Snoqualmie Railroad Days brings a kaleidoscope of memories to retired music teacher and bandleader Harley Brumbaugh.
The man accused of robbing a North Bend bank last autumn goes to trial Sept. 1.
Three local companies are among King County’s Best Workplaces for Recycling and Waste Reduction list for 2010.
North Bend teacher David Spring and Sammammish technology consultant Dean Willard are vying for Democratic-leaning votes in the three-way race for the 5th Legislative District’s position 2 Washington House of Representatives seat.
This summer, the Northwest Railway Museum’s campus makes its next transformation, with the addition of the new Train Shed Exhibit Building. Construction of the shed is nearly complete; once finishing touches are done, the building will shelter all vulnerable cars in the museum’s collection, safeguarding them from further decay.
So, how many locals can state the official name of the big park on Snoqualmie Ridge?
Former Snoqualmie Mayor Jeanne Hansen will be remembered with a namesake city park.
But it won’t be the one that current Mayor Matt Larson and other city worthies always envisioned for her.
King County Animal Control agents want to know who neglected and then abandoned two horses in the wilds of the Snoqualmie National Forest.
The two horses, a bay mare and a gray gelding, were spotted by a hiker and rescued Thursday, July 22, from a remote location off Tinkham Road east of North Bend.
Examples of famed Celadon pottery, a trademark sea-green ceramic made in the Snoqualmie sister city of Gangjin, are normally kept at Snoqualmie City Hall.
But the crafts will be on view at the first Snoqualmie Valley Festival of Music, set for Aug. 7 and 8 at North Bend’s Mountain Meadows Farm.
Summer in the Snoqualmie Valley brings long-awaited afternoons in the sun and the water.
But folks who play on rivers and lakes should never forget that their favorite swimming hole can still be a dangerous place.
Prog rock is not dead. Far from it: Progressive music prophets Yes, who play Thursday at Snoqualmie Casino in concert with Peter Frampton, continue to spread the good word of the experimental, jazz-influenced form of rock and roll.
A group of Snoqualmie residents are making noise in an effort to muffle Snoqualmie Casino’s outdoor concert series.
Compared to Snoqualmie Ridge as a whole, Puget Sound Energy’s 20-acre annex for a new power distribution station looks like small potatoes.
But the annex, which is moving forward after a series of votes last week by the Snoqualmie City Council, is poised to change a much larger area. And it’s clear that more awareness is needed community-wide on how both the Ridge and folks who live on and near it will change as a result.