Time: 12 am to 9 pm
Contact: Box Office · tickets@loyno.edu · 504-865-2074
Location: Roussel Performance Hall, 2nd Floor, Comm./Music Complex
These two ensembles will perform some great music from the repertoire of the large jazz ensemble. Come and join directors Jason Mingledorff and Wess Anderson for an evening of big band jazz.
Earth Week 2018 April 16th – 20th Hosted by Loyola University New Orleans’ Environment Program, Earth Week 2018 will teach community members to celebrate the environment, as well as how to protect and sustain it. Most events are free and open to the public. Free parking in the West Road garage for all Earth Week events.
Visit our website for more details: http://www.loyno.edu/earthweek
Time: 12:30 pm to 1:30 pm
Contact: Mona Wolfe · rkwolfe@loyno.edu · 504-865-2288
Location: Monroe Hall Room 152
Join us for a presentation given by David B. Reeves, M.S. entitled, "The ecology of fishes and invertebrates associated with Louisiana's offshore oil and gas platforms."
David B. Reeves graduated Loyola University New Orleans with a bachelor's degree in biological sciences in 2012 and is currently with the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Gulf Restoration Team, Lafayette, LA.
Time: 2 pm to 3:30 pm
Contact: Behrooz Moazami · moazami@loyno.edu
Location: Monroe Library – Multimedia Room 2
The university’s Tenth Annual Student Peace Conference is an opportunity for students and visitors to further community discussion about hope, renewal and global peace. Titled “Breaking Walls,” this year’s one-week event is expected to be the largest student peace conference ever held at this Jesuit, Catholic University. The conference runs Tuesday, April 10 through Tuesday, April 17. All events will be held on Loyola’s main campus, 6363 St. Charles Ave. and are free and open to the public.
2 - 3:30 p.m. “Modernization and The Imagination”
Monroe Library – Multimedia Room 2
Mallory Dickerson (Loyola University New Orleans): “The National Effort to Modernize Istanbul”
Thanh Mai (Loyola University New Orleans): “The Internet Imagined as a State of Nature”
Barron Burmaster, Yuichiro Oguma, Julia Houha, Huntington Harton (Loyola University New Orleans): “Game for Peace”
Time: 4 pm to 6 pm
Contact: Behrooz Moazami · moazami@loyno.edu
Location: Monroe Library – Multimedia Room 2
The university’s Tenth Annual Student Peace Conference is an opportunity for students and visitors to further community discussion about hope, renewal and global peace. Titled “Breaking Walls,” this year’s one-week event is expected to be the largest student peace conference ever held at this Jesuit, Catholic University. The conference runs Tuesday, April 10 through Tuesday, April 17. All events will be held on Loyola’s main campus, 6363 St. Charles Ave. and are free and open to the public.
4 - 6 p.m. “Misconceptions of Cultural Idealism”
Monroe Library – Multimedia Room 2
Ember Jetter (Loyola University New Orleans): “Hostility & Hospitality in Israel”
Catherine van Es (University of Amsterdam): “Unveiling Empowerment”
Brittney Giardina (Loyola University New Orleans): “Culture Shock: The Cappella Palatina, Roger II, and Arguments on Irony”
Maddy Mulder (Loyola University New Orleans): “How the French Lycee System Became the Model for the Iranian Secondary Education System”
Madeline Fleming (Loyola University New Orleans): “Western Orientalist View vs. Reality: A Look at Harems and Temporary Marriage”
Time: 7 pm to 9 pm
Contact: Behrooz Moazami · moazami@loyno.edu
Location: Nunemaker Auditorium, 3rd Floor, Monroe Hall
The university’s Tenth Annual Student Peace Conference is an opportunity for students and visitors to further community discussion about hope, renewal and global peace. Titled “Breaking Walls,” this year’s one-week event is expected to be the largest student peace conference ever held at this Jesuit, Catholic University. The conference runs Tuesday, April 10 through Tuesday, April 17. All events will be held on Loyola’s main campus, 6363 St. Charles Ave. and are free and open to the public.
7 - 9 p.m. Presidential Lecture II: "Early Modern Globalization Through a Jesuit Prism: Potential Lessons for our Global Age."
Nunemaker Auditorium, Monroe Hall
José Casanova: Professor of Sociology and Theology, and senior fellow at the Berkley Center for Religion, Peace & World Affairs –Georgetown University