Time: 12:30 pm to 2 pm
Contact: Tori Luwisch · valuwisc@loyno.edu · 504-861-5563
Location: College of Law, Room 405
Loyola University New Orleans College of Law &
The Morris Bart Lecture Series Presents
Professor Jerome M. Organ
Being Purposeful in Fostering Professional Identity Formation: Why it is Important and Why it is a Challenge
Thursday, November 12, 2015
College of Law, Room 405
12:30 - 2:00 PM
A light lunch will be served after the lecture.
This event is free and open to the public.
Jerry Organ is Professor of Law and Associate Director of the Holloran Center for Ethical
Leadership in the Professions at the University of St. Thomas School of Law in
Minneapolis, MN, where he also served as Associate Dean for Academic Affairs from
2005-2009. His research has recently focused on professional identity formation and on
understanding substance use and mental health issues among law students. He also writes frequently on issues of transparency in financial aspects of the decision to attend law school – addressing both scholarship programs for students and employment and salary data of graduates – along with tracking application and enrollment trends for law schools. He frequently posts his analyses and observations on The Legal Whiteboard. He presently serves as a member of the Data Policy and Collection Committee of the ABA’s Section of Legal Education and Admissions to the Bar.
Time: 12:30 pm to 1:30 pm
Contact: Elizabeth Rainey · earainey@loyno.edu · 865-3595
Location: Student Success Center, MA112
University Ministry staff will lead a discussion on Ignatian strategies that can be used in the classroom and to maintain balance and focus.
Time: 7:30 pm to 8:30 pm
Contact: CMFA Box Office · tickets@loyno.edu · 504-865-2074
Location: Roussel Performance Hall, 2nd Floor, Comm./Music Complex
Loyola University Concert Band
Free and Open to the public
Time: 8 pm to 9 pm
Contact: Tom Ryan, Director of LIM · tfryan@loyno.edu · (504) 865-2069
Location: Webinar is Online
A New Perspective.
Presented byJuan-Lorenzo Hinojosa, Founder of Solidarity Bridge, a non-profit organization that trains and equips medical communities in Bolivia and Paraguay.
Time: 8 pm to 9 pm
Contact: Connie Rodriguez · rodrigue@loyno.edu · 865.2287
Location: Whitney Bank Presentation Room
A Lecture by
Dr. Kenneth Harl
Department of History
Tulane University
Thursday, November 12, 2015
Whitney Bank Presentation Room
Thomas Hall
8 pm
free admission and free parking on campus
Co-sponsored by the Office of the Provost, the Department of Classical Studies and the New Orleans Society of the Archaeological Institute of America
Contrary to popular perceptions, Scandinavians of the Viking Age often trade more than raided. Coins and archaeological finds, in tandem with contemporary literary sources reveal the economic, social, and political impact of overseas trade that transformed Scandinavia between the ninth and eleventh centuries. Find out how the widespread use of coins and development of towns facilitated commerce along the “Northern Trade Arc,” stretching from Dublin to Constantinople. These new market towns such as Birka and Hedeby were vital for the emergence of territorial kingdoms, and the Scandinavians entered the wider community of Christian Europe.