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Student newspaper serving Tulane University, Uptown New Orleans

The Tulane Hullabaloo

Student newspaper serving Tulane University, Uptown New Orleans

The Tulane Hullabaloo

Student newspaper serving Tulane University, Uptown New Orleans

The Tulane Hullabaloo

tulane climate change

OPINION | Tulane is responsible for Hurricane Ida

Sahil Inaganti, Contributing Columnist December 8, 2021

Hurricane Ida caused catastrophic destruction as it ripped through Louisiana in August. Communities across Louisiana, particularly low-income communities and communities of color, were devastated by...

OPINION | Divestment conversation should follow Middlebury’s model

OPINION | Divestment conversation should follow Middlebury’s model

Bobby Becker, Contributing Columnist November 17, 2021

A growing number of student activists are pushing Tulane University to refinance their $3 billion endowment away from fossil fuels. These activists hope our school will follow in the footsteps of Harvard...

Tulane students, community members gather for global climate strike

Tulane students, community members gather for global climate strike

Sanjali De Silva, Senior Staff Reporter September 20, 2019

Today, more than a hundred students and community members gathered in Pocket Park to protest inaction on climate change. Hundreds of thousands of people around the world also partook in a global climate...

Tulane to take part in global climate strike

Tulane to take part in global climate strike

Sanjali De Silva, Senior Staff Reporter September 19, 2019

This Friday, students and community members will gather near the McAlister bell to join a worldwide climate strike. The Office of Sustainability has invited environmental groups to come together in an...

Some Tulane students and organizations planned a teach-in Oct. 18, hoping to educate community members about the potential negative effects associated with the Bayou Bridge Pipeline.

Students mobilize in response to proposed Bayou Bridge Pipeline

Lily Milwit, Senior Staff Reporter November 2, 2017

Thousands of members of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe garnered national attention last year when they organized large-scale protests against the building of the Dakota Access Pipeline in North Dakota....

Isle de Jean Charles has lost 98 percent of its land since 1955. Residents of the island, members of the Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw, have become climate refugees amid increasing land loss in the region.

Population displaced, culture affected by coastal land loss of Isle de Jean Charles

Sophia Mariani, Contributing Reporter October 25, 2017

Isle de Jean Charles, 75 miles south of New Orleans and inhabited by the Biloxi-Chitimacha-Choctaw tribe, has lost 98 percent of its land to the Gulf of Mexico's waters. The encroaching waters have eroded...

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