Library Guides
Media Services is home an international selection of current print newspapers and a rich microform collection of archival documents and historical newspapers including the Tulane Hullabaloo and the Times-Picayune, among many others. You can find microfilm/microfiche printers and scanners. Digital scanners enable reading, scanning, and printing microforms; editing scanned documents; saving documents to a flash drive; and sending files to an email account, Dropbox, or a Google Drive account.
Current print newspapers are shelved in alphabetical order in hanging files the central lobby area on the sixth floor of Howard-Tilton Memorial Library. If assistance is needed, please ask at the nearby Media Services Desk.
In addition to the current issues of both domestic & international print newspapers housed on the 6th floor of Howard-Tilton, both the Latin American Library and the Louisiana Research Collection maintain extensive print newspaper holdings in their respective subject areas.
Non-Rare Latin American Library printed newspapers, including both archival and current issues, can be located by doing a keyword search for "LAL Newspapers in Storage" in the Tulane University Libraries Catalog.
Rare Latin American Library printed newspapers can be located on their website or by contacting them.
To learn more about archival newspapers held by the Louisiana Research Collection, please contact them directly.
Tulane's beloved news source has changed names over the years. The first Tulane newspaper available in our collections is The College Spirit (1894-1897). In 1896, The Olive and Blue began publications and continued through 1906. From 1905 to 1919, the university newspaper was called Tulane Weekly. The Tulane Hullabaloo that we still know today first published January 21, 1920.
All of these are available for viewing on Microfilm. Specifically, the last cabinet on the right in the very first row of microfilm cabinets. Tulane Newspapers are all located in the 5th drawer from the top.
Despite the growing availability of newspapers through digital resources, there are still plenty of titles that are only available in print or on microfilm.
Newspapers from Louisiana are housed in the first row of microfilm cabinets and are arranged alphabetically.
A selection of local titles available to you here at Tulane University Libraries includes:
National and International Newspapers are housed in the second row of microfilm cabinets and are shelved alphabetically.
A selection of national and international titles available to you here at Tulane University Libraries includes: