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ND-Saint Mary's marriages dwindling
Coeducation at Notre Dame has lessened the cross-highway marital pairings
of Saint Mary's and ND students.
An analysis by Paul Perl '00Ph.D. shows that the percentage of women
in each Saint Mary's graduating class marrying Notre Dame graduates rose
fairly steadily from 1950 until around 1972, the advent of coeducation.
At that point, more than 1 in 4 Saint Mary's graduates were taking their
vows with Notre Dame men.
However, that ratio plummeted to about 1 in 10 by the end of the decade
and, after leveling off in the 1980s, drifted lower still in the 1990s.
Part of the reason may be that there are simply fewer Notre Dame men
around to marry than before coeducation. Although total undergraduate
enrollment has remained fairly steady since the 1970s (roughly 6,000-8,000),
today only about half that number are men.
Perl, a research associate with the Center for Applied Research in the
Apostolate, a sociological research institute of the Catholic Church affiliated
with Georgetown University, also theorizes that grooms are switching to
Notre Dame women for brides at the expense of Saint Mary's women. But
so far he's been unable to gather the statistical information from Notre
Dame's alumni database to verify it.
-- Ed Cohen
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