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Wednesday, April 3, 2024
- 12:00 AM23h 59mStudent Toter Scavenger HuntFrom April 1-7, the Notre Dame Sustainability Office invites you to find as many recycling toters as possible on campus to win a prize for your dorm! Each form submission is one (1) point; one submission per toter ID. The dorm with the most submissions wins funding for their dorm! You must have either your face or your Notre Dame ID card in the photo with the toter to count. Already found a toter? Start making submissions here! Sample of recycling toters you can find on campus.
- 12:30 PM1h 15mNanovic Forum Lunch Lecture — "Diplomatic Thinking: Lessons in forming thinkers and leaders"Catherine Arnold OBE, the Master of St. Edmund's College at the University of Cambridge and former British Ambassador to Mongolia, will present the spring 2024 Nanovic Forum lecture. It's open to Notre Dame students, faculty, and staff, as well as the general public. This lunch lecture will occur during Ms. Arnold's stay as a Nanovic Forum Diplomat in Residence, during which time she will meet with Notre Dame community members and teach and advise students studying diplomacy in the Keough School of Global Affairs. Her lecture, entitled "Diplomatic Thinking: Lessons in forming thinkers and leaders," will tie diplomacy and education together through her unique perspective as a leader in both fields. Lunch will be available beginning at noon, while supplies last. About the Speaker Catherine Arnold serves as master of St. Edmund's College, University of Cambridge, a post she took in 2019. Before being named head of the college, Ms. Arnold served with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in the United Kingdom, with posts in Oman, Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan. In 2015, she was appointed as the British Ambassador to Mongolia, where she served until 2018. Following her ambassadorship, she led units within the FCO, including the Illegal Wildlife Trade Unit, and helped the UK secure its bid to chair the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26). About the Nanovic Forum Generously established by Robert and Elizabeth Nanovic, the Nanovic Forum’s mission is to bring Europe’s leaders from many fields to Notre Dame to explore, discuss, and debate the most pressing questions about Europe today. Learn more and see past speakers Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1h 15mNanovic Forum Lunch Lecture — "Diplomatic Thinking: Lessons in forming thinkers and leaders"Catherine Arnold OBE, the Master of St. Edmund's College at the University of Cambridge and former British Ambassador to Mongolia, will present the spring 2024 Nanovic Forum lecture. It's open to Notre Dame students, faculty, and staff, as well as the general public. This lunch lecture will occur during Ms. Arnold's stay as a Nanovic Forum Diplomat in Residence, during which time she will meet with Notre Dame community members and teach and advise students studying diplomacy in the Keough School of Global Affairs. Her lecture, entitled "Diplomatic Thinking: Lessons in forming thinkers and leaders," will tie diplomacy and education together through her unique perspective as a leader in both fields. Lunch will be available beginning at noon, while supplies last. About the Speaker Catherine Arnold serves as master of St. Edmund's College, University of Cambridge, a post she took in 2019. Before being named head of the college, Ms. Arnold served with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in the United Kingdom, with posts in Oman, Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan. In 2015, she was appointed as the British Ambassador to Mongolia, where she served until 2018. Following her ambassadorship, she led units within the FCO, including the Illegal Wildlife Trade Unit, and helped the UK secure its bid to chair the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26). About the Nanovic Forum Generously established by Robert and Elizabeth Nanovic, the Nanovic Forum’s mission is to bring Europe’s leaders from many fields to Notre Dame to explore, discuss, and debate the most pressing questions about Europe today. Learn more and see past speakers Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1h 15mNanovic Forum Lunch Lecture — "Diplomatic Thinking: Lessons in forming thinkers and leaders"Catherine Arnold OBE, the Master of St. Edmund's College at the University of Cambridge and former British Ambassador to Mongolia, will present the spring 2024 Nanovic Forum lecture. It's open to Notre Dame students, faculty, and staff, as well as the general public. This lunch lecture will occur during Ms. Arnold's stay as a Nanovic Forum Diplomat in Residence, during which time she will meet with Notre Dame community members and teach and advise students studying diplomacy in the Keough School of Global Affairs. Her lecture, entitled "Diplomatic Thinking: Lessons in forming thinkers and leaders," will tie diplomacy and education together through her unique perspective as a