Patrick Bordnick, dean of the School of Social Work, says ‘Sesame Street’ helps reduce stigma around health and social issues, making people more comfortable to have their own conversations which may lead them to seek support.
The New Orleans Center for the Gulf South at Tulane, in partnership with Haus der Kulturen der Welt and the Max Planck Institute for the History of Science, Berlin, is hosting "Anthropocene River Campus: The Human Delta," a weeklong educational event that examines the Mississippi region. The event will be held from Nov. 10 - 16 at several locations on campus and in New Orleans. The event is the culmination of a year-long study of the Mississippi River and will feature talks, seminars, presentations and public programming. Additional sponsors of the event are Tulane’s School of Liberal Arts and the ByWater Institute. For a full list of daily events, click here.
Cell and Gene Bruce Bunnell, PhD, director of the Tulane Center for Stem Cell Research Regenerative Medicine, professor in the Department of Pharmacology, and Tulane National Primate Research Center faculty member, writes a guest column about allogeneic mesenchymal stem cells.
EMS World Tulane EMS has a total of 54 members who handle a call volume of more than 550 a year.
Politifact Stephen Griffin, Tulane law professor, says it’s up to the Senate to decide whether or not to bar an impeached president from holding office in the future.
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