgh and the University of  Scranton, Pennsylvania, acted to prevent student-run newspapers from distributing offensive content on campus, asserting their responsibility as publishers.

The April 14 edition of The La Roche Courier was confiscated the day before a campus open house for prospective students.  College administrators were concerned "that parents of prospective students might not recognize" a distinction between the college's official position in support of Catholic teaching and a student columnist's advocacy of condoms.

University of Scranton officials temporarily suspended production of The Aquinas newspaper in response to an April Fools edition that included "offensive and potentially libelous language, degrading images and behavior misrepresentative of the University of Scranton community."  The  college has removed the editor-in-chief and required the newspaper to develop a statement of ethics prior to resuming publication.

KUDOS & THANKS: Rev. Msgr. William Kerr, President, La Roche College, 9000 Babcock Blvd., Pittsburgh, PA 15237; (412) 536-1204; (via secretary) shearej1@laroche.edu

KUDOS & THANKS: Rev. Scott R. Pilarz, S.J., President, University of Scranton, Scranton, PA 18510; (570) 941-7500; pilarzs2@scranton.edu.
____________________________

[Catholic Campus News]
CATHOLIC U. LAW STUDENTS SEEK GAY-STRAIGHT CLUB

First-year law students at the Catholic University of America's Columbus School of Law are reviving past failed attempts to organize a Gay-Straight Alliance and threaten legal action if they are denied, according to the Washington Blade, a newspaper for the Washington, D.C., homosexual community.

"The new group [of students] is completely dedicated and motivated to pursue this until we either get approval or are told by the courts that we have no recourse," student Jack Brown told the Blade.  The District of Columbia's anti-discrimination law was used several years ago to force Georgetown University to allow a homosexual student club on campus.

"The university administration and its board of trustees consider organizations that advocate a homosexual lifestyle and/or homosexual activity incompatible with the teachings of the Catholic Church, and therefore, incompatible with the mission of the university," warned Victor Nakas, the university's executive director for public affairs.

Executive Summary)  Culture of Death on Catholic Campuses: A Five-Year Review

(Full Report)  Culture of Death on Catholic Campuses: A Five-Year Review

10 posted on 05/12/2004 5:08:47 PM PDT by Coleus (Roe v. Wade and Endangered Species Act both passed in 1973, Murder Babies/save trees, birds, algae)
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To: Coleus
Please

Do not post such a mismash.

and if you do, please do not ping me to such a mess.

11 posted on 05/12/2004 5:45:50 PM PDT by don-o (Stop Freeploading. Do the right thing and sign up for a monthly donation.)
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To: Coleus
DePaul University - School for New Learning (Chicago, IL): Anthony Lewis, commencement speaker and honorary degree recipient, June 12. Until December 2001, Lewis was a columnist for The New York Times. His columns sharply criticized Attorney General John Ashcroft for "ideological zealotry" because he promised to revoke the drug prescription license of any doctor who participates in physician-assisted suicide, President George W. Bush for refusing to fund family-planning organizations abroad that recommend abortion, and Ashcroft again for supporting a ban on all abortions except to save the mother's life.

Anthony Lewis is also the husband of Supreme Judicial Court Justice Margaret Marshall who was the driving force behind the court's decision to push homosexual 'marriage' in Massachusetts!

21 posted on 06/04/2004 8:57:04 AM PDT by SuziQ (Bush in 2004/Because we Must!!! (Bombard))
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