leader in both fields. Lunch will be available beginning at noon, while supplies last. About the Speaker Catherine Arnold serves as master of St. Edmund's College, University of Cambridge, a post she took in 2019. Before being named head of the college, Ms. Arnold served with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in the United Kingdom, with posts in Oman, Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan. In 2015, she was appointed as the British Ambassador to Mongolia, where she served until 2018. Following her ambassadorship, she led units within the FCO, including the Illegal Wildlife Trade Unit, and helped the UK secure its bid to chair the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26). About the Nanovic Forum Generously established by Robert and Elizabeth Nanovic, the Nanovic Forum’s mission is to bring Europe’s leaders from many fields to Notre Dame to explore, discuss, and debate the most pressing questions about Europe today. Learn more and see past speakers Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
- 12:30 PM1h 15mNanovic Forum Lunch Lecture — "Diplomatic Thinking: Lessons in forming thinkers and leaders"Catherine Arnold OBE, the Master of St. Edmund's College at the University of Cambridge and former British Ambassador to Mongolia, will present the spring 2024 Nanovic Forum lecture. It's open to Notre Dame students, faculty, and staff, as well as the general public. This lunch lecture will occur during Ms. Arnold's stay as a Nanovic Forum Diplomat in Residence, during which time she will meet with Notre Dame community members and teach and advise students studying diplomacy in the Keough School of Global Affairs. Her lecture, entitled "Diplomatic Thinking: Lessons in forming thinkers and leaders," will tie diplomacy and education together through her unique perspective as a leader in both fields. Lunch will be available beginning at noon, while supplies last. About the Speaker Catherine Arnold serves as master of St. Edmund's College, University of Cambridge, a post she took in 2019. Before being named head of the college, Ms. Arnold served with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) in the United Kingdom, with posts in Oman, Iraq, Iran, and Afghanistan. In 2015, she was appointed as the British Ambassador to Mongolia, where she served until 2018. Following her ambassadorship, she led units within the FCO, including the Illegal Wildlife Trade Unit, and helped the UK secure its bid to chair the 2021 United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP26). About the Nanovic Forum Generously established by Robert and Elizabeth Nanovic, the Nanovic Forum’s mission is to bring Europe’s leaders from many fields to Notre Dame to explore, discuss, and debate the most pressing questions about Europe today. Learn more and see past speakers Originally published at nanovic.nd.edu.
- 3:30 PM1hLecture: "Enabling and Accelerating Scientific Discovery with Generative AI"What do AlphaFold2, ESM1&2, ChatGPT, GPT-4, DALL-E, and a growing list of generative AI methods have in common? The word disruption comes to mind. Those of us who started our love affair with AI because we wanted to advance scientific enquiry and the human condition are familiar with disruptions. Through representative examples, Amarda Shehu, professor in the Department of Computer Science and associate dean for AI Innovation in the College of Engineering and Computing at George Mason University, will showcase her laboratory’s work on generative AI before and after deep learning. Sponsored by the Lucy Family Institute for Data & Society.
- 3:30 PM1hLecture: "Enabling and Accelerating Scientific Discovery with Generative AI"What do AlphaFold2, ESM1&2, ChatGPT, GPT-4, DALL-E, and a growing list of generative AI methods have in common? The word disruption comes to mind. Those of us who started our love affair with AI because we wanted to advance scientific enquiry and the human condition are familiar with disruptions. Through representative examples, Amarda Shehu, professor in the Department of Computer Science and associate dean for AI Innovation in the College of Engineering and Computing at George Mason University, will showcase her laboratory’s work on generative AI before and after deep learning. Sponsored by the Lucy Family Institute for Data & Society.
- 3:30 PM1hLecture: "Enabling and Accelerating Scientific Discovery with Generative AI"What do AlphaFold2, ESM1&2, ChatGPT, GPT-4, DALL-E, and a growing list of generative AI methods have in common? The word disruption comes to mind. Those of us who started our love affair with AI because we wanted to advance scientific enquiry and the human condition are familiar with disruptions. Through representative examples, Amarda Shehu, professor in the Department of Computer Science and associate dean for AI Innovation in the College of Engineering and Computing at George Mason University, will showcase her laboratory’s work on generative AI before and after deep learning. Sponsored by the Lucy Family Institute for Data & Society.
