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NOTRE DAME, IN - THE CHALLENGE TO NOTRE DAME'S CATHOLIC IDENTITY
Dear alumni and other members of the Notre Dame
family:
We have sent to a number of other alumni a message
explaining the purposes of Project Sycamore that we
urge you to examine. In it we summarize, and provide
links to, significant information that we have not
before supplied.
Read our recent letter
For example, notwithstanding the warning of Dr. Mark
Roche, the Dean of the College of Arts and Letters, in
his 2005 Report that Notre Dame's mission as a
Catholic university will be threatened unless more
Catholics are added to the faculty, Dr. Roche has
acknowledged recently that, during the past year,
only 42% of new hires were Catholic. That Catholics
will soon be a minority seems almost certain now
unless there is quickly a major change in the hiring
practices of the past thirty years.
A plausible reason why Dean Roche's warning has
been ineffective is continued resistance by an
already highly secularized faculty. A comprehensive
study of the Notre Dame faculty, reported at a 2003
conference of the University's Center for Ethics and
Culture, disclosed that a solid majority is opposed to
any hiring preference for scholars on the basis of
their Catholic faith. They believe, rather, that hiring
should be based only on "the highest level of
academic promise or prominence,” and they are
opposed to delaying the filling of positions in order to
find Catholics meeting this standard.
This is doubtless what a long-time professor of
philosophy had in mind when he said:
"The real problem is that the hiring policies of the last
thirty years have given us a faculty, especially in the
humanities and sciences, that is more and more
devoid of Catholic sensibilities . . .. Father Jenkins
sincerely wants to do something about it. The
question is whether he will be able to. There is no
group of people harder to deal with than entrenched
university faculty."
We discuss all of this, and more -- including problems
with the curriculum -- in the letter to other alumni
that you can examine through the link provided
above.
If you share our concerns but have not yet joined our
petition, we remind you again to do so, and we urge
you also to let others know about Project Sycamore.
A convenient forwarding tool is provided on our
home page. And of course we welcome contributions
to take care of the costs of this
enterprise, which we hope will develop into a
permanent association of those committed to the
protection of the Catholic identity of Notre
Dame.
We thank you for your interest and welcome your
support and comments.
Sincerely,
Project Sycamore Steering Committee
Richard V. Allen (’57, ’58)
Dr. Daniel M. Boland (’56, ’61)
Timothy M. Dempsey (’89)
William H. Dempsey (’52)
Dr. John A. Gueguen, Jr. (’56, ’58)
George L. Heidkamp (’52)
Amelia Elizabeth Marcum (’04)
Joseph A. Reich, Jr. (’57)
Dr. Susan Biddle Shearer (’88)
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