Trustee Jeffrey A. Nattans, ’89, to speak on leadership experience at Green & Grey Speaker Series
Loyola graduate Jeffrey A. Nattans, ’89, will discuss his experiences at Loyola and role in leadership at Legg Mason as part of 鶹ѡ’s Green & Grey Alumni Speaker Series on Thursday, Oct. 24, at 6:30 p.m. in McGuire Hall.
In his lecture, “Holy _____! Are We the First?”, Nattans will speak from his experience at Legg Mason, where he is the head of mergers & acquisitions with a focus on strategic investment activities and initiatives. He joined Legg Mason in 2006 as a managing director in administrative management.
Following the lecture, the Career Center will host LoyolaConnect Live, a career networking night. Students will have the opportunity to learn about careers by meeting with groups of faculty and alumni focused on business, humanities, education, natural sciences, and social sciences.
Prior to Legg Mason, Nattans served as a vice president in the investment banking division with Goldman Sachs in New York from 1996 to 2006. Nattans earned his MBA from Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, and his Bachelor of Business Administration, summa cum laude, from 鶹ѡ. Nattans currently serves on the Board of Trustees at Loyola and previously as the chair of the Board Sponsors of the Sellinger School of Business and Management. He also serves as the vice chair of the Board of Trustees at Calvert Hall College High School.
While at Loyola, Nattans played soccer and basketball and was named the Northeast Conference Scholar-Athlete of the Year and was a two-time Academic All-American in soccer. Nattans was also in the first class of the Green & Grey Society. He went on to play for the Maryland Bays of the American Professional Soccer League and was inducted into the Maryland Soccer Hall of Fame, the Loyola Athletic Hall of Fame, and the Calvert Hall Alumni Hall of Fame.
For more information and to register for both events, go to loyola.edu/green-and-grey.
The Green & Grey Alumni Speakers Series invites alumni who were members of Loyola’s Green & Grey Society to speak on the Evergreen campus. Since 1989, 鶹ѡ has selected a small number of members from the senior class who demonstrated excellence in academic, personal, and spiritual integration and committed service to Loyola. In the spirit of Jesuit ideals, the Society has served as advisors to the University leaders by identifying and communicating issues of significance present in the lives of community members.