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Laurence Juber has clocked studio time with some of the music industry’s best. He’s played guitar onstage alongside Paul McCartney…
At just 28 years old, Nick Hacheney was a salesman of a preacher, and he spoke with the cadence of…
Even without doing research, one probably knows a bit about post-World War I Germany. It was a time of monetary…
Turns out Annie Oakley may have had the one-up on Frank Butler all along. The wild west shooter had a…
What’s Up writer Jennifer Morris and her dog paid a visit to Kitsap’s off-leash parks to find what’s available for…
The Bremerton Symphony Orchestra is heading into the final few performances of its current season with newly revved momentum. Last…
Ma Joad, her hair bound in one long, single braid, kneels quietly at the edge of her father-in-law’s grave. She…
On his ukulele, a high-voiced instrument with only two octaves and four strings, Jake Shimabukuro makes an impossibly big sound….
Travel guide Rick Steves will take a night off the road to encourage Kitsap to view travel in a new…
With songs like “The Steam Train,” “Flying Home” and “On the Deck of a Spanish Sailing Ship,” it’s no wonder…
It was a time when a man had six votes to cast — one for each bullet in the chamber…
In a turn-of-the-century farmhouse on the outskirts of Poulsbo, there is a doorpost covered in pencil markings. The names of…
The Choreography Showcase by Peninsula Dance Theatre features original dances of all varieties — movements of all different styles and…
Marrisa Bishop, all of 5 feet tall, is wearing fishnet stockings like battle insignia. Get in her way, she’ll take…
Christina Arokiasamy has been blending spices and flavors since childhood. Her senses are finely tuned to it, the way a…
Hard times are a sure part of the human condition, and for generations people have turned to music for comfort,…
Give a kid a whistle, and you might never again have a moment’s peace. Give a kid a whistle in one of Guy Sidora’s movement classes, and that kid might take that whistle and turn it into an art.
Sidora, known to many on Bainbridge as the Island’s Pied Piper, doesn’t often have to introduce himself nowadays. He’s worked with kids (and adults) throughout the Island’s art community, at Bainbridge Performing Arts, as both a thespian and instructor, and with the Island Theatre, Bainbridge Ballet, Bainbridge Symphony Orchestra, the Island parks district and most area schools.
Religion – that never-ending pursuit of the purpose of the universe – has sparked countless wars and debates. It has turned father against son, country against country. Now, in the middle of that fray, is a peace offering; a middle ground between extremes.
It comes in the form of Seattle author Brenda Peterson’s newest novel, and thankfully, unlike most things related to religion, it’s funny.