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According to muralist James Mayo, business owners in a down economy could take a cue from Alice Cooper. Or Lady…
What might get you questioned for suspicious behavior any other day of the year could win you a quirky title…
Memorial Day fast approaches, and getting out of town for the three-day weekend can be sweet relief. Here are five…
There is no thick velvet curtain for the Kitsap Forest Theater to open at the start of “The Sound of…
Twelve years ago, New York comedian Glenn Rockowitz was about to become a father. He was also about to die….
Familiar favorites Viking Fest and Armed Forces Day parade awaken with a roar this weekend (see below), while sophomore Kustom…
There is a lesson to be learned backstage, amidst the hullabaloo of preparations at the Kitsap Children’s Musical Theatre: The…
Three-piece folk-pop band The Makepeace Brothers delivers political awareness and feel-good encouragement to the sounds of contagious melodies. The homegrown…
Fifth-grader Hank Zipzer is a funny and resourceful guy. He’s also dyslexic. Zip’s co-creator, Henry Winkler, is all those things…
Suzanne Selfors is not about to write a sad dog story. In fact, she’s adamantly against them, down to her…
In the sleepy town of Sequim, a patchwork land of lolling green fields and crisp mountain views, something is beginning…
The long-running, well-known stage drama “Our Town” runs this month and next at Silverdale’s CSTOCK. The unconventionally written play —…
If there is a harder question to answer, it hasn’t yet been asked.
“What do you think happens when you die?” wonders a character in “The Scientist,” a Gypsyhouse Entertainment film coming to Kitsap through April. “What continues on then, if it’s just your body that dies?”
The results of the third annual Eagle Harbor Book Co. limerick contest will be presented at 7:30 p.m. April 29 at 157 Winslow Way. Submissions were taken earlier this year, and now three judges must name the best from 70 entries, said store employee and poet John Willson.
For what’s billed as a chorus concert, the words ‘chorus’ and ‘concert’ sure come up short. Really, an evening with…
When bad things happen, whether it is a death in the family or a disease, there is an arsenal of feel-better phrases to choose from, from “look on the bright side” to “this, too, shall pass.” Bainbridge author Rebecca Wells, however, only needs one word.