Sign up for Exclusive A.M. Headline Briefing

E-mail:


Georgia Quick Links
Georgia Time
Georgia Weather
Georgia Traffic
New Georgia Encyclopedia
Georgia Events Calendar

GEORGIA BUSINESS INSIGHT

Georgia's Top Five
Atlanta Journal-Constitution
Augusta Chronicle
Macon Telegraph
Columbus Ledger Enquirer
Savannah Morning News
more media links >

Have a news tip?
Did we miss a story? Tell us. Do you have a news tip but don't know who to give it to? We'll pass it on. Confidentiality guaranteed!

Contact the editor

Essential Links
Business/Consumer
Education
Government
Legal
Lifestyles
Media
Nonprofit
Transportation

News

 


May 11, 2008 – WSB TV - Atlanta   
Storms Knock Out Power Across Atlanta; Damage Homes
WSB reports that a Mother's Day storm moved through north Georgia early Sunday morning, knocking out power to thousands in metro Atlanta and causing severe damage in some areas. About 20,000 households were without power at one point, according to Carol Boatright of Georgia Power. The hardest hit areas appeared to be Forest Park and parts of central Atlanta. Crews fanned out across the area to repair downed lines and get electricity flowing again.

May 11, 2008 – Athens Banner-Herald   
Thomas tells grads of goal blocked by injustice
Blake Aued reports that U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, the fifth Georgian to serve on the high court, would have been the first black University of Georgia graduate if he'd had his way. Thomas wanted to be a Bulldog, but segregation stopped him, he said Saturday during his commencement address at Sanford Stadium.

May 11, 2008 – Atlanta Journal Constitution   
Thomas gives grads familiar advice
Jeffry Scott reports that U.S. Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas, the commencement speaker before the 2008 graduating class of the University of Georgia, said when he graduated from high school 41 years ago, attending UGA "was not an option" because schools in the state were still largely segregated. But then Thomas, who grew up in Pin Point, outside Savannah, told the approximately 3,500 graduating students gathered on the field at Sanford Stadium on Saturday that he was happy to be back at the school, where he gave the law school commencement address in 2003.

May 11, 2008 – Valdosta Daily Times   
Notes from Death Row: A reporter’s observations from an execution
EDITORS NOTE: The Valdosta Daily Times’ Dean Poling was the journalist tapped to serve as the media monitor for the May 6 execution of William Earl Lynd for the 1988 Berrien County murder of Virginia “Ginger” Moore. As monitor, he was granted access to preparations for Lynd’s execution as well as witnessed the execution. What follows are some of his impressions from the Georgia Diagnostic and Classification Prison, Jackson, which houses the state’s death chamber and death row.

May 11, 2008 – Georgia Times Union   
State eyes No Child compromise
Brandon Larrabee reports, when a Glynn County school fell short of annual goals in just one category for a couple of years, it was labeled a problem school even though it excelled in other areas. Now Georgia education officials are hoping to win a spot in a pilot program that would allow the state to treat less harshly than others some school districts that fall short of federal standards. The State Department of Education has asked to be one of 10 states included in the new program, seen as a response to growing congressional resistance to renewing the landmark No Child Left Behind Act. U.S. Education Secretary Margaret Spellings unveiled the proposal in March.

May 11, 2008 – Savannah Morning News   
Ready or not, part-ethanol gas is here
Mary Carr Mayle reports, if you're looking for "pure" gasoline these days - unleaded fuel not infused with ethanol - you're likely to be out of luck. As of April 15, the terminal operator who supplies the overwhelming majority of gasoline sold in the Savannah area made the switch to 100 percent E10 - gasoline that's blended with up to 10 percent ethanol - to comply with federal mandates issued by Congress and the Environmental Protection Agency.

May 11, 2008 – Atlanta Journal Constitution   
Georgia State's Carl Patton: We 'worked hard to become a part of this city'
Andrea Jones reports, during Georgia State University President Carl Patton's 16-year tenure, the college grew from a small commuter school into one of the state's leading universities. Patton presided Saturday over his last commencement. Former U.N ambassador and Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young delivered the commencement speech, and Atlanta architect John Portman received an honorary degree. We caught up with Patton, 63, for an interview as he prepared to pass the torch to a yet-to-be-determined successor and head into retirement.

May 11, 2008 – Athens Banner-Herald   
Veterans of civilian army reflect on service
Adam Thompson reports, before John Derden fought in Europe during World War II, he was part of a different army deployed within his own country. Fueled by a dollar a day, "three hots and a flop" and a raw hunger for jobs, Derden and more than 3 million other boys in the Civilian Conservation Corps battled enemies of a different sort throughout the Great Depression. The young volunteers, unmarried men between 18 and 25 years old, built roads, planted trees, moved earth and put out forest fires to counteract more than a century of neglect of the country's natural resources. At work camps in remote places across the U.S., Corps enrollees built the country's national and state park systems, including 12 state parks in Georgia.

