Save the date and take your little ones to Full Circle's unconventional setting to experience a live classical performance thought precisely with the whole family in mind. Sadie Fields and her guests will then delight the audience with a lively performance for all ages. You can also have a nice Sunday morning breakfast with coffee and croissants, and let the children enjoy themselves in the play corner. Children must be accompanied by an adult.
Steve Fennessy: This is
Georgia Today. I m Steve Fennessy. It s Friday, Jan. 15th, 2021. For more than four decades, Jim Galloway has been on the front lines of some of the biggest political stories in the South.
Gov. Roy Barnes: The new flag does not, however, value one Georgian s heritage over another.
Stacey Abrams: Hard work is in our bones and we have proven this every single day, Georgia. With doors knocked, with calls made, with miles traveled.
Steve Fennessy: Jim is a frequent guest on GPB’s
Political Rewind. But you likely also know him from the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution Political Insider column. After 41 years at the paper, Jim retires today. The Chief, as he s called in the halls of the state capitol, stuck around long enough to cover one of the biggest political stories in a generation: Georgia changing the balance of power in the U.S. Senate with a victory last week of Democrats Raphael Warnock and John Ossoff.
Steve Fennessy: This is
Georgia Today. I m Steve Fennessy. It s Friday, Dec. 25th, 2020, Merry Christmas and happy holidays. For four decades, Jim Galloway has been on the front lines of some of the biggest political stories in the South.
Gov. Roy Barnes: The new flag does not, however, value one Georgian s heritage over another.
Stacey Abrams: Hard work is in our bones and we have proven this every single day, Georgia. With doors knocked, with calls made, with miles traveled.
Steve Fennessy: Jim’s a frequent guest on GPB s
Political Rewind. But you may know him best from the
Atlanta Journal-Constitution Political Insider column. After 41 years at the paper, Jim will be retiring on Jan. 15th. But the Chief, as he s called in the halls of the state Capitol, is sticking around long enough to cover the outcome of the two runoff elections in Georgia that will determine control of the Senate.