- 3:30 PM1hLecture: "Enabling and Accelerating Scientific Discovery with Generative AI"What do AlphaFold2, ESM1&2, ChatGPT, GPT-4, DALL-E, and a growing list of generative AI methods have in common? The word disruption comes to mind. Those of us who started our love affair with AI because we wanted to advance scientific enquiry and the human condition are familiar with disruptions. Through representative examples, Amarda Shehu, professor in the Department of Computer Science and associate dean for AI Innovation in the College of Engineering and Computing at George Mason University, will showcase her laboratory’s work on generative AI before and after deep learning. Sponsored by the Lucy Family Institute for Data & Society.
- 4:30 PM1h 15mLecture — "Fruit of the Earth and Work of Human Hands: Eucharist as (and) Integral Ecology"In the lecture, Emmanuel Katongole will offer the fifth in a six-part series called "The Only Solution is Love: The Eucharist and Catholic Social Teaching." This fifth lecture will highlight the connections between Eucharist and ecology with a view of making two interconnected claims, namely (1) that an adequate understanding of the Eucharist intensifies and shapes the Christian responsibility for the care of Our Common Home, and (2) that efforts for the care of our Common home are Eucharistic in more than a symbolic sense. They are truly a sacrament (sign and reality) of God’s love for the earth. Drawing from the work of Bethany Land Institute in Uganda, he will display the dynamic relationship between these two claims. For more information, please click here. Originally published at mcgrath.nd.edu.
- 4:30 PM1h 15mLecture — "Fruit of the Earth and Work of Human Hands: Eucharist as (and) Integral Ecology"In the lecture, Emmanuel Katongole will offer the fifth in a six-part series called "The Only Solution is Love: The Eucharist and Catholic Social Teaching." This fifth lecture will highlight the connections between Eucharist and ecology with a view of making two interconnected claims, namely (1) that an adequate understanding of the Eucharist intensifies and shapes the Christian responsibility for the care of Our Common Home, and (2) that efforts for the care of our Common home are Eucharistic in more than a symbolic sense. They are truly a sacrament (sign and reality) of God’s love for the earth. Drawing from the work of Bethany Land Institute in Uganda, he will display the dynamic relationship between these two claims. For more information, please click here. Originally published at mcgrath.nd.edu.
- 4:30 PM1h 15mLecture — "Fruit of the Earth and Work of Human Hands: Eucharist as (and) Integral Ecology"In the lecture, Emmanuel Katongole will offer the fifth in a six-part series called "The Only Solution is Love: The Eucharist and Catholic Social Teaching." This fifth lecture will highlight the connections between Eucharist and ecology with a view of making two interconnected claims, namely (1) that an adequate understanding of the Eucharist intensifies and shapes the Christian responsibility for the care of Our Common Home, and (2) that efforts for the care of our Common home are Eucharistic in more than a symbolic sense. They are truly a sacrament (sign and reality) of God’s love for the earth. Drawing from the work of Bethany Land Institute in Uganda, he will display the dynamic relationship between these two claims. For more information, please click here. Originally published at mcgrath.nd.edu.
- 4:30 PM1h 15mLecture — "Fruit of the Earth and Work of Human Hands: Eucharist as (and) Integral Ecology"In the lecture, Emmanuel Katongole will offer the fifth in a six-part series called "The Only Solution is Love: The Eucharist and Catholic Social Teaching." This fifth lecture will highlight the connections between Eucharist and ecology with a view of making two interconnected claims, namely (1) that an adequate understanding of the Eucharist intensifies and shapes the Christian responsibility for the care of Our Common Home, and (2) that efforts for the care of our Common home are Eucharistic in more than a symbolic sense. They are truly a sacrament (sign and reality) of God’s love for the earth. Drawing from the work of Bethany Land Institute in Uganda, he will display the dynamic relationship between these two claims. For more information, please click here. Originally published at mcgrath.nd.edu.
- 5:00 PM2hSeries on Community Bridge-Building — "A Case for REPAIRations: Notre Dame and Its Neighbors"Join the Accomplice Program for a 2-day series on community bridge-building and how this speaks to the University of Notre Dame’s strategic framework. Schedule of Events Tuesday, April 2Hesburgh Auditorium 12:00 pm“History between Notre Dame and harmed communities”Presented by: Zada Ballew, Ph.D. candidate in history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Dé Bryant, professor of psychology and director of Social Action Project, Indiana University South Bend 1:00 pm“A case for reparations from Notre Dame”Presented by: Clark Power, professor, Program of Liberal Studies and executive director of Play Like a Champion, University of Notre Dame, and Gwendolyn Purifoye, assistant professor of racial justice and conflict transformation, Kroc Institute for International Peace StudiesModerated by: Laurie Nathan, professor of the practice of mediation and mediation program director, Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies Lunch will be available beginning at 11 am. Wednesday, April 3, 5:00 pmO’Rourke’s Public House1044 E. Angela Blvd., #103, South Bend, IN 46617 Meet at O'Rourke's for a walking tour of the Harter Heights neighborhood, led by Derrick Perry, high fidelity wraparound supervisor at Oaklawn Psychiatric Center, South Bend Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.