May 11, 2008 – Chattanooga Times Free Press   
Dalton forum tackles teenage pregnancy
Erin Fuchs reports that more than 100 people with varying stakes in the teen pregnancy issue convened at Dalton State College for the forum on Thursday, with the objective to tackle the area’s high teen pregnancy rates. Among them were physicians, elected officials, social workers, business leaders and teen mothers. In a state where abstinence-based education often rules, several panelists said current sex education is inadequate. Kim Nolte, of the Georgia Campaign for Adolescent Pregnancy Prevention, or G-CAPP, gave the keynote speech, and lamented the lack of safe-sex teaching in the state’s schools.

May 11, 2008 – Augusta Chronicle   
Autistic quadruplets and their parents work to overcome problems
Tom Corwin reports Leslie Mann remembers when it hit her. As she stood in a shoe store watching her infant son Michael stack boxes over and over and over again, she broke into sobs knowing he and his three brothers -- celebrated quadruplets -- really did have autism and would face long odds ahead. What followed was years of searching out therapies, and hundreds of hours of hands-on work by the family, to the point where three of the boys are living nearly normal lives.

May 11, 2008 – Augusta Chronicle   
Vaccine case draws attention to autism
Tom Corwin reports, when the Augusta Chronicle began following the Mann quadruplets in October, there was little attention being paid to autism outside of the advocacy community and some researchers. That all changed in March when it became public that attorneys for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services conceded late last year that 9-year-old Hannah Poling, of Athens, Ga., had "features of autism spectrum disorder" caused in part by a series of vaccinations she received in 2000.

May 11, 2008 – Atlanta Journal Constitution   
Tucker time capsule reveals its secrets at last
Jim Auchmutey reports that the grand marshal of the Tucker Day parade didn't smile or wave at the crowd. How could it? It was a time capsule from 1958. The old box was paraded down Main Street on Saturday on a float created by students at nearby Westwood College. The float had crepe paper tail fins meant to suggest a late '50s Chevy; in a sign of the times, it was pulled by a late-model Toyota 4Runner. One by one, the discoveries were announced to the audience. Many of the items had to do with an old Tucker Day custom. Fifty years ago, it seems, men had to grow beards like the pioneer citizens of the 1800s or they would be "arrested" and fined for charity.

May 11, 2008 – Columbus Ledger-Enquirer   
'I'm glad it's finally over' - 700 graduates cross the state at Columbus State University
Sara Pauff reports that about 700 graduates were recognized Saturday during commencement exercises at Columbus State University. The college held two ceremonies, one at 10 a.m. and another at 3 p.m.; retiring president Frank Brown gave the commencement speech at both exercises. Several graduates said they were relieved and excited to receive their degrees.

May 11, 2008 – Macon Telegraph   
Mercer graduates, others across midstate receive diplomas
Ashley Tusan Joyner reports that the diploma was in the bag Saturday for thousands of Middle Georgia college students, who participated in commencement exercises at four area schools. Donning caps and gowns, the graduating classes exuded the newfound maturity that is characteristic of graduation day. Accompanied by friends and family members, the students reveled in a shared sense of accomplishment.

May 11, 2008 – Rome News-Tribune   
Berry College celebrates its 305 graduates
Andrea Freygang reports that Sephen Briggs, Berry College president said “Graduates, you are entering the world in a tough moment, but you need to step into the world with confidence and optimism that you will make a difference that has lasting value by being pillars of your community, by courage, character … by commitment to yourselves, to friends and families.” Briggs was one of several speakers who addressed 305 graduates Saturday afternoon at the school’s Memorial Lawn.

May 11, 2008 – Rome News-Tribune   
Speaker tells GHC grads to ‘reach farther’
Kevin Myrick reports that in the real world, it’s not just how much you know that counts. Sometimes it’s also how much people think you care. That message was delivered to graduating students at Georgia Highlands College on Saturday by Willis Potts, commencement speaker. Potts represents the 11th Congressional District on the Board of Regents.

May 11, 2008 – Gainesville Times   
Windows into World War II - Photos obtained by GSC professor show images of Nazi Germany, Russia’s war role
Jessica Jordan reports that the American archaeology professor readjusted the orange scarf hanging loosely around his neck, making sure it was still visible. He nervously scanned the crowd milling outside the Eastern European opera house. Steve Nicklas, a professor at Gainesville State College, was searching each face, wondering which belonged to a man he knew as "Alex."

May 11, 2008 – Valdosta Daily Times   
Search progresses for new VSU president
Rabyn Ratliff reports that as Valdosta State University President Ronald Zaccari prepares for retirement this July, the VSU search committee has been working diligently, along with the University System Board of Regents, to complete the selection process for the university’s eighth president.

May 11, 2008 – Savannah Morning News   
Isakson addresses GSU graduates
Staff reports that U.S. Sen. Johnny Isakson was the featured speaker Saturday at Georgia Southern University's 2008 Spring Commencement, where degrees were conferred on 2,393 students.

May 11, 2008 – Savannah Morning News   
Savannah State confers 219 degrees
Staff reports that Savannah State University conducted its 172nd commencement ceremony Saturday, awarding undergraduate and graduate degrees to 219 candidates in Tiger Arena.

more headlines >