MARYSVILLE — The Marysville Strawberry Festival Talent Show will return to the Marysville-Pilchuck High School auditorium on Thursday, June 18, starting at 6:30 p.m., but in order for the doors to open at 5:30 p.m., the Talent Show will need more talent.
TULALIP — Michael Chang retired five years ago, but for the past three years, the Boom City Swap Meet has been his job.
MARYSVILLE — Volunteers faced gray skies and a chilly drizzle when they worked at Ebey Waterfront Park May 14, but their goal was to help get Marysville’s downtown ready for summer.
MARYSVILLE — The ninth annual Cinco De Mayo celebration at Totem Middle School May 1 served authentic Hispanic cuisine to hundreds of attendees, and treated them to Latin-themed entertainment and activities for all ages.
MARYSVILLE — After Arlington and Lakewood teachers staged their day of protests April 22, Marysville teachers followed suit May 1, voicing concerns about class sizes, funding for education, excessive testing, health care bargaining rights and cost of living adjustments.
MARYSVILLE — “Keep your line tight,” Shannon Karzmar told her 9-year-old grandson, Dylon Richard. “It’s harder to tell if you’ve got a tug on the line if it’s loose.”
MARYSVILLE — Marysville YMCA staff agreed, when it rains in Western Washington, you have to have a “Plan B.”
MARYSVILLE — If there’s any lesson that Garnett Dixson and her son Kyle learned from the April 25 cleanup at the Marysville-Pilchuck High School campus, it’s to dispose of gum properly.
MARYSVILLE — Dinosaurs and trains might not seem like subjects that go together, but they somehow coexist quite nicely in the paintings of Marysville artist Jacques Drapeau.
MARYSVILLE — Nearly 90 volunteers were more than willing to get wet April 25. The city of Marysville observed Earth Day by coordinating the planting of 50 cedar and 50 spruce trees at Jennings Park with the help of the Adopt-A-Stream Foundation.
MARYSVILLE — The more that the community can help keep its parks and other resources clean, the more city staff can expand the scope of its work.
MARYSVILLE — The city’s annual Shred-A-Thon again marked the culminating of its spring “Clean Sweep,” even as the community prepared for Earth Day the following weekend.
MARYSVILLE — Four years of honing his craft finally paid off for Arlington’s Dave Mitchell. On April 18, he earned a first-place ribbon from the Quil Cedar Carvers during their 30th annual “Artistry in Wood” event at the Red Curtain Arts Center.
