Georgia industry - News
|
What's behind repeated protests in Tbilisi? - Xinhua What's behind repeated protests in Tbilisi?by Xinhua writers Hai Yang and Liu Yang TBILISI, April 15 (Xinhua) -- Since April 9 thousands of demonstrators have been gathering in the Georgia capital of Tbilisi to demand the resignation of President Mikhail Saakashvili. |
|
The peanut industry lost a friend - Michigan Farmer The peanut industry lost a friendAfter five years, she became editor of Georgia Farmer magazine, waded through a series of changes and mergers in agricultural publishing, and now continues to work for the same parent company, Rural Press Ltd. of Australia, as an employee of its US |
|
Stimulus steers billions to 'weatherizing' homes By Drew Griffin and Scott Bronstein ATLANTA, Georgia () -- Across the country, in nearly every state, boom times are coming for programs to make homes more energy-efficient. States will get $5 billion from the stimulus package for "weatherizing" the |
Sen. Mullis in Europe for trade mission - Walker County Messenger
Walker County MessengerSen. Mullis in Europe for trade missionJeff Mullis of Chickamauga left for a two-week trade mission to Europe to promote Georgia to companies from all over the European continent. “In today’s economic times, it is crucial that we are aggressive in recruiting new industry to Georgia,” Mullis
|
|
Swedish 'City in Transformation' Looks for Business Partners in ... - GlobalAtlanta Swedish 'City in Transformation' Looks for Business Partners in But Malmö has reinvented itself in aa way that should make representatives from Savannah and other Georgia cities take note, said Nils Eric Svensson, an economic developer in Skåne, the southernmost region of Sweden, where Malmö is the capital. |
Walker County MessengerSen. Mullis in Europe for trade missionJeff Mullis of Chickamauga left for a two-week trade mission to Europe to promote Georgia to companies from all over the European continent. “In today’s economic times, it is crucial that we are aggressive in recruiting new industry to Georgia,” Mullis
