Results List
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My Syrian Refugee Grandparents’ Lost America
By Christopher Oechsli Almost 115 years ago, Abraham and Camelia George left the small Syrian village of Mattan Arnouk. They sailed past the Statue of Liberty and landed on Ellis Island. They were refugees. Syrian refugees. They passed through a Manhattan neighborhood known as Little…
Author: New York Daily News
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Atlantic Fellows: Advancing Fairer, Healthier, More Inclusive Societies
From their inception, The Atlantic Philanthropies have invested in people and in their vision, opportunity and ability to realize a better world. When Chuck Feeney established the foundation in 1982, its first grant was $7 million to Cornell University to create the Cornell Tradition, a…
Author: Christopher G. Oechsli, President and CEO, The Atlantic Philanthropies
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Elizabeth Garrett, First Female President of Cornell, Dies at 52
The Atlantic Philanthropies express our profound sadness at the passing of Cornell University President Elizabeth Garrett. Beth’s leadership of Cornell, the alma mater of Atlantic’s Founding Chairman Chuck Feeney, was extraordinary, even in her short tenure, and will endure. As the largest single recipient of…
Author: The New York Times
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From Social Movement to Social Change: Philanthropy and School Discipline Reform
By David Callahan What role does philanthropy play in social movements? It’s an interesting question, and there’s a long history of funder involvement in different movements—from civil rights in the 1960s to LGBT rights in the past decade. Just last week, I wrote about the role of…
Author: Inside Philanthropy
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Charles F. Feeney Honored with Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy
Atlantic’s Founding Chairman, Charles F. Feeney, along with seven other philanthropists, has been awarded the 2015 Carnegie Medal of Philanthropy. Each recipient has had significant and lasting impact on a particular field, nation or the international community, and each embodies the spirit and example of…
Author: The Atlantic Philanthropies
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Crime, Bias and Statistics
Charles M. Blow By Charles M. Blow Discussions of the relationship between blacks and the criminal justice system in this country too often grind to a halt as people slink down into their silos and arm themselves with their best rhetorical weapons — racial bias…
Author: The New York Times
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A Closer Look at Atlantic's End Game—And Where It's Putting the Biggest Money
By David Callahan Atlantic Philanthropies is going out with a bang, not a whimper, and it’s pretty darn interesting to watch—far more interesting than you think. Why? Because the story of Atlantic’s end game is not about a multi-billion-dollar foundation that is spending down its…
Author: Inside Philanthropy
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Obama to Report Widening of Initiative For Black and Latino Boys
President Obama delivering remarks at the White House in February on his My Brother’s Keeper initiative to help black and Latino boys succeed. Photo: Gabriella Demczuck / The New York Times By Motoko Rich President Obama will announce on Monday that 60 of the nation’s…
Author: The New York Times
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How Did This High School Student Go From Being Suspended 20 Times to Graduating Valedictorian?
https://youtu.be/fM-nO7muBrg High school student Damon Smith had been suspended more than 20 times before entering Ralph Bunche High School in Oakland, an alternative high school for chronically expelled students. After working with Eric Butler, a restorative justice counselor at the school, Damon left behind the…
Author: The Nation
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Defiance no reason to suspend students, board president says
BY TERESA WATANABE L.A. Unified President Monica Garcia proposes an end to “willful defiance” suspensions. Photo: Al Seib / Los Angeles Times Administrators in the Los Angeles Unified School District would no longer be allowed to suspend students for mouthing off or other acts of…
Author: Los Angeles Times