Posted inHigher Education

Emory will be tuition-free for students whose families earn $200,000 or less

Students whose families earn $200,000 or less will attend Emory University tuition-free starting in fall 2026. This transformative scholarship, Emory Advantage Plus, represents a significant expansion of the university’s financial aid program and continues Emory’s longstanding commitment to support talented students by making a preeminent education more attainable.   All new and returning domestic undergraduate students who […]

Posted inColumns

Ocean Conservancy’s hallmark International Coastal Cleanup celebrates 40 years of collection — and not just trash

Ocean Conservancy held its 40th International Coastal Cleanup (ICC) effort on Sept. 20 in what it calls the “world’s largest beach and waterway cleanup effort.” Hundreds of thousands of volunteers took to their local beaches and waterways around the world to help clean up the trash that made its way there in a day of […]

Posted inGlobal Health & Development

Service Before Self

On 400 acres of scenic farmland in Fayetteville, Georgia, there is an inspiring organization dedicated to serving youth and veterans called Camp Southern Ground. Founded by GRAMMY award-winning artist Zac Brown, Camp Southern Ground offers residential summer camp experience for kids aged 7 to 17, and workforce and wellness transition programs to help veterans transition to […]

Posted inGlobal Health & Development

The Power of Partnership: Bridging the Gap in Healthcare Access Through Public/Private Collaboration

In today’s volatile healthcare environment, access to quality care is at even greater risk—especially for the most vulnerable among us. Charitable healthcare providers across the U.S. are under intense pressure: facing funding cuts, uncertainty around Medicaid distributions, and surging demand from patients in crisis. As these providers fight to do more with less, organizations like […]

Posted inGabi Hart

Behind the numbers: Atlanta leaders sound the alarm on hidden homelessness

On Thursday Sept. 10, over 120 Atlantans gathered in- person for the Atlanta Regional Housing Forum. A mix of developers, nonprofit leaders, corporate representatives, and advocates met at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church to grapple with a stark reality: homelessness is rising, families are struggling, and the housing crisis is deepening. The event was moderated by […]

Posted inGabi Hart

From zoning to electric vehicles, SART lays out Atlanta’s climate to-do list

The Sept. 12 Sustainability in Action Roundtable (SART) hosted by Southface Institute drew more than 30 attendees, from city officials and nonprofit leaders to housing executives, mobility experts and even comedians. The morning’s theme, “Infrastructure in a Sustainable City,” spotlighted how Atlanta and the broader metro region are navigating the intersection of growth, climate action […]

Posted inDelaney Tarr

Invest Atlanta gives another $1 million to keep Gaines Hall stable

Invest Atlanta approved another $1 million for the ongoing stabilization of historic Gaines Hall at its Sept. 18 board meeting, and officials said the struggling building is on track to be steady by 2027.  Gaines Hall, built in 1869, was the first permanent building on the Atlanta University campus, now Clark Atlanta University. It was […]

Posted inLatest News

Georgia Research Alliance celebrates 35 years at the Governor’s Mansion

For the first time in its 35-year history, the Georgia Research Alliance held its quarterly board meeting at the Governor’s Mansion on Sept. 18. Appropriately, the location meant the meeting was filled with reverence and symbolism. The meeting was unlike most GRA board meetings because it focused less on its operations and more on its […]

Posted inReporter's Notebook

Reporter’s Notebook: Delta’s ‘Century of Flight’, Bernie Marcus remembered, Pride announces headliners

Delta celebrates a ‘Century of Flight‘ Delta Air Lines packed the Fox Theatre Sept. 15 with the premiere of “A Century of Flight,” a documentary about the airline’s first 100 years. The premiere was followed by a conversation between the film’s director – Joshua Seftel, and Ed Bastian, Delta’s CEO. The surprisingly emotional documentary exposed […]

Posted inColumns, Common Chords, Megan Anderson

Courtney Barnett’s A Sea of Split Peas: Lo-fi charisma and kitchen-table cool

By the time A Sea of Split Peas was released in 2013, Courtney Barnett was a Melbourne guitarist and songwriter with a knack for making slacker storytelling sound like precision work. She’d played in garage bands, run her own label out of a spare bedroom, and cultivated a voice that could turn a trip to […]

Posted inAdrianne Murchison, Columns

Dr. Mehmet Oz discusses Medicaid and health data sharing at Atlanta conference

The Trump administration’s digital health system was a topic of discussion at the 12th annual Health Connect South conference, held Wednesday at the Georgia Aquarium. Dr. Mehmet Oz, director of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and former Health and Human Services Secretary Tom Price led a keynote conversation on Medicaid, work requirements, and […]

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