About the Author:
Rev. Edward A."Monk" Malloy, C.S.C, graduated from the University of Notre Dame, attended the seminary formation program for the Congregation of Holy Cross, and was ordained at Sacred Heart Church on the Notre Dame campus in 1970. He has been a member of Notre Dame's theology faculty since 1974 and received his Ph.D. in Christian Ethics from Vanderbilt University in 1975. He became Notre Dame's 16th president in 1987, after previously serving as university vice president and associate provost.
From Library Journal:
The "monk" of the title is not a distant ascetic but the Rev. Edward "Monk" Malloy, the 16th president of the University of Notre Dame. Here Malloy considers, in a first-person singular account, the state of American higher education, the mission of a specifically Catholic college, and the roles, responsibilities, and relations of today's college teachers and administrators. Repeating some of the themes of his Culture and Commitment: The Challenges of Today's University, Malloy is ironic but often not specific. Such an approach lets him make his general points clearly and often wisely, but it limits his discussion of particularly thorny questions (e.g., the relationship of a Catholic college to a diocesan bishop). The book is sure to be popular with Notre Dame graduates, and Part 2 of the book should be studied by any junior faculty member who would hope to receive tenure.ADavid I. Fulton, Coll. of Saint Elizabeth, Morristown, NJ
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