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(02/16/26 5:00am)
On Feb. 13, the Not-So-Royal Shakespeare Company (NSR) gave a one-night-only performance of “The Taming of the Shrew” live on the Haggerty Family Stage in the Duncan Student Center. But this wasn’t a typical performance of the Bard’s work, for it featured a major twist: none of the actors had ever encountered the material nor knew the story going into it. The show was performed “Unrehearsed.”
(02/16/26 5:00am)
The Notre Dame lacrosse team took on the Marquette Golden Eagles in a road battle and came away with a 16-11 victory. It was the opening game of the year for the Irish, meaning they are 1-0 heading into their next contest. For Marquette, they fall to 0-2 after having played two ranked opponents, Michigan and Notre Dame, to start the year.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
Notre Dame women’s tennis has been in impressive form so far this season, and came into a busy week with high expectations to continue their good form. An Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) opener at Louisville before hosting Bellarmine would prove a tough test for the formidable Irish.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
Ever since I heard that Emerald Fennell, director of “Promising Young Woman” and "Saltburn,” was adapting “Wuthering Heights,” I was intrigued; as an English major, it’s practically a requirement for me to love the Brontë sisters. And though all the press releases over the past six to eight months made it clear that it would be a very loose adaptation, many people have been criticizing how far it strays from Emily Brontë’s novel. But even without the surface-level references to its source material, ”Wuthering Heights” stands on its own as a horrible movie, directionless and themeless, that meanders on until the very last moments.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
If you had any doubts about the Notre Dame women’s basketball team, think again.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
Danny Nelson finished skating through the fist-bump line and pumped his arm in the air one more time for good measure.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
Dear Father Dowd:
(02/16/26 5:00am)
Former Notre Dame quarterback Riley Leonard was golfing with his brothers when his phone rang. It was the call he had dreamed about since he first picked up a football.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
Despite a winter of historic snowfall in South Bend and Punxsutawney Phil proclaiming six more weeks of winter, it seems like things are finally looking up. The blue skies and warm, friendly sunshine we’ve had this week have made trekking to class in an Arctic blizzard seem like a distant memory. Campus is buzzing with the news that this Wednesday is forecast to reach a 60-degree high. It seems a bit premature to say we’re out of the trenches yet … but it’s hard not to feel optimistic after living under the permacloud for weeks on end.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
Love was undeniably in the air this weekend. But with Valentine’s Day in the rearview and the sun starting to emerge, after seeing your former-valentine in the light, you’ve realized they’re actually chopped. A breakup is in order. Nevertheless, you should let them down easy. But what makes or breaks a break-up conversation isn’t being open and honest, showing respect or choosing the right clichés. It’s the location you break the news. Choosing the wrong spot could leave your soon-to-be ex emotionally scarred and unable to love again. So, assuming the role of reverse cupid, I present the best breakup spots on campus.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
In the fall, Therese Mary Grojean Hall and Coyle Hall will be opened and dedicated as Notre Dame’s newest residence halls, replacing Pangborn Hall and Fisher Hall, respectively. The new residents of Grojean Hall will be students who currently live in Howard Hall, while those in Coyle are presently in Zahm Hall. Both projects began in the summer of 2024 and, after two years of work, are nearing completion.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
After delays confirming that Archbishop Fulton Sheen was not connected to clerical sexual abuse allegations, Pope Leo XIV has agreed to move forward with his beatification. A date has not yet been set, but it is expected to occur sometime this year.
(02/13/26 6:29am)
(02/13/26 5:43am)
On Tuesday afternoon, biographer Sam Tanenhaus spoke in McKenna Hall to discuss his bestselling biography of famed conservative political commentator William Buckley, entitled “Buckley: The Life and the Revolution That Changed America.” In his address, Tanenhaus highlighted the role of Buckley’s Catholic faith in forming his personal and political views, as well as his influence in curbing populist movements on the right.
(02/13/26 5:00am)
With Valentine’s Day around the corner, the on-campus flower shop Irish Gardens has been preparing for one of its busiest weeks of the year.
(02/13/26 5:14am)
Every February, conversations about love tend to drift toward flowers, chocolates and the familiar chaos of “cuffing season.” But in Notre Dame’s neuroscience department, love is being examined through a very different lens, one grounded in brain circuits, hormones and decades of behavioral research. This spring, postdoctoral research associate Shang Lee is teaching The Neuroscience of Love, a one‑credit directed readings course that asks students to look past the clichés and into the biology that shapes human attachment.
(02/13/26 5:00am)
With Notre Dame baseball opening its season this weekend, let’s preview its schedule, starting with non-conference matchups.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
As part of the College’s Courage to Act Campaign, anonymous donors have provided Holy Cross College with $2.25 million to build a new residence hall chapel and the Center for Campus Ministry in the Student Union, as announced on Tuesday.
(02/13/26 5:00am)
For the past few weeks, CrossPaths, a mysterious Marriage Pact dupe, has been flooding students’ emails, prompting them to fill out their match-making form in time for Valentine’s Day.
(02/16/26 5:00am)
Data journalist Mona Chalabi lectured for the 207th birthday of John Ruskin, presented by the John J. Reilly Center for Science, Technology and Values. The event took place in Leighton Concert Hall of the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center, with a hundred individuals present, including faculty, professors and students.