Hormel Foods, the makers of Planters, is hiring three full-time crew members to travel across the U.S. in a 26-foot-long peanut-shaped vehicle: the NUTmobile. Chosen candidates, referred to as "Peanutters," will represent the peanut brand in media interviews and community events across the country.
Washington Youth Tour Planters EMC is now accepting applications from high school juniors for an all-expense paid spot on the 2025 Washington Youth Tour. This week-long leadership trip offers participants the chance to experience government and history firsthand while making new friends,
Discover the Acorn Worm, a primitive creature linking vertebrates and invertebrates, and its profound impact on our evolutionary history.
Washington Commanders wide receiver Terry McLaurin addresses the media after a win against the Detroit Lions in the 2024 NFC Divisional Round.
Although people from all over the country, of all ages and backgrounds, joined the People's March, one protester said no one felt like a stranger.
The City of Spokane is working on plans to change a dangerous intersection in the Emerson Garfield neighborhood.
The recent passing of former President Jimmy Carter has brought renewed attention to his shared ancestry with Motown Founder Berry Gordy.
Actors are sought to dress up in colonial garb and tell stories about the American Revolution to tourists in Old City.
The Star Ceiling Project debuted Thursday evening outside the El Paso Museum of Art during a private ceremony for the donors of the project
Development of a walking trail on an island unused for decades wasn’t the only result of a community meeting in the spring of 2023. About 130 people attended the meetings, paid for by a federal Recreation Economy for Rural Communities grant,
As the incoming Trump administration threatens Chinese immigrants with deportation, it is urgent to draw the lessons from the ugly history of Chinese Exclusion in the 19th century. A recent article and podcast by NPR on the Chinese Exclusion era significantly distorts that history.
Charles Dickens would have loved it. While it wasn’t a tale of two cities, it was a saga of two streets when the Greencastle City Council conducted its January meeting with more than dozen residents in attendance at City Hall.