Throw on a cute summery ’fit and grab your tote bags — it’s time to head to The Farm Chicks Vintage & Handmade Fair one last time.
It’s no secret that public defenders have long been asked to take on too many cases, reducing their ability to provide adequate counsel to defendants as guaranteed by both the U.S. and Washington state constitutions.
Tucked away inside Coeur d’Alene Casino Resort Hotel awaits a new dining experience unlike any other in the Inland Northwest. The casino’s fine dining establishment, Chinook Steak, Pasta & Spirits, recently launched a dry-aged beef program that takes its steak dishes to the next level by…
With a wave of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation continuing to move through Idaho, Pride events across the Inland Northwest rage on.
If you talk to enough drag artists, you’ll find that the venn diagram between them and theater kids is practically a circle. And drag king Edacious March isn’t one to buck that trend.
Over the last seven years, the Spokane Regional Health District has hired three administrative officers — the top boss at the health agency, which tracks communicable diseases, provides medication-assisted treatment for substance use disorder, monitors health standards at dining and drinking…
Two decades ago almost to the week, a group of about 300 fans of comics and animation gathered for a few hours at Gonzaga University. They were joined by Wonder Woman and Doom Patrol illustrator Matthew Clark, Superman actress Margot Kidder and a lone Stormtrooper.
Saying that Blake Braley is a fixture on Spokane stages would be an understatement. The singer-songwriter, keyboardist and organist has spent the past decade spreading his soulful sound around the Lilac City in many different forms.
It’s going to be another tough year for Washington farmers, who were already facing record-low worldwide commodity prices.
If you’ve not met Jonathan Tilley at a local comedy show, chances are you’ve at least heard him.
If you’re a regular of the Spokane-area bar scene, there’s a good chance that Dakota Goldman played a hand in a cocktail you’ve ordered, whether by crafting it herself or helping curate the business’ beverage program.
When it comes to fixing unhealthy waterways, Gonzaga University undergraduates in professor Sue Niezgoda’s stream restoration and senior design classes are taking notes from nature’s engineers: beavers.
When Nathan Schiele attended the University of Dayton in Ohio a couple decades ago, he focused his studies on mechanical engineering. However, rather than designing and building machinery, he became enamored with the human body’s mechanical tissue: the tendon.
There’s perhaps no better demonstration of the 1980’s eclectic vibe than that of the beloved film Back to the Future, in which a souped-up DeLorean driven at a specific speed transports a scrappy teen 30 years into the past.
When fire sweeps the landscape in the Northwest, one of the first plants to emerge from the scorched earth is fireweed. The hardy perennial blooms magenta-pink flowers in August, representing new beginnings.
When Theater on the Verge Director Troy Nickerson first read the 2015 dark comedy play Hand to God, he thought it’d be crazy to stage it in Spokane.
I apologize in advance for the trauma that I’m about to inflict upon pop punk-loving millennials.
Medicine is a challenging field under the best of circumstances. But in the U.S., where the health care system can be fraught with obstacles, one of the biggest challenges is also one of the most basic: there’s simply a shortage of primary care providers, something that’s particularly acute …
The newest exhibit at the Northwest Museum of Arts and Culture can be summed up in one familiar phrase: “It’s the little things.”
