In honor of Children’s Dental Health month, North Bend dentist Kelly Garwood hosted its first Give Kids A Smile Day….
Twin Falls Middle School travels back five millenia in the school’s second annual Egyptian Museum Walk, hosted by the sixth…
Council moves hotel decision to March to allow time for public comment
Mount Si High School senior Brianna Kelly dreams of a career decorating beautiful wedding cakes.
As Mount Si’s finalist for the Washington Award for Vocational Excellence, or WAVE, scholarship, she’s in the running for funds to help her attend college and grow business, nutrition and culinary skills.
Kelly is among high school seniors across the state who have come to rely on scholarships in the recent economic downturn. Her scholarship opportunity is on thin ice, though. Washington Gov. Chris Gregoire has proposed postponing the WAVE and five other scholarships in 2010 to balance the state’s budget.
Welcoming 15-year-old exchange student DoHeyong Kim into their home, the Skylstad family of North Bend planned to learn a thing or two about the Korean culture
It turns out that the Skylstads also had some teaching of their own to do, as they showed Kim, locally known as “D.J.,” the basics of being an American kid.
Catering to the a.m. crowd, Big Sky Barbeque and Smokehouse has added a new breakfast menu to start early birds with a home-style meal.
Trading cowboy boots for rain galoshes, Cliff Brown, current chairman of Valley Voters for Education, uprooted his family six years ago from their hometown of Houston, Texas, to come to the vastly different climate of Snoqualmie.
To show children the importance of team building and getting to know each other, Fall City Elementary counselor Kelly Stinson…
Executive board of Sallal Grange #955 to discuss goals for 2010
Sandals, tennis shoes, dress shoes — most in pairs, but a few single soles — have been piling up in…
Valley residents asked to nominate candidates for education award
Police, agencies battle graffiti, slurs
Twin Falls students drop $2,100 in change for quake refugees