News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Camp Rainbow celebrating its 40th anniversary
SUMMARY: Camp Rainbow, hosted annually by WellStar Children’s Hospital of Georgia at Camp Lakeside, celebrates its 40th year providing a medically safe summer camp for children with cancer and their siblings. The camp allows kids to escape medical routines and enjoy activities like archery, kayaking, ziplining, and rock climbing. Familiar nurses provide necessary medical care, giving parents peace of mind. Camp Director Kym Allen emphasizes the importance of outdoor experiences and normalcy, as many children miss school and social activities due to illness. Allen values seeing kids engage in fun activities they once thought impossible. The camp concludes on Friday.
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News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Tybee Island community comes together to help house fire victims
SUMMARY: A devastating house fire on Tybee Island left four women with nothing, including the loss of one woman’s car. Fidgit Bouffard, the only resident home at the time, escaped by jumping from a second-story window with her dog, fracturing her back. With no resources to fall back on, the women have found support from their community. Locals have donated clothes, toiletries, and money through bars like Bernie’s on Tybee and the Islander on Wilmington Island. Many contributions have been anonymous, showcasing the island’s tight-knit spirit and compassion. Donations will continue over the coming weeks to help the women rebuild.
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News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Trump framework for compensating college athletes limits some payments
by Shauneen Miranda, Georgia Recorder
July 24, 2025
WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump signed an executive order Thursday that bars payments from university boosters and some other private-sector donors to college athletes.
The NCAA changed its rules in 2021 to allow athletes to profit from their own name, image and likeness, or NIL. A White House fact sheet Thursday said third-party payments from boosters and other private donors “created a chaotic environment that threatens the financial and structural viability of college athletics.”
“Waves of recent litigation against collegiate athletics governing rules have eliminated limits on athlete compensation, pay-for-play recruiting inducements, and transfers between universities, unleashing a sea change that threatens the viability of college sports,” the order said.
A patchwork of laws exists across states, with no federal NIL law in place. A federal judge in June approved the terms of a nearly $2.8 billion antitrust settlement, which paved the way for schools to directly pay athletes.
“While changes providing some increased benefits and flexibility to student-athletes were overdue and should be maintained, the inability to maintain reasonable rules and guardrails is a mortal threat to most college sports,” the executive order said.
According to the White House fact sheet, the order’s prohibition of “third-party, pay-for-play payments” does not apply to “legitimate, fair-market-value compensation that a third party provides to an athlete, such as for a brand endorsement.”
The order also seeks to preserve and expand “opportunities for scholarships and collegiate athletic competition in women’s and non-revenue sports” and calls on the secretary of Labor and the National Labor Relations Board to clarify the “status” of college-athletes.
A day before the order, two U.S. House panels advanced a measure that would set a national framework for college athletes’ compensation and bar them from being recognized as employees.
That bill, the Student Compensation and Opportunity through Rights and Endorsements Act, or ‘‘SCORE Act,” was approved in the House Energy and Commerce and Education and Workforce committees, which both have jurisdiction.
Georgia Recorder is part of States Newsroom, a nonprofit news network supported by grants and a coalition of donors as a 501c(3) public charity. Georgia Recorder maintains editorial independence. Contact Editor Jill Nolin for questions: info@georgiarecorder.com.
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Note: The following A.I. based commentary is not part of the original article, reproduced above, but is offered in the hopes that it will promote greater media literacy and critical thinking, by making any potential bias more visible to the reader –Staff Editor.
Political Bias Rating: Center-Right
This content presents a generally neutral yet slightly center-right perspective by emphasizing concerns about maintaining the financial and structural viability of college sports, supporting restrictions on third-party payments to athletes, and highlighting the executive actions taken by former President Donald Trump. The focus on preserving traditional structures and cautious regulation aligns more closely with center-right viewpoints that prioritize order and control over rapid reform in collegiate athletics compensation.
News from the South - Georgia News Feed
Chuck Mangione, known for 'Feels So Good,' dies at 84
SUMMARY: Grammy-winning jazz musician Chuck Mangione, known for his iconic 1977 hit “Feels So Good,” has passed away at 84 in his Rochester, New York home. A Rochester native, Mangione graduated from Benjamin Franklin High School and earned a degree from the Eastman School of Music. Over his prolific career, he released over 30 albums, received 14 Grammy nominations, and won two. Mangione also made appearances on the animated series “King of the Hill.” Services will be private. His legacy as a talented flugelhorn player and composer remains celebrated worldwide.
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