Tulane University is 安卓海外加速器永久免费 as it works to reopen following Hurricane Katrina.
Students are scattered around the country with some withholding tuition checks. The medical school's 325 doctors have no billing system to collect their fees. Some of the university's most prestigious research -- including the world's longest-running study of heart disease in children -- is in shambles.
While the school is trying to play hardball with its athletes, faculty-looting competitors, and students, it is also working hard to play a leading role in the New New Orleans. When New Orleans announced that it would not open its elementary schools this year, Tulane decided to open its own for faculty and staff children. Tulane is a microcosm for a lot of decisions that New Orleans is facing.
Tulane's leaders also fret about rebuilding a mostly white enclave of schools and services in a predominantly black city. Founded in 1834, Tulane has "always stood aloof from direct intervention in New Orleans's problems," says Clarence Mohr, a professor at the University of South Alabama and co-author of a history of Tulane.
The hurricane could change that. Dr. Cowen says Tulane's new grade school will be open to neighborhood children. And Tulane has offered use of its campuses to New Orleans's historically black Xavier and Dillard universities, which were heavily damaged by Katrina. Tomorrow, Dr. Cowen plans to tour Tulane's campus for the first time since the hurricane, and says he invited Dillard's president to join him.
Some of the school's losses will be permanent and profound, like the 33 years worth of blood samples collected as part of a research project into adolescent heart disease called the Bogalusa Heart Study that were "cooked" when power to the freezers holding them failed. Like everything else in New Orleans, Tulane will start over with a few things salvaged, pain for the lost, and the challenge of coming up with a whole new way of doing things.
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