- 5:00 PM2hSeries on Community Bridge-Building — "A Case for REPAIRations: Notre Dame and Its Neighbors"Join the Accomplice Program for a 2-day series on community bridge-building and how this speaks to the University of Notre Dame’s strategic framework. Schedule of Events Tuesday, April 2Hesburgh Auditorium 12:00 pm“History between Notre Dame and harmed communities”Presented by: Zada Ballew, Ph.D. candidate in history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Dé Bryant, professor of psychology and director of Social Action Project, Indiana University South Bend 1:00 pm“A case for reparations from Notre Dame”Presented by: Clark Power, professor, Program of Liberal Studies and executive director of Play Like a Champion, University of Notre Dame, and Gwendolyn Purifoye, assistant professor of racial justice and conflict transformation, Kroc Institute for International Peace StudiesModerated by: Laurie Nathan, professor of the practice of mediation and mediation program director, Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies Lunch will be available beginning at 11 am. Wednesday, April 3, 5:00 pmO’Rourke’s Public House1044 E. Angela Blvd., #103, South Bend, IN 46617 Meet at O'Rourke's for a walking tour of the Harter Heights neighborhood, led by Derrick Perry, high fidelity wraparound supervisor at Oaklawn Psychiatric Center, South Bend Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.
- 5:00 PM2hSeries on Community Bridge-Building — "A Case for REPAIRations: Notre Dame and Its Neighbors"Join the Accomplice Program for a 2-day series on community bridge-building and how this speaks to the University of Notre Dame’s strategic framework. Schedule of Events Tuesday, April 2Hesburgh Auditorium 12:00 pm“History between Notre Dame and harmed communities”Presented by: Zada Ballew, Ph.D. candidate in history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Dé Bryant, professor of psychology and director of Social Action Project, Indiana University South Bend 1:00 pm“A case for reparations from Notre Dame”Presented by: Clark Power, professor, Program of Liberal Studies and executive director of Play Like a Champion, University of Notre Dame, and Gwendolyn Purifoye, assistant professor of racial justice and conflict transformation, Kroc Institute for International Peace StudiesModerated by: Laurie Nathan, professor of the practice of mediation and mediation program director, Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies Lunch will be available beginning at 11 am. Wednesday, April 3, 5:00 pmO’Rourke’s Public House1044 E. Angela Blvd., #103, South Bend, IN 46617 Meet at O'Rourke's for a walking tour of the Harter Heights neighborhood, led by Derrick Perry, high fidelity wraparound supervisor at Oaklawn Psychiatric Center, South Bend Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.
- 5:00 PM2hSeries on Community Bridge-Building — "A Case for REPAIRations: Notre Dame and Its Neighbors"Join the Accomplice Program for a 2-day series on community bridge-building and how this speaks to the University of Notre Dame’s strategic framework. Schedule of Events Tuesday, April 2Hesburgh Auditorium 12:00 pm“History between Notre Dame and harmed communities”Presented by: Zada Ballew, Ph.D. candidate in history at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, and Dé Bryant, professor of psychology and director of Social Action Project, Indiana University South Bend 1:00 pm“A case for reparations from Notre Dame”Presented by: Clark Power, professor, Program of Liberal Studies and executive director of Play Like a Champion, University of Notre Dame, and Gwendolyn Purifoye, assistant professor of racial justice and conflict transformation, Kroc Institute for International Peace StudiesModerated by: Laurie Nathan, professor of the practice of mediation and mediation program director, Kroc Institute for International Peace Studies Lunch will be available beginning at 11 am. Wednesday, April 3, 5:00 pmO’Rourke’s Public House1044 E. Angela Blvd., #103, South Bend, IN 46617 Meet at O'Rourke's for a walking tour of the Harter Heights neighborhood, led by Derrick Perry, high fidelity wraparound supervisor at Oaklawn Psychiatric Center, South Bend Originally published at kroc.nd.edu.