It would take a natural disaster to keep new sailor Josh Fry off the water.
Miah Davis, the 30-year-old former basketball player from Bremerton High School, returned from his sixth professional basketball season in Europe to host the second annual Bremerton Jaguars Basketball Camp, July 11 – 15 at Bremerton High School.
Roller derby may be a woman’s world, but for Geno Guerrero, of Bremerton, there is room for men in the fast-paced contact sport.
Scott Alexander, director of golf at the Gold Mountain Golf Club, is hoping that by hosting the 64th Junior Amateur this month the course will attract the largest gallery a national championship has seen.
Admission is free and spectators will be allowed to stand alongside the golfers on the course.
When Kevin O’Niel was a teenager and started studying martial-arts, his instructor kicked him out of his Karate class for drug use. It took this initial rejection to set him on the right path.
“It saved my life so I’m gonna spend the rest of my life saving others,” he added.
For some it is shoes, but you could say that Paul Wright has a fetish for discs.
“He probably has about 1,000,” said his wife Pam Wright.
When Donna Waderich feels the need to blow some stuff up, she knows to head to Dave Douglas’ Kitsap Fireworks stand.
The state Department of Natural Resources on Tuesday postponed a proposal to sell or trade a 48-acre parcel of trees near Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor after neighbors complained about the plan to log the land.
Jonny Stackhouse was shocked to hear Monday that tuition at Olympic College will rise 24 percent over the next two years.
“That’s crazy,” said the 20-year-old from Bremerton.
News of 20 percent tuition increases for Washington’s universities has grabbed the attention of college students and their parents. But community and technical colleges like Olympic College in Bremerton, who are expected to grow as the cost of university tuition goes up, will face their own steep tuition hikes. The increases are expected to be approved in Olympia Thursday.
Kevin McVicker doesn’t think talking on a cellphone while driving is a big deal.
“I usually drive with one hand anyways so I don’t really think it impairs my driving,” said McVicker, 16.
Kevin McVicker doesn’t think talking on a cellphone while driving is a big deal.
“I usually drive with one hand anyways so I don’t really think it impairs my driving,” said McVicker, 16.
Charly Hennegan, a seventh grader at Central Kitsap Junior High, usually doesn’t have big plans for Friday nights.
“I would probably sit around at home and watch TV,” she said.