Mulch Madness
Students participate in Back the Bend service project.
“I think we have to recalibrate all of our political thinking these days and conventional wisdom does not apply when one is talking about Donald J. Trump,” says Bob Schmuhl.
Now running 40 years strong, the Revue celebrated its most recent edition in sold-out performances on Feb. 11, 12 and 13.
But beginning in fall 2016, the dynamic of residence halls on campus will shift.
In the Oct. 30, 1964 issue of Scholastic, students debated a change to the dorm system.
As we begin the month of March, we realize that our tenure in office is coming to a close.
Emmanuel Katongole is an associate professor of theology and peace studies and a priest.
Rohr’s, the bar and grill inside the Morris Inn, hosted a student event called “Bites and Brews with Bell’s Brewery” on Feb. 17.
Tick tock. Tick tock. Tick tock.
As Scholastic interviewed and evaluated each ticket to decide which one we believe is most qualified for the role of student government president and vice president, we realized that each ticket was very distinct from the others in its focus and ideas.
A press release sent to campus media outlets by the Student Government Election Committee of the Judicial Council says the council found the Corey Robinson-Becca Blais ticket in violation of an election law that prohibits early campaigning.
Platform Focus: Transparency, Deliverability, Unity
Platform Focus: Innovation & Tradition
Platform Focus: Mental Health
The 2015 Notre Dame football team seemed to be following an all too familiar path.
This fall, Notre Dame launched a new program that gives people a concrete way of identifying and differentiating between instances that promote a culture of violence and instances that challenge the culture.
As spread through a recent email to students, the review committee has just released a draft report of its recommendations. The recommendations do not include the Moreau First Year Experience course, which has been deemed too new to currently review.
GALA-ND/SMC, the Gay and Lesbian Alumni of Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s College, recently announced a fundraising campaign to finance the first ever scholarship for qualified LGBT students at Notre Dame and Saint Mary’s.
During that era, students could stay on campus during the ten-day break, far shorter than our modern winter break.
During our Thanksgiving break, Fr. Jenkins asked the Notre Dame community and our nation to avoid “turning our backs on our Syrian brothers and sisters, but instead — and in the name of Our Lady of Refuge — share with them our bounty and protection.”
Debate across America is swirling around this central question related to the Syrian refugee crisis. President Obama has said that 10,000 refugees will be permitted entry into the U.S. over the next year.
Christmas truly is the most wonderful time of the year. Anyone who disagrees provides justification to be called a Grinch.
Pope Francis’ homily embodied how God loves all people, and that families should be prioritized and cherished because “our families, our homes, are true domestic churches.”
An interview with the College Democrats officers: Grace Watkins, President, and Andrew Galo, Secretary.
Mark Gianfalla was the President of the College Republicans at Notre Dame for two years. A finance major and 2015 graduate, Gianfalla appeared on “The O’Reilly Factor” on Fox News last year and was vocal about his conservative ideology in debates and conversations around campus.
Fitzgerald is one of a slowly growing number of students on campus with service dogs. Service dogs meet a variety of specific student needs. There are guide dogs, hearing dogs, mobility dogs, medical alert dogs, psychiatric service dogs and autism dogs.
The number of eligible millennial voters will outnumber baby boomers for the first time in American history in the upcoming national election cycle. This places the brunt of the electoral power directly into the ballots of Notre Dame students.
The professors, who all came from disadvantaged socioeconomic backgrounds, spoke with candor about their upbringings, how they made their way through college to academia and, specifically, to Notre Dame.
But the dining halls can, and should, go further to become even more sustainable; they should eliminate the use of dining hall trays completely.
Just ask any student who had to endure going trayless for a day — students need trays, and going without them is inefficient and messy.
All that is left to tell is who exactly will win this 2016 election. In this 1932 issue of Scholastic, students voiced their opinions on what kind of man they thought would do that: a man that would come to be held as one of the greatest in the country’s political history.