The Grange Supply incorporated in 1934 — it celebrates 80 years this year — but its history stretches back much farther.
The Issaquah Valley and Apollo elementary school campuses will hold public ribbon-cutting ceremonies Sept. 2.
“The Soaring Dream” depicts a young child watching the launch of a space shuttle from a farm, while perched on a swingset with the family dog.
Remnanz is led by Steve Anderson, a vocalist who also plays guitar and saxophone. Joel Snook is on electric guitar.
The back-to-school contest will be operated out of the information booth at the Sammamish Farmers Market Aug. 27.
The membership-based warehouse sales company — which has headquartered in the city since 1995 — leased 176,656 square feet of office space in the Sammamish Park Place commercial park, according to a release from property owner Vulcan Real Estate.
A parking lot, trailhead and trail to the Lower Evans Creek Preserve are now open, according to an announcement from the City of Sammamish sent out by email Monday.
The 38th Annual Issaquah Rotary Run will kick off Salmon Days Oct. 5.
The Center closes 3 p.m. Aug. 29 and remains closed through Sept. 1.
The Issaquah King County Library will host ‘Play & Learn Chinese’ 10:30 a.m. to 12 p.m.
The band specializes in covers of popular songs, with a range that covers artists from Duke Ellington to Lady Gaga to Metallica.
The East Link extension is almost a decade from completion and neither Sound Transit or King County Metro yet know, specifically, how buses from the greater Eastside will connect to light rail stations in Bellevue or Mercer Island. But dozens of bus riders converged on the Hilton Garden Inn on Monday to learn more about the plan.
Is Lake Sammamish State Park on its way toward obtaining an Issaquah address?
All suspects in the police blotter are presumed innocent unless proven guilty in a court of law.
This weekend, two Eastside men will see their first feature film screen publicly for the first time. “Layover,” premiering Friday and screening again Saturday as part of the Seattle International Film Festival, was written and directed by Joshua Caldwell and produced by Travis Oberlander. Both men are originally from the Sammamish Plateau — now living in Los Angeles — and friends dating back to their time as classmates at Samantha Smith Elementary School.
Sarah Rose Davis, the actress who plays Fanny Brice in Village Theatre’s production of “Funny Girl,” demonstrates a remarkable agility of performance and comic timing.
Early on in “The Tutor,” there’s a fear, an icky sense of dread, that things between the titular private teacher and his teenage client could go in an inappropriate direction. It’s a difficult unease to put your finger on. Maybe it’s the tutor’s wolfish smile, or his honeyed words, or his uncanny resemblance to another bespectacled, neurotic and wiry New Yorker.
“The Foreigner” opened to Village Theatre audiences Thursday, beginning a six-week run of the Larry Shue written comedy at the the company’s Issaquah playhouse.
Musical theater’s subjective emotional truth is understood deeply by director Steve Tomkins, whose production of “Les Misérables” often feels like a fevered and surreal dream given form by stunning set design and propelled forward by a talented cast.
“Les Misérables” is perhaps one of the oldest and most epically sweeping stories in musical history. Based on the 19th Century novel by Victor Hugo, the story of a French ex-convict’s search for redemption covers decades and numerous locations throughout Paris and its outlying towns.