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Arts & CultureCatholic Book Club
James T. Keane
A novel, a memoir and a history of men's Catholic collegiate basketball were the three latest selections for the Catholic Book Club.
Arts & CultureLast Take
Shannen Dee Williams
Writing the first full history of Black Catholic women religious in the United States, Shannen Dee Williams experienced the gamut of human emotions.
Timothy L. Porter, who in 1964 became the second African American to graduate from Loyola Blakefield, is picture with his family at the schools “Black, Blue and Gold” exhibit, which commemorates Black alumni (photo: Donovan Eaton).
FaithJesuit School Spotlight
J.D. Long García
Kenneth Montague became the first African-American student at Loyola in 1956. He “opened the door for others to follow.”
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Greg Boyle, S.J.
It was after this moment, 30 years ago, that chiefs of police, beginning in Los Angeles and spreading everywhere, started to say, “We cannot arrest our way out” of this.
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Sam Sawyer, S.J.Patrick Gilger, S.J.
The church’s passion for justice arises not only from its moral certainty, but even more from its solidarity with those who are suffering.
Politics & SocietyFeatures
Francis J. Beckwith
It is difficult for a thoughtful Catholic to separate the wheat from the chaff in assessing secular social movements and causes. But we owe it to each other to try.