Apr 14 Tuesday
A book club from the more adventurous side of your romance shelves! Does the idea of the monster under your bed excite rather than scare you? Like your love interests with more bite than bark? Do you look at Pyramid Head from Silent Hill and think "Yeah, he can get it?" This group is for you! Please note that due to the adult nature of the books we will be discussing, this club will be open to 18+ only. Hosted at Lee's Tahitian, on the second Tuesday of every month from 6-8 pm.
Columbia River Cabaret presents Why We Sing, an evening of storytelling through song featuring beloved performers Molly Holleran, Paul Davis, Erin Dickey, and Ron Harman, with Sheila Gephart on piano. From heartfelt ballads to joyful ensemble numbers, this cabaret celebrates the power of music to connect, comfort, and inspire.
$12 CoverStarts at 6 PM
Apr 15 Wednesday
Fort Walla Walla Museum is ready for spring!
April is the start of our annual April Fools Scavenger Hunt. Practice your sleuthing skills by tracking down the historically inaccurate items hidden throughout the museum’s exhibits—keep an eye out for these time-traveling objects and earn a prize in the Museum Store!
The scavenger hunt is a month-long event starting Wednesday, April 1st. The Museum is open from 10 am-5 pm daily.
Don’t forget that members get in free!
Mimi Jung: An Unfinished Origin ExhibitionMarch 31, 2026 – June 27, 2026Tuesday through Saturdays from 10am to 4pm, CLOSED Sunday, Monday
"Mimi Jung: An Unfinished Origin" brings together recent sculptural works from this Helena, Montana-based artist. The loom has long served as the foundation of her methodical and often labor-intensive process, where the slow creation of each piece allows for deliberate shaping and assessment over time. Using unexpected and unconventional materials like paper and foam as wefts, a variety of non-traditional strings as warps, as well as woven pieces cast in metal, the artist’s work rewards close inspection, asking us to slow down and engage reflectively.
Central to her concerns are the gaps between what we believe we know and what remains unknown, creating space for wonder, contemplation, and connection. Correspondingly, her woven forms are intentionally ambiguous and in a state of change. Their structures invite multiple interpretations appearing near completion, undergoing deconstruction, or suspended between concealment and exposure. Jung relates this fluidity to one’s own sense of evolving self.
“The core component of my work has always been identity and self-preservation,” says the artist. “It’s about how our narratives constantly evolve to fit into a much larger cultural narrative in order to survive.”
IMAGE | Mimi Jung, Resonate With, 2023
LOCATION | The Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU is located in the Crimson Cube (on Wilson Road across from Martin Stadium and the CUB) on the WSU Pullman campus.
Mimi Jung: An Unfinished Origin ExhibitionMarch 31, 2026 – June 27, 2026Tue-Sat, 10am-4pm, CLOSED Sun, Mon
LOCATION | The Jordan Schnitzer Museum of Art WSU is located in the Crimson Cube (Wilson Road across from Martin Stadium/CUB) WSU Pullman campus.
Date, Time, Place: April 15, 2026; 1912 Center Arts Workshop. 12:00 PM - 1:00 P.M.
Title: The Lifeblood of the Pacific Northwest: Stories of Salmon in the Columbia Basin
Speaker: Abby Saks, Inland Northwest Organizer for Save Our wild Salmon
Description: Salmon are an ecological and cultural keystone species, playing a crucial role for ecosystems across the Northwest and holding a deep significance for many Northwest Tribes. However, runs across the Columbia Basin are in peril: 11 of the 16 historic stocks migrating above Bonneville Dam are either threatened, endangered, or extinct, and none are anywhere close to healthy or harvestable numbers. This month's talk will discuss the critical importance of salmon, how they're doing across the Basin, the threats they face, and what actions can be taken to restore their populations, with a focus on lower Snake River restoration.
Free In Person Financial Course! Want to learn more about money? How to make your dollar stretch? How to create a budget? Well this free course is for you! Come join us on Wednesdays at the WECU Education Center on 511 E. Holly Street, Downtown Bellingham, starting February 4th-March 25th from 3:00pm-5:00pm. Scan the QR code or visit www.oppco.org/flare-registration/ to register. Hope to see you there!!!
Gesa Power House Theatre proudly presents Spacewoman on Wednesday, February 15, 2026, at 7PM. This program is supported, in part, by Friends of Gesa Power House Theatre, and a grant from the Washington State Arts Commission.
Astronaut Eileen Collins was the first woman to pilot and command an American spacecraft. Born on the other side of the tracks in upstate New York, she smashed many glass ceilings in the US Air Force and at NASA in her career, culminating in four increasingly dramatic and dangerous space shuttle missions. With an incredible set of archival materials, intimate interviews, and a moving score by Marcelo Zarvos, Hannah Berryman’s nail-biting film shares the emotional journey experienced by Eileen’s family, and explores what level of risk is acceptable in human endeavour.
Apr 16 Thursday