The Marysville Police Department is once again teaming up with several other law enforcement agencies to present the North American Motor Officer Association Training Conference.
In just three weeks, the students of Cascade Elementary raised $3,220.73 through a penny drive for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, which they presented to the group, complete with an oversized check, at an assembly on March 18.
In just three weeks, the students of Cascade Elementary raised $3,220.73 through a penny drive for the Leukemia and Lymphoma Society, which they presented to the group, complete with an oversized check, at an assembly on March 18.
Ron Logan’s state career in corrections began in 1989, and as of April 1, he will officially retire as a community corrections officer in Marysville.
A community gathering on “Understanding Alzheimer’s” will take place April 10 from 9:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. at the Bethlehem Lutheran Church in Marysville.
Teens at the Marysville Library got a chance to create eye-catching art out of recycled materials March 24.
Close to a dozen kids from Marysville and Arlington put together “LED throwies,” under the supervision of Marysville Library Teen Librarian Laura Tilman, out of ingredients that cost little more than pennies each.
After nearly 20 years, the Chocolate Lovers’ Gala is drawing crowds faster than ever. The 18th annual event, to benefit to the Snohomish County Center for Battered Women, not only seated 400 guests for its “Noche de Chocolate” March 26 at the Everett Events Center, but it did so weeks in advance, according to Vicci Hilty.
At 83 years of age, Stanley Jones Sr. has led a life so full that it could fill a book, and it already has. After 44 years and 15 consecutive elected terms of service, Jones is stepping down from the Tulalip Tribal Board of Directors April 3, and on April 11 and 12 from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m.
The crowd was sparse at Marysville Mayor Dennis Kendall’s coffee klatch March 24, but he was happy to speak to an audience of half a dozen at the HomeStreet Bank on State Avenue anyway.
Tulalip Elementary and Totem Middle School have both been approved for federal funding, after agreeing to adopt federal reform models aimed at turning around the nation’s lowest-performing schools.
The 85-year-old state Route 529 Ebey Slough bridge served as the site for the Washington State Department of Transportation’s March 29 announcement kicking off this year’s construction season for Puget Sound.
Tulalip Elementary and Totem Middle School have both been approved for federal funding, after agreeing to adopt federal reform models aimed at turning around the nation’s lowest-performing schools.
Teens at the Marysville Library got a chance to create eye-catching art out of recycled materials March 24.
