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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 March 2013
1 Hogan, Peter E., The Catholic University of America, 1887–1896: The Rectorship of Thomas J. Conaty (Washington, DC: The Catholic University of America Press, 1949), 49Google Scholar; cited by O'Brien, David J. in “The Church and Higher Education,” Horizons 17 (1990): 13.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2 Greinacher, Norbert, “Catholic Identity in the Third Epoch of Church History, The Second Vatican Council and Its Consequences for the Theory and Practice of the Catholic Church,” in Catholic Identity, ed. Provost, James and Walf, Knut, Concilium 1994, vol. 5 (London: SCM Press/Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1994), 6.Google Scholar
3 This purpose is reflected in an emphasis on character formation, which was featured strongly in the literature of Catholic universities and colleges prior to the 1960s; see Gallin, Alice OSU, Negotiating Identity, Catholic Higher Education Since 1960 (Notre Dame, IN: Notre Dame University Press, 2000), 1.Google Scholar
4 Carey, Patrick W., “Catholic Theology in Historical Perspective,” in American Catholic Traditions, Resources for Renewal, ed. Mize, Sandra Yocum and Portier, William (Maryknoll, NY: Orbis, 1996), 243–44.Google Scholar See also Gallin, , Negotiating Identity, 105.Google Scholar
5 Gallin, , Negotiating Identity, 21.Google Scholar
6 Congar, Yves, Lay People in the Church: A Study for a Theology of the Laity, trans. Attwater, Donald (Westminister, MD: Newman Press, 1959), 19–20Google Scholar; cited in Gallin, 21.
7 Carey, , “Catholic Theology in Historical Perspective,” 261.Google Scholar This shift is reflected in the society's decision to adopt “College Theology Society” as its name in 1967.
8 Address of his Holiness John Paul II to The Catholic University America, Washington, DC, Sunday, 7 October 1979, which was given six months after Sapientia Christiana (On Ecclesiastical Universities and Faculties) http://www.vatican.va/holy_ father/john_paul_ii/speeches/1979/october/documents/hf_jpii_spe_19791007_usa_ washington_univ-catt_en.html, (accessed 18 May 2009).
9 Gallin, 151.
10 Ibid., 161.
11 Ex corde Ecclesiae (On Catholic Universities, August 15, 1990), in Catholic Identity in our Colleges and Universities, a Collection of Defining Documents (Washington, DC: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2006), 51–74.
12 Morey, Melanie M. and Piderit, John J., SJ, Catholic Higher Education: A Culture in Crisis (New York: Oxford University Press, 2006).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
13 Ibid., 62–63 and passim.
14 This statistic was compiled by the Association of Catholic Colleges and Universities in 2007 and is available at http://www.accunet.org/i4a/pages/Index.cfm?pageID=3513#students (accessed 18 May, 2009). A statistic worth pondering is the fact that eighty percent of Catholic undergraduates are attending non-Catholic schools; see Richard A. Yankowski, “Catholic Education: The Untold Story,” Address to the Catholic Colleges and Universities, 1 February 2010, 5, http://www.accunet.org/files/public/2010_presen tations/Untold_Story.pdf+Catholic+undergraduates+at+non-Catholic+schools+accunet (accessed on 11 November 2010).
15 Pew Forum on Religion and Public Life, “U.S. Religious Landscape Survey, Report 1: Religious Affiliation” (2007)Google Scholar, http://www.religions.pewforum.org/reports (accessed on 10 May, 2009).
16 Morey and Piderit, 64–65.
17 Ibid., 89.
18 Ibid., 65–66.
19 Congar, Yves OP, I Believe in the Holy Spirit, vol. 1 (New York/London: Seabury, 1983), 45.Google Scholar