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No Catholic Schools in Minnesota or its neighboring dioceses received "unfavorable mention" this year from the Cardinal Newman Society.
The number of scandalous commencement speakers and honorees on Catholic campuses  this spring appears to have declined dramatically compared to previous years,  the Cardinal Newman Society (CNS) announced today.
For the past nine  years CNS research has identified invited commencement speakers or honorees at  Catholic colleges who have taken public positions contrary to Catholic values or  teaching.
In 2006, CNS research uncovered problems at 24 colleges with  speakers or honorees who publicly advocated for abortion rights, embryonic  stem-cell research, physician-assisted suicide, homosexual marriage, women's  ordination or other issues contrary to Catholic values.
By contrast, this  year CNS has so far only had to alert the presidents of 11 Catholic colleges to  problems with 12 commencement speakers or honorees. CNS also commended 14  colleges for honoring Vatican leaders, bishops and leading Catholic thinkers  including University of Notre Dame philosopher Ralph McInerny and Rev. Richard  John Neuhaus of First Things.
CNS is urging the presidents of the 11  colleges to withdraw the invitations their schools have extended to honorees who  have publicly advocated positions contrary to Catholic values. Already Bishop  Salvatore Matano of Burlington, Vermont, has assured CNS that he will not attend  commencement ceremonies at nearby St. Michael's College, which will honor  journalist Cokie Roberts and Vermont Gov. Jim Douglas on May 17.
The CNS  research department has identified the speakers and honorees at most U.S.  Catholic colleges, and CNS researchers are confident the final tally of  problematic invitations will be significantly reduced from previous years as  most of the colleges that have not yet announced speakers and honorees have not  had problems in the past.
"This is a very hopeful sign that more Catholic  college leaders are embracing Pope John Paul II's vision for faithful Catholic  higher education," said Patrick J. Reilly, President of the Cardinal Newman  Society. "What a fitting legacy for this likely saint!"
The Cardinal  Newman Society has been working for 14 years toward the renewal of Catholic  colleges and universities according to Ex corde Ecclesiae, the 1990 Catholic  higher education guidelines issued by the late Pope John Paul II.
In June  2004, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops approved the statement "Catholics  in Political Life," which mandated: "The Catholic community and Catholic  institutions should not honor those who act in defiance of our fundamental moral  principles. They should not be given awards, honors or platforms which would  suggest support for their actions."
In 2005, CNS identified 19  problematic commencement speakers and honorees, including two contenders for  U.S. President in 2008. The protest led Marymount Manhattan College in New York  City, which hosted Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton as its commencement speaker and  honoree, to declare itself no longer Catholic. It also prompted Cardinal William  Keeler of Baltimore to refuse to attend Loyola College's commencement ceremony  featuring former New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani.
2007 Colleges and  Problematic Commencement Speakers/Honorees (to date)
College of Mount  Saint Joseph (Ohio): Hamilton County Coroner O'Dell Owens (commencement speaker  & honorary degree), May 12
Owens is a pioneer and nationally known expert  of in vitro fertilization, a practice opposed by Catholic teaching. Owens  established an infertility program at the University of Cincinnati Medical  Center, where he achieved Cincinnati's first pregnancy from a frozen embryo and  first conception and delivery through in vitro fertilization.
College of  Saint Mary (Nebraska): Roberta Wilhelm, Executive Director of Girls Inc. of  Omaha (commencement speaker), May 20
Girls Inc. supports "a woman's freedom  of choice" and opposes "restrictions of reproductive choice." As part of its  "health and sexuality' core education program for girls, the organization argues  that "girls need and have a right to…effective methods of  contraception."
Loyola University New Orleans (Louisiana): NAACP Chairman  Julian Bond (commencement speaker & honorary degree), May 12
In 2004,  when the Catholic University of America rejected a campus NAACP affiliate  because of the national organization's support for abortion rights, Bond  declared: "[W]e are pleased to join those insisting on a woman's right to  control her own body." On behalf of Planned Parenthood, Bond has deplored  efforts "to deny Americans their constitutional right to freedom of choice." He  marched in a 2004 abortion-rights demonstration in Washington, D.C., declaring  that the NAACP has supported the pro-choice movement since 1968.
Marian  Court College (Massachusetts): U.S. Rep. John Tierney (commencement speaker),  May 12
Tierney has received a 100 percent rating from NARAL, indicating a  consistent pro-abortion voting record. He opposed a ban on homosexual  "marriages."
Marquette University (Wisconsin): Former Wisconsin Secretary  of State Vel Phillips (honorary degree), May 20
Last year Phillips was a  leading opponent of a proposed constitutional amendment to prevent recognition  of homosexual "marriage." She chaired the 2004 campaign of pro-abortion U.S.  Rep. Gwen Moore and helped her secure substantial funding from EMILY's List,  which supports pro-abortion female candidates.
Ohio Dominican University  (Ohio): Boston College theology professor Rev. David Hollenbach, S.J.  (commencement speaker & honorary degree), May 12
Hollenbach has acted  shamefully as a Catholic theology professor, publicly opposing the U.S. bishops'  implementation of the mandatum, a Canon Law requirement that theologians pledge  to teach authentic Catholic doctrine. Hollenbach has publicly questioned  Catholic teaching that abortion is always sinful, wrongly comparing judgments  about abortion to prudential judgments about war and the death penalty. Last  year he rejected concerns about Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice's  pro-abortion views while leading a protest against her Boston College  commencement speech because of her support for the Iraq War. In 1991, Hollenbach  defended Georgetown University's official support for a student pro-abortion  club, despite vocal opposition by Cardinal James Hickey of  Washington.
Regis College (Massachusetts): Massachusetts Attorney General  Martha Coakley (commencement speaker & honorary degree), May 20
Coakley  publicly supports homosexual "marriage" and abortion rights. An advocate of  embryonic stem cell research, she has opposed a state regulation barring the  creation of embryos solely for research.
Saint Michael's College  (Vermont): Journalist Cokie Roberts (commencement speaker & honorary  degree), Vermont Governor Jim Douglas (honorary degree), May 17
Cokie  Roberts, political commentator for ABC News and National Public Radio, has  publicly attacked Pope Benedict XVI as "really lacking in the theological virtue  of charity," "an extremely controversial choice" and "the most conservative  voice of Catholicism." In her syndicated column with husband Steve Roberts, she  has espoused abortion rights and ridiculed pro-lifers as "extremists." The  Robertses characterized the federal ban on partial-birth abortion as "off the  track" and "cynical games-playing" by pro-life activists. They have argued that  the authority of the Catholic bishops has been significantly weakened, in part  because of their teaching on homosexuality and contraception: "It's as if they  are asking to be ignored."
Vermont Gov. Jim Douglas campaigned in all  three elections for abortion rights. In March 2006 he signed a law allowing drug  stores to sell the "emergency contraception" Plan B pill to minors without a  prescription or parental notification.
The Graduate School, University of  Notre Dame, (Indiana): Mary Sue Coleman, President of the University of Michigan  (commencement speaker & honorary degree), May 19
Coleman has been a vocal  advocate for embryonic stem cell research. She launched the University of  Michigan's center for stem cell research, called on Michigan's state legislature  to reconsider a ban on cloning and argued that creating stem cell lines from  unwanted embryos is "highly ethical." She refused to cancel a course at the  university teaching students "How to Be Gay" despite protests and efforts of the  state legislature to cut university funding.
Villanova University  (Pennsylvania): Chris Matthews, host of MSNBC's Hardball With Chris Matthews  (commencement speaker & honorary degree), May 20
In his television  commentary and newspaper columns, Matthews has publicly
supported abortion  rights, even suggesting the validity of partial-birth abortion for severely  handicapped babies.
Walsh University (Ohio): Rabbi John Spitzer  (commencement speaker), April 29
Rabbi Spitzer, who is Director of Walsh  University's Jewish-Catholic Institute, publicly announced support for  homosexual unions and has made himself available to perform homosexual  "commitment" ceremonies until such marriages are legal.
2007  Commended Colleges & Commencement Speakers/Honorees (to  date)
Assumption College (Massachusetts): Ralph McInerny, Philosopher,  University of Notre Dame
Ave Maria University (Florida): Rev. Richard John  Neuhaus, Editor, First Things
Canisius College (New York): Bishop Edward  Kmiec of Buffalo
Christendom College (Virginia): Rev. George Rutler, author  & lecturer
Fordham University (New York): Archbishop Celestino Migliore,  Apostolic Nuncio to United Nations
Franciscan University of Steubenville  (Ohio): Archbishop Timothy Dolan of Milwaukee
Mount St. Mary's University  (Maryland): Archbishop Pietro Sambi, Apostolic Nuncio to United States
St.  Ambrose University (Ohio): Bishop Martin Amos of Davenport
St. Mary's College  of California: retired Bishop John Cummins of Oakland
Seton Hall University  (New Jersey): Cardinal Oscar Andres Rodriguez of Tegucigalpa, Honduras
Spring  Hill College (Alabama): Archbishop Oscar Lipscomb of Mobile
Thomas Aquinas  College (California): Archbishop Albert Ranjith, Congregation for Divine  Worship
Univ. of Portland (Oregon): Archbishop John Foley, Pontifical Council  for Social Communications
University of St. Francis (Indiana): Bishop John  D'Arcy of Fort Wayne-South Bend
 
 
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