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Wind Ensemble

Date

Time

Cost

Free

Dr. Serena Weren conducts the Loyola Wind Ensemble.

Event is free and open to the public.

Loyola follows all City of New Orleans guidelines regarding COVID-19 and indoor music venues.

All in a Day's Work

Date

Time

Cost

Free

All in a Day’s Work is an original movement-based exploration about the history of the American Dream. AIADW investigates the journey of various Americans to achieve the mystical goal, and the challenges encountered along the way. ÌýDirected by Justin Prescott.

Ìý

Tickets (presale and cash preferred):

$5 - General Admission

Ìý

Group Rates Available for all Productions

Call 504-865-2074 for Ticket Information

Department of Theatre Arts and Dance:Ìý504-865-3840

Concert Band

Date

Time

Cost

Free

Dr. Serena Weren conducts the Loyola Concert Band.

Event is free and open to the public.

Loyola follows all City of New Orleans guidelines regarding COVID-19 and indoor music venues.

Zahria Sims, saxophone

Date

Time

Cost

Free

Junior recital featuring Zahria Sims, saxophone.

Event is free and open to the public.

Loyola adheres to all City of New Orleans' protocols regarding COVID-19 and indoor music venues.

Loyola Law Ranks First Among Louisiana Law Schools for July 2021 Bar Exam

By Loyola University on Thu, 11/04/2021 - 13:07

Lagniappe Days

Date

Time

Cost

Free

From November 16 through 30, the Alumni Association will host Lagniappe Days: Loyola’s Community Impact Campaign. During Lagniappe Days, you can support vital student and faculty causes that have a direct impact on our community. Loyola has provided quality Jesuit education for over a century, but its impact goes far beyond the classroom. Our faculty and students provide and participate in a range of programs and causes that improve the quality of life in New Orleans and the Gulf Coast region.

Biology Research Seminar

Date

Time

Cost

Free

Please join us for a presentation given by Dr. Rebeca de Jesus Crespo, College of Coast and the Environment, Louisiana State University. Ìý

Poetic Form and Racialized Environments in The Faerie Queene

Date

Time

Cost

Free

This talk turns to Edmund Spenser’s epic-romance,ÌýThe Faerie Queene, to inquire how literary forms transform the concept of nature into an engine of race-making. Dr. Debapriya SarkarÌýattends to the poetic apparatus that dehumanizes marginalized figures, turning them into symbol and allegory by linking them to wasted and unsalvageable environments.