The Hibulb Cultural Center marked its first-year anniversary during the weekend of Aug. 17-19 by serving as the site for storytellers, craft-makers, gardeners and film screenings for three days.
Close to 250 cars, trucks, hot rods and dragsters returned to the Arlington Airport for the annual Sittin Pretti Summer Slam car show Saturday, Aug. 18, as auto enthusiasts from across the state and beyond turned out to help out a local community organization.
The Arlington-Smokey Point Chamber of Commerce aimed to make Smokey Point live up to its name once more, as five cooking teams entered nine different types of food between them in the Chamber’s barbecue cook-off on Saturday, Aug. 18.
The Cottages at Marysville look forward to opening their doors in late August or early September, and while Marysville offers a number of senior care centers already, the Cottages at Marysville are unique in that they provide memory care services, according to Kim Johnson, executive director of the Cottages at Marysville.
The fourth annual “Tulalip Days” on Saturday, Aug. 11, drew more than 30 entries for its parade, from members of the Tulalip Tribes to representatives of the surrounding communities, but the morning’s bustling procession was intended as the prelude to the cultural educational opportunities that followed.
TULALIP — The Hibulb Cultural Center is celebrating its first full year with free admission for its three-day anniversary celebration weekend, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Friday, Aug. 17, through Sunday, Aug. 19.
TULALIP — The return of the National Night Out Against Crime to the Tulalip Amphitheatre on Tuesday, Aug. 7, drew not only a host of civilian attendees, some from as far away as Lake Stevens and even Canada, but also a number of dignitaries in law enforcement.
TULALIP — Reid Shockey sees North Snohomish County’s ongoing population growth leading to greater traffic congestion, and while traffic jams are aggravating enough on their own, Shockey fears they could derail the economic engine of the region.
MARYSVILLE — When the state of Washington got out of the liquor business on May 31, Marysville’s Edward Chea and his family saw an opportunity to fill a gap in the local market while maintaining the store that’s become a fixture of the Allen Creek Shopping Center in town.
SEATTLE — Marysville Fire Capt. Keith Taylor has gotten to know Safeco Field in Seattle almost as well as the Seattle Mariners themselves, and there’s no signs that he’ll be ratcheting back on his visits to the field anytime soon.
The Greater Marysville Tulalip Chamber of Commerce celebrated the return of one of its most-missed members on Wednesday, July 18, as its Regional Visitor Information Center hosted an evening in honor of Chamber President and CEO Caldie Rogers.
While the second annual open house and car show at the Kumon Math & Reading Center of Marysville on Saturday, July 21, attracted a slightly sparser crowd than last year’s inaugural event, the event’s organizers were hardly discouraged.
One thing that both Marysville School District officials and local residents will readily agree on is that at least a couple of the schools’ landscaping is looking rough.
