
Infant Slain—Student Declares Baby Death ‘Favorite’ Option!
In a harrowing and heartrending tragedy that reveals the depths of our culture's detachment from the sanctity of human life, a 19-year-old University of Tampa student stands accused of murdering her own newborn—allegedly smothering the baby in a dorm bathroom before wrapping the lifeless body in a blood-soaked towel and hiding it in a trash can. Reports state the young woman, Brianna Moore, later coldly referred to infant murder as her “favorite” form of birth control in a chilling text exchange. The grisly scene, only discovered after horrified students heard a baby’s cries and found blood in their shared bathroom, sends a clarion call to America’s conscience. As prosecutors weigh charges including aggravated manslaughter of a child and child neglect, we must ask: what led this young soul so far astray—and how many more innocent lives will be discarded in a world that has lost reverence for the unborn? As Catholics, we must mourn for the child, pray for the mother's conversion, and redouble efforts to restore a true culture of life.


Augustine was bishop of Hippo, a Roman city that is now Annaba, Algeria. In his early 30s, he converted to Christianity, gave up his position as professor of rhetoric, became a bishop, and turned his home into a monastery. He served for more than 40 years. While he lay dying, Vandals destroyed his city but spared his library. His writings, which include Confessions and De Civitate Dei, deeply influenced Western Christianity. What now-extinct religion did he originally practice?
The first American citizen to be proclaimed a saint of the Roman Catholic Church,
When ash began to fall on the Colombian town of Armero, local authorities assured residents that it was safe to stay put, despite geologists' warnings to the contrary. It had been more than 140 years since the last serious eruption of the Nevado del Ruiz, known to residents as "the Sleeping Lion." That night, a lahar—a massive flow of mud and debris—swept down the side of the erupting volcano, destroying Armero. It was the worst natural disaster in Columbian history. How many people were killed?
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