This issue’s editorial focuses on the disturbing trend of making marriage into a commodity.
Notre Dame philosophy professor Gary Gutting, not Pope Francis, should rethink abortion.
The ninth annual Edith Stein Project was a resounding success. Here are ten reasons why.
Caroline Reuter and Madeline Gillen, co-chairs for the Edith Stein Project, describe this year’s conference schedule and encourage students and staff to attend.
2014 will a big year for marriage in America—for better or for worse. There is no time like the present to commit yourself to defending marriage in the new year.
2013 was a good year for the Irish Rover, and 2014, with the generous support of the Rover‘s readership, can be even bigger.
Madeline Gillen reflects on the Notre Dame, its student body, the many ways in which students can learn and live the faith at Notre Dame and the “inestimable advantage” that the university enjoys over its Ivy League counterparts.
Notre Dame has an institutional duty to emphasize more fully and publicly its conviction that the Church’s teachings about marriage are true.
The Irish Rover has been awarded the Publication of the Year by the Collegiate Network, a subsidiary of the Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
By now you will have noticed that the Rover is sporting a new design layout.
The man behind the curtain responsible for these design and graphic changes is Adam Conrath, a freshman whom we are now privileged to have contributing to the Rover as a member of the layout and production team. Adam brings a considerable amount of expertise and experience to newspaper layout design and style, and together he and I have agreed upon a new look that better comports with contemporary newspaper design standards that are at once informative, straightforward and aesthetically attractive.