The performers range in age from 7 to 87, but they all have one love: traditional music making.
On Saturday, April 12, set aside your chore list, close the laptop, turn off the TV, settle in with a good book and join readers around the country as they celebrate National D.E.A.R. Day by getting ready to “Drop Everything and Read.”
Like many children of the 1960s we came of age during the Vietnam War. We saw the photographs in Life magazine and heard Walter Cronkite intone place names like Danang, Dien Bien Phu, and the Gulf of Tonkin.
The Olympic Driftwood Sculptors host their free sixth annual Winter Show 10 a.m.-4 p.m. March 22-23 at the Audubon Center at Railroad Bridge Park, 2151 W. Hendrickson Road, Sequim.
Kicking off its 24th season, the Sequim City Band invites concertgoers to march right up and take a hand in its future. “Marches and More — in March” opens the 2014 season at 3 p.m. Sunday, March 23, at the Sequim High School Auditorium, 601 N. Sequim Ave.
Music/dance, event, ongoing classes and more in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley
To start off spring, shake off the peninsula winter and support the local arts, the Olympic Peninsula Men’s Chorus and guests will perform “Vocal Chords, Some Strings Attached” on March 22 at the Olympic Theatre Arts in Sequim.
Fairy tale fans get two chances to fly to Never Land this week. Greywolf Elementary’s Drama Club presents “Peter Pan Jr.” at 6 p.m. Friday, March 21, and Saturday, March 22, at the school. Admission is free at the school, 171 Carlsborg Road, with donations accepted.
Soroptimist International of Sequim has presented its annual Vocational/Technical Award to Tatum Harris. The $1,000 educational support award is given…
Sequim Gazette staff This month, Music Live with Lunch takes a turn to the earlier days of music with…
Matinee helps SHS choir get to ‘Big Apple’
The Port Angeles Library will be accepting entries for the 2014 High School Poetry SLAM through March 25. Any student…
Water … such a vital substance. Water is absolutely necessary to sustain all life on Earth. Without it we would perish in a very short time. And yet, most of us in the Pacific Northwest take water for granted.