EVERETT — “If you must do something, Karen, it must be a celebration of the good times.”
FEDERAL WAