.
Catholic
educator, author; born in Johnstown, Pa. He graduated from the Georgian
University in Rome (1958) and later taught at Stanford University
(1965--68), the State University of New York (1968--73), and other
schools. He wrote numerous books on Catholicism, identity, and spiritual
growth, and became an increasingly more prominent, and outspoken,
conservative critic of contemporary trends in American society. His
best-known works are The Experience of Nothingness (1970) and The Rise
of the Unmeltable Ethnics (1972). In Choosing Our King (1974) he
proposed that there should be two presidents of the United States--one
with the power, another with the ceremonial role.
|