Jake Kildoo gives an update on the Notre Dame Track and Field team, which is gearing up for the indoor season as the South Bend permacloud settles in.
Rich Hidy spends some time with Jeni Houser, a junior on the volleyball team here at Notre Dame.
Charlie Ducey takes an extended tour of the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center and tells the story of the chief donors, the DeBartolo family.
Maggie Duncan spends some time with Len Gish who has been part of the Notre Dame football family for an incredible 52 seasons.
Maggie Schmid reflects on her first year at Notre Dame and her summer spent volunteering with the Appalachia Service Project.
Kate Hardiman explains the recent switch from the Office of Residential Life to the Office of Community Standards and the new policies, which emphasize consistency in process over consistency in outcomes, and allow for rectors to handle incidents with more discernment.
The Rover Staff gives some advice to those who are still searching for classes to take next semester.
Executive Editor Lilia Draime reports on the administrative changes that have occurred over the last couple of years to confront the serious problem of sexual assault in the Notre Dame student body.
Professor Laura Hollis explains the importance of the wisdom tradition and that “wisdom is not ingrained. It is learned, and therefore must be handed down.” This is written as a response to the current shift in emphasis on cultural wisdom to that of legality, which has devalued wisdom.
Campus Editor Emeritus Elliot Argue takes an insightful look at the relationship between Catholicism and guilt through the lens of Evelyn Waugh’s character Julia Flyte in his Brideshead Revisited.