Merry, I have a good friend that works for Tulane. She would be a good potential source of info, at least about Tulane. I also have a friend here whose daughter was enrolled at Tulane back in August. She returned a couple of weeks ago when school reopened. She is more of a liberal arts major. What I do know is that Tulane has streamlined or dropped at least temporarily many programs, especially graduate programs. This is something you should check into closely. I assume Loyola may have or will make similar changes, albeit on a smaller scale. The Tulane medical school issue is the one I am worried about. There were 180 clinical faculty laid off. The hospital where Tulane docs (Charity and University Hospital) worked were very damaged. I understand Tulane Medical Center (hospital) is scheduled to open soon on a limited basis.
As your son is just starting on this, it is hard to project what will be available when he is ready to start med school.
http://www2.tulane.edu/tulanian/ read the one called from survival to renewal. This is a link to the Tulane site that has some info.
Much of the med school staff was laid off recently. I am not sure what this means for the future of the med school. I will pose that question to my friend. I know she thinks a lot of Tulane. In addition to working there, her son will most probably attend there this fall if the school of Public Health survives (still up in the air, apparently.)
I don't know much about Loyola. One of the guys I used to work for graduated from there but that was eons ago.
I also have a niece who graduated from LSU med school and has finished her rotations. She might know a bit about the situation with Tulane as well.
I'll try and contact them and send you a pm.
Congrats on your son's scholarship.
I can see some upside of being in New Orleans during the next 4 years. There is so much to do, and it might afford an excellent learning experience.
Lodging there offcampus continues to be iffy and very costly. I imagine more students will end up remaining on campus for multiple years instead of moving to an apartment.