One Catholic college made the U. S. News & World Report lists of “most popular” among applicants and “most loved” by alumni and it is none of the ones the media like to cover—those institutions that could be called Catholic in Name Only (CINO).
Read the articlePro-life students expecting to find a haven in such institutions of higher learning find themselves sadly mistaken.
Read the articlePro-lifers who think they have found safe spaces in Catholic colleges and universities may want to visit the web sites of those institutions of higher learning.
Read the articleWhat can courts do that most Catholic colleges can’t? Take their employees off the job when they have a conflict of interest.
Read the articleCatholic League president Bill Donohue commented today on an article by Michael Sean Winters posted on the blog site of America magazine.
Read the articleOddly, even reporters on the education beat seem to have failed to grasp the significance of a meeting that took place 44 years ago of the Catholics they like to cover the most—the Kennedy family and Jesuit theologians.
Read the articleAlthough Catholic schools look good when compared with their public counterparts, they don’t fare as well in contrast to the way they used to be.
Read the articleLast Fall, the president of a Catholic college acknowledged a trend we have been highlighting for years.
Read the articleAnother religiously affiliated university trying to be diplomatic may be in danger of becoming Catholic in Name Only (CINO).
Read the articleHorowitz points the finger at a handful of professors who teach at Catholic colleges and universities in his new book The Professors.
Read the articleThose colleges and universities that seem to be vying for the chance to be Catholic in Name Only (CINO) may soon lose even that designation because Pope Benedict XVI has indicated in his writings that the Mother Church may release these institutions of higher learning to fend for themselves.
Read the articleFaith & Family magazine may have come up with a great way of determining whether schools that nominally share the religion of Pope Benedict XVI are actually Catholic in Name Only (CINO).
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