Jimmy Carter, after a successful term as governor of Georgia, returned to his home in Plains. Instead of resuming full-time peanut farming, he embarked on an unlikely campaign for the presidency of
What most Americans don’t know is that the Carters’ church is among a growing number of churches in America with female pastors.
Authentic. Peacemaker. Humanitarian. These are a few of the words students and professors at the University of Georgia used to describe former President Jimmy Carter, who died on Dec. 29,
Door in a frame in Government Center represents the opportunities Carter created for others through his service and dedication.
Schedule: Carter’s casket headed back to Georgia via Air Force One after the ... patriarch to his burial place beside his late wife Rosalynn Carter with darkness descending on Plains.
I’ve had the privilege to keep Georgians informed about state and national politics. As I retire, I’m thankful for the memories.
Former President Jimmy Carter, the 39th U.S. President, died in Plains, Georgia, on Dec. 29, 2024, at age 100. He was the longest-living American president.
A federal judge temporarily halted President Donald Trump’s order freezing trillions of dollars in federal grants and loans. But not before the sprawling plan had unleashed a wave of confusion — and some panic — among public and private organizations that rely on the money to fund programs aimed at everything from Meals on Wheels to solar power to cancer research.
Timothée Chalamet fans were not happy with him for making a rude joke about late President Jimmy Carter, who died on December 29, 2024. In one sketch, the Wonka star, 29, played bungee instructor Nathaniel Latrine who was in charge of getting Heidi Gardner and her on-screen boyfriend Michael Longfellow into shape.
At the Democratic National Convention in August 1976, one-term Democratic governor of Georgia Jimmy Carter made the case for his down-to-earth leadership. “As I’ve said many times before, we can have an American president who does not govern with negativism and fear of the future,
Young Democrats. I brought the former governor of Georgia to the campus in Tallahassee to make a speech. His name was Jimmy Carter. Everyone else called him “Jimmy Who?” I introduced him as “the next President of the United States.
On a cold Monday morning, hundreds of mourners braving the January wind made their way into the Carter Center in downtown Atlanta. Ashleigh Henning,