Hey You, Barbarian! Love Carefully!
While perusing a flea market booth where old photos, news clippings and other vintage paraphernalia were for sale
While perusing a flea market booth where old photos, news clippings and other vintage paraphernalia were for sale
Just yesterday, Michael Hichborn, host of our ALL Report, got roped into the unbelievable task of reviewing the new Max Baucus version of the health care reform bill.
American Life League is having a surprising effect on the health care reform debate. Media coverage of our activities has brought out a lot of good people and some people who are terribly confused.
I never met Jim Pouillon, but I have met several of his friends. Many of them have written poignant expressions of their sorrow. Among them is the one and only Cal Zastrow, whose heart was broken; and whose love for Pouillion and his family is sincere to the very depths of his being.
On August 26, the theologically dissident (and therefore misnamed) National Catholic Reporter published an interview conducted on August 12 with Archbishop Michael Sheehan of Santa Fe.
The National Sexuality Resource Center, a far-left, radical, sex-peddling project of San Francisco State University, recently launched a web site called coolaunt.org.
Eileen Smith’s daughter and grandchild were killed in Hyannis, Massachusetts, just two short years ago.
Judie Brown, president of American Life League and member of the Pontifical Academy for Life, is requesting that the Academy postpone a November conference on the ethics of organ transplantation entitled “A Gift for Life.”
The president of the United States will address a joint session of Congress tomorrow evening.
Webster tells us that the transitive verb “pillar” means “to provide or strengthen with or as if with pillars.” At the opposite end
There are many pro-life Americans who knew Robert Schindler far better than I, but I doubt there were many who respected him more than
Each of us who believe in the justice and mercy of God are called, as an act of charity, to pray for the repose of the soul of the deceased. However, there are some rubrics of decorum that should