The Jesuit Case for a More Inclusive Definition
by Jessica Morley in Features
Ask any student on the Gonzaga campus about our University's mission, and you are likely to hear a response colored with talk about the promotion of social justice. Since my initiation as a Zag I have heard constant mention of social justice and Gonzaga's commitment to educating and forming students to be men and women for others who will contribute to the formation of a more just world.
What You Didn't Know About Roe v. Wade
by Matt Kiernan in Features
January 22, 1973 was a day that changed the character of the United States forever, and my guess is that many of you have no idea what I'm talking about. It wasn't a war; it wasn't that the world trade center became the tallest building; it wasn't even the Watergate scandal.
by Matt Kiernan in Features
Who, really, can determine when life starts? If a child is not wanted, is it not better that it is never born at all? And of course everyone should have the right to choose, right? Wrong, wrong and wrong. Since the 1973 case Roe v. Wade, the pro-choice camp has used these and other illogical and immoral arguments to allow over 50 million babies to be aborted.
the real history of Valentine's Day
by Hally DeBroeck in Features
Whether we dread the day known to us as Singles Awareness Day, or look forward to the opportunity to spend quality time with our significant other, Valentine's Day is coming. But who - we might ask - is behind all the cards, chocolates, and flowers? No, not a secret admirer.