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Michael Swan, The Catholic Register

Michael Swan, The Catholic Register

Michael is Associate Editor of The Catholic Register.

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{mosimage}TORONTO - ThereƵapp a job opening at the University of St. MichaelƵapp College. The collegeƵapp board of governors has tried to replace retired president Richard Alway before, but this time heƵapp really gone and the governors don’t have the option of extending Alway one more time.

ThereƵapp a similar story brewing at OttawaƵapp bilingual Saint Paul University, where attempts to replace rector Fr. Dale Schlitt have foundered, again.
{mosimage}Dr. Evil has a secret, and heƵapp itching to tell.

For eight years, Prof. David Seljak has been teaching one of the most popular courses at . The course is often called . Ever since late in the summer of 2000 when Seljak covered campus lamp posts and bulletin boards with posters advertising “Evil” in 240 point Arial Bold type, the religious studies professor has been able to attract as many as 1,000 students a year to his course. He often has to turn students away because he simply can’t fit any more into the lecture hall.

{mosimage}Twenty of 31 full-time faculty at have signed union cards and expect to form a legal bargaining unit with a secret ballot vote before the end of March.

St. JeromeƵapp president Fr. David Perrin would not comment on whether the formation of a union would be good or bad for the university.

“This is a labour relations issue. I can’t comment,” he said.

{mosimage}Faculty at WaterlooƵapp St. JeromeƵapp University have voted no confidence in the schoolƵapp president and have begun talks with the Canadian Association of University Teachers about forming a union.

The crisis at the Catholic liberal arts college affiliated with the University of Waterloo began with the mass resignation of the St. JeromeƵapp chaplaincy team just before Christmas.

{mosimage}ThereƵapp plenty of blame to go around in the furor at , and itƵapp going to take the Christian value of forgiveness to get the small, Catholic liberal arts college back on track, according to a consultant who spent two months investigating the universityƵapp troubles.

“The Gospel values that are included in the mission statement are a very good reference point for everybody in this particular exercise. Some part of that involves good Christian value of forgiveness,” Ken Snowdon told The Catholic Register.


{mosimage}Dr. Michael Higgins has set himself free from the daily struggles of running a university.

One of CanadaƵapp best known Catholic writers and intellectuals, Higgins has tendered his resignation after three years as president of .

{mosimage}TORONTO - The new Regis College won’t be finished when theology students arrive for academic orientation Sept. 10, and even when construction wraps up before the end of September the academic home of the Jesuits won’t really be finished. However, Regis Dean Fr. Gordon Rixon couldn’t be happier.

Weaving among the trucks in the driveway as he emerges from the dust and occasional thump of construction crews, Rixon is as calm and contented as a monk in a garden.

{mosimage}Catholic higher education is about to establish a new outpost in Peterborough.

Peterborough Bishop Nicola DeAngelis has collected $1.6 million in donations and entered into talks with Trent University in hopes of offering university level liberal arts courses at Sacred Heart parish in downtown Peterborough.

The first non-credit courses at Sacred Heart College could be up and running as soon as this September.

AjaTORONTO - With the dawn of the era of all-day Kindergarten for children three-and-a-half to six years old, Ontario will begin to see how much difference an early introduction to formal learning can make in the life of a child.

The program will begin in fewer than 600 schools province-wide when the school year dawns following Labour Day, but should be available in all elementary schools by 2015-2016. By September 2011 up to 50,000 pupils will be enrolled in upwards of 800 schools.
September 17, 2007

Halton board chair resigns

{mosimage}As the prepares to launch into the second year of its mandate, trustees are still huddling with private consultants in hopes of articulating a common vision and priorities.