Articles FLiP onLine media Dot.Org.Jobs BUZZ Books Resource Center Sponsors
Google
Buzz is onPhilanthropy's news and commentary blog, covering the latest stories and updates in the world of philanthropy.

Learn more about onPhilanthropy



Add to Google Reader or Homepage

Subscribe in Bloglines

Add to My AOL


onPhilanthropy Articles by Topic
Just Published
Fundraising
Marketing
Current Issues
Government Relations
Corporate Giving
Foundations
Technology/Media
Healthcare
Articles by Contributor
View all contributors


onLine Jobs



Pics


  • www.flickr.com

November 14, 2008

News Briefing: Ex-Official of Diabetes Foundation Is Indicted in Theft

  • A former official of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation led a false invoicing scheme that resulted in the theft of more than $1 million from the organization.  [New York Times]
  • The former director of a Brooklyn nonprofit is arrested on charges that he stole more than $500,000 in federal aid.  [New York Times]
  • A Winchester man reaches a deal with Virginia and the Shenandoah Valley Battlesfield Foundation to sell some of his family's land.  [Washington Post]

October 24, 2008

News Briefing: U.S. Endowments Grow Wary but See Opportunities

  • Acorn's registration numbers were wildly exaggerated.  [New York Times]
  • A U.N. report finds that North Korea is facing its worst food crisis in a decade.  [New York Times]
  • The Washington region's network of nonprofits is ill-prepared to respond to a natural disaster.  [Washington Post]
  • A prominent British architect is selected for renovation of the New York Public Library.  [New York Times]
  • Money managers are staying the course as they ride out the economic storm, according to industry insiders.  [Reuters]

October 14, 2008

News Briefing: For This Generation, Vocations of Service

  • Recent college graduates forgo traditional careers to start nonprofits that are focused on outreach.  [Washington Post]
  • Report encourages more partnerships and mergers among Long Island nonprofits.  [Newsday]
  • Bob Dole and George McGovern will receive the World Food Prize for their efforts to curb hunger in the world.  [Associated Press]

October 07, 2008

News Briefing: In Tight Times, Many Nonprofits Feel the Pinch as Contributions Dwindle

  • Nonprofits begin to feel the pinch as contributions dwindle.  [New York Times]
  • The Cooper-Hewitt National Design Museum plans to begin work on the renovation and expansion of its ornate Fifth Avenue mansion.  [New York Times]
  • A Washington area nonprofit group has returned $500,000 in public money after an audit.  [Washington Post]
  • A new generation of Americans is transforming the face of giving in the U.S.  [USA Today]

September 15, 2008

News Briefing: Matt Damon, Wyclef Jean Visit Haiti City in Ruins

  • "Fruit philanthropists" voluntarily harvest surplus fruit and donate it to food banks, centers for the elderly, and other nonprofits in the Berkeley area.  [New York Times]
  • Twenty-one Indonesians die in small town after beign trampled outside the gates of a wealthy family's home.  [New York Times]
  • New York City Council standards committee to discuss requiring board members of nonprofits to submit long and detailed financial disclosures.  [New York Times]
  • Two kidnapped employees of the World Food Program are released; 11 aid workers still remain in captivity in Somalia.  [Associated Press]
  • Matt Damon and Wyclef Jean visit Haitian city after storms submerge parts of the country.  [Associated Press]

August 12, 2008

News Briefing: Museum of History Unveils Its Future

  • The Museum of the City of New York completes the first phase of its building project.  [New York Times]
  • Alumni, parents, and students in Mount Vernon raise money to keep its high school's fall lineup of varsity and junior varsity sports, which had been eliminated during budget cuts.  [New York Times]
  • Federal agents investigate a New Orleans nonprofit with faulty records.  [Associated Press]
  • A new breed of charities allows donors to browse descriptions of specific projects online before funding them.  [Wall Street Journal]
  • The World Food Programme will provide $214 million in food assistance to 16 impoverished areas.  [Associated Press]
  • Twenty-two groups boycott Ben Stiller's 'Tropic Thunder' for its portrayal of disabled people.  [ABC News]

July 29, 2008

News Briefing: Amnesty Slams China's Broken Olympics Promises

  • Amnesty International slams China for failing to honor its Olympic human rights pledges.  [Reuters]
  • Televangelist Kenneth Copeland is one target of a Senate Finance Committee investigation into allegations of questionable spending.  [Associated Press]

July 25, 2008

News Briefing: Report on Shriners Raises Question of Wrongdoing

  • An investigavtive committee suggests questionable financial dealings with Shriners.  [New York Times]
  • GlobalGiving introduces a new web site that will list projects with minimal greenhouse gas emissions.  [New York Times]
  • The House votes to triple financing to fight AIDS, malaria, and tuberculosis.  [Associated Press]

July 18, 2008

News Briefing: Problems Persist With Red Cross Blood Services

  • Clinton's Foundation aims to stabilize the cost of anti-malaria medication.  [Associated Press]
  • Problems continue with the Red Cross's blood services.  [New York Times]
  • The founder of a defunct Muslim charity is sentenced to a year in prison.  [Associated Press]
  • A Washington-based nonprofit is under fire for high compensation of its longtime chief.  [Washington Post]
  • Billy Crystal joins the Board of the 9/11 memorial foundation.  [Associated Press]

May 01, 2008

News Briefing: Degree Scandal Costs WVU $2M Donation of Cash and Art

  • The McGee Foundation withdraws its pledge of $2 million to West Virginia University after the school improperly awarded a degree to the Governor's daughter.  [Associated Press]
  • Aid groups grapple with the global food crisis.  [Seattle Times]
Our Sponsors
Changing Our World Archimede NYU Convio Grizzard Russ Reid Wiley Books