91ĘÓƵ

ND in the News: November 2021

October 2021 November 2021 December 2021

  1. Tim O’Malley, academic director of the University of Notre Dame’s Center for Liturgy, noted that Catholic liturgies don’t often rely on pronouns for God — though they are masculine, when present — and they frequently implement the trinitarian language of Father, Son and Holy Spirit.

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    Tim Omalley Expert

    Timothy O'Malley

    McGrath Institute for Church Life

  2. Father Joe Corpora of the University of Notre Dame warns: “We’ll never get another chance like this again.” 

  3. His federal tax obligations could be as high as 40% on proceeds from some of the sales, said Brad Badertscher, an accounting professor at the University of Notre Dame.

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  4. University of Notre Dame alumnus Harry Fath and his wife, Linda, are donating $50 million to the Catholic institution, to be used exclusively for undergraduate financial aid. It is the largest gift in the university’s history.

  5. Audio

    Richard Garnett, a professor at Notre Dame Law 91ĘÓƵ, discusses the Supreme Court justices grappling with the religious rights of death-row inmates in the execution chamber.

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    Rick Garnett

    Richard Garnett

    Notre Dame Law 91ĘÓƵ

  6. A $50 million gift to the University of Notre Dame to support undergraduate financial aid is the largest of its kind in the school's history, officials said Tuesday.

  7. Audio

    Father John Paul Kimes of the University of Notre Dame is an expert in canon law, which governs life within the church. 

  8. Timothy P. O’Malley, Ph.D., is the director of education at the McGrath Institute for Church Life at the University of Notre Dame.

    ND Experts

    Tim Omalley Expert

    Timothy O'Malley

    McGrath Institute for Church Life

  9. Video

    Joshua Eisenman, an associate professor at the University of Notre Dame, joins CBSN to discuss.

  10. Though this point was not necessarily at the center of a discussion titled “Dignity in the Dock” at Notre Dame’s Fall Conference organized by the De Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture, the evolution of both Pope Francis and his predecessor’s policies on clerical sexual abuse dominated the Q&A session.

  11. Though he didn’t mention the matter of Communion, his homily on Thursday opening the annual Fall Conference organized by the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture at the University of Notre Dame turned around the Church’s “increasingly unpopular duty to issue a cry in defense of the most poor and vulnerable: Migrants, the unborn, the disabled, the infirm, and the elderly.”