In an e-mail sent to The Marysville Globe at 4:25 p.m. July 12, slightly more than two hours before the first Marysville School District Board of Directors meeting held since his return from Washington, D.C., Board member Michael Kundu confirmed his resignation from the Board effective the same day.
Jon Nehring just recently started his third term on the Marysville City Council, but he’s already getting ready for his new job in August.
The first “Crowns For Hope” charity luncheon pageant is set for July 31, but the deadline to enter without a late fee is July 24.
Monica Berginc was inspired to create and coordinate the event by meeting 2009’s Mrs. Washington international, DeAnna Emborski, at the All American Girl Pageant in Marysville in February. Berginc wanted to organize a children’s and young adults’ beauty pageant to support a worthwhile community cause, and after hearing how Emborski, the outgoing publisher of The Marysville Globe and The Arlington Times, used her participation in pageants to raise awareness about domestic violence, Berginc chose Domestic Violence Services of Snohomish County as Crowns For Hope’s cause.
On July 8, Marysville police detectives were able to return $11,000 to a 73-year-old Marysville woman who had lost close to $37,000 to a Jamaican lottery scam a few weeks before.
The Tulalip Lions Club and PC Recycle of Arlington teamed up to help area techies dispose of their old and outdated electronics in an environmentally safe way.
John Rants, band director for the Marysville-Pilchuck High School campus, has been named this year’s Seattle Symphony Educator of the Year.
MARYSVILLE — Marysville fans of “The Twilight Saga” began lining up for the latest installment in the series at 1:30 p.m. the day before its premiere at the Marysville Re
While Dennis Kendall is loath to point to any one event or circumstance that inspired him to resign as mayor of Marysville, he acknowledged that a recent painful loss played a significant part in it.
MARYSVILLE — Although the Marysville Public Works Building at 80 Columbia Ave. is still closed to walk-in visitors until further notice, citizens can now conduct their business with the city’s Community Development office at 601 Delta Ave. from 7:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mondays through Fridays, excluding holidays.
Brain cancer survivor Molly McMurphy of Marysville has defied the odds in a big way and she hopes to help others in her situation do the same.
MARYSVILLE — City of Marysville officials hope that residents enjoy Independence Day fireworks in a legal “safe and sane” fashion.
Inside Marysville city limits the discharging of fireworks is permitted from 9 a.m. to 11 p.m. on July 4 only. In unincorporated Snohomish County, fireworks may only be discharged between 9 a.m. and 11:59 p.m. on July 4.
The city of Marysville Planning Commission voted 5-1 June 22 to recommend protection for five of the 13 mobile home parks within the city limits.
Marysville-Pilchuck High School students Meghan O’Brien and Tyler Beach are heading to the national competition for the Future Business Leaders of America in Nashville, Tenn., from July 12-18.
