Early in the morning on Jan. 20, 2009, as night approached its zenith across the Pacific Northwest, I was awakened by a melody from my BlackBerry.
How tough is the economy? We wonder.
The city’s oldest park is now a national historical landmark.
A sour start to the season has turned sweet for the Redmond boys’ basketball team.
The streaking Mustangs knocked off a tough Issaquah team, 63-53, last Friday night and leapfrogged the Eagles into second place in the 4A Kingco Crest Division.
It is a hypothetical question designed to have no correct answer: What is your perfect day?
Maggie Brooks, 12, puts items into a care package while volunteering with American Heritage Girls Troop No. 1946 at the VFW Post 2995 last Thursday.
I whole-heartedly disagree with Leslie McCormick’s letter printed in the Jan. 21 issue of the Redmond Reporter.
We’ve always suspected some elected officials of having tunnel vision.
What do Washington D.C. and Washington state have in common?
The Redmond Arts Commission is looking for applications from Redmond residents who are interested in developing and supporting the arts. Positions are open for both youth advocates and arts commissioners.
Redmond residents with an interest in the future growth and character of the city are invited to apply for a vacancy on the Redmond Planning Commission. Planning Commissioners are appointed by the Mayor and confirmed by the City Council and may serve up to two four-year terms.
Threats: A man who lives in the 16900 block of Northeast 100th Street got a phone call from an unknown person who threatened to shoot and stab him.
Competing without one of its captains, the Redmond wrestling team pulled off a comeback for the ages during Tuesday’s 4A Kingco contest against Mount Si. The Mustangs, who will be without injured senior Jimmy Brookman for the rest of the season, finished the meet with four straight pins to squeak by the Wildcats, 35-33.
Redmond-based Microsoft Corp. eliminated 1,400 jobs Thursday morning, including 872 at its Redmond campus — and there are more cuts to come.
From the front page of Jan. 7 Redmond Reporter, it appears that the Redmond Reporter is almost as enamored with Redmond’s elected politicians as they are with themselves.
For almost three weeks now, I have been waking up each night from nightmares filled with armies, death, war crime, and terror, all with a focused purpose: destruction.
Barack Obama being sworn in as the 44th President of the United States on Jan. 20 is no doubt historic — breaking an invisible barrier of race as the nation’s first black president.
The Redmond boys’ basketball team went on the road last Friday and continued their winning ways, beating the Eastlake Wolves,…
Mother and son, Monica and Patrick Anderson perform a waltz before switching to a hip hop dance routine during a rehearsal for the World Dance Extravaganza at The Overlake School last Friday.
King County Metro Transit will be operating with a reduced weekday schedule today for the Martin Luther King Jr. holiday. That means some commuter-oriented routes will be canceled that day, and there will be individual trips canceled on other routes. Many routes will have no changes.