In its 24th season, the New Orleans Shakespeare Festival at Tulane University aims to reach underserved communities including homeless shelters and a prison.
The A.B. Freeman School of Business recently hosted an intensive international seminar that drew students from China, Colombia, France, Germany, Italy and Lithuania.
The David Vitter Congressional Papers have become the latest acquisition of the Louisiana Research Collection (LaRC) at Tulane University, joining the papers of dozens of Louisiana political figures from Huey P. Long to Lindy Boggs.
The Spark Residential Learning Community will bring together first-year women to build and engage in creative, intellectual and social justice communities at Tulane, in New Orleans and beyond.
Tulane University alumna Jane Wolfe says that religious studies changed her outlook on life. The program returned to campus this semester thanks to her gift to the School of Liberal Arts.
Almost 60 students rode for 20 hours from New Orleans to Washington, D.C., on Saturday to take part in the unprecedented international march for women’s rights.
Michelle Haberland, author of Striking Beauties: Women Apparel Workers in the U.S. South, 1930-2000, is the recipient of the 2016 H. L. Mitchell Award from the Southern Historical Association.
A panel of prominent scholars and commentators, including husband-wife political strategists James Carville and Mary Matalin, will discuss the 2016 election and the prospects for governing in the years ahead Jan. 17 at Tulane University.