The Voice of the Conservative Movement at Wabash College

On Thursday, September 30, 2010, the Wabash Conservative Union, in association with the Wabash Newman Center, will host Robert P. George, professor of jurisprudence at Princeton University.  He will be presenting a talk entitled “Natural Law, God, and Human Dignity” at 8:00 p.m. in Baxter 101.
Professor George is at the forefront of the Pro-Life movement [...]

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Wickens was the first person in his immediate family to attend college. He went in without a solid plan but eventually settled on pursuing law. Although he claims that law school didn’t seem to be the first thing on his mind, his mother has always disagreed. “She always used to tell me that from the earliest age on, I would sit and read the Constitution, pull out books and read about it, and say I wanted to be a lawyer some day.” Not many kids do that anyway, but for a native of Ellettsville, Indiana, an average small Hoosier town, it must have seemed especially odd. Living in Ellettsville, Wickens said, he knew very little about law when he decided to venture into the world of litigation. “When I made that decision, I didn’t know a lawyer. In fact, my family used to think that if we knew a lawyer, that was a bad thing.”

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The Pro-Life movement in America is in a crisis. With the Freedom of Choice Act (FOCA) looming in the air and the perceived prospect that it may be enacted, the abortion debate has once again reached a feverish pitch. Faith-based groups have mobilized, websites such as FightFOCA.com have sprung up, and eighty-four Facebook groups dedicated [...]

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The year is 2033 and America as we know it is a keg of gunpowder, waiting to explode under the fiery pressure of civil unrest. Intent on chaos, a maniacal daemon provides the neces¬sary spark by igniting a vicious cycle of brutal murders and race riots. The bewildered United States government feebly walks on glass [...]

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The Christian Studies Center will serve the College, including students, staff, faculty, and alumni, by creating and supporting programs to promote Christian excellence at Wabash. We want to support Wabash Christians in both their intellectual and spiritual pursuits. Indeed, we believe that Christians anywhere and everywhere cannot separate the intellectual from the spiritual. To grow spiritually, you need to be challenged intellectually, but intellectual challenges work best when they are theologically informed and spiritually nourishing. The Wabash Christian Studies Center will unite hearts and minds in the pursuit of Christian excellence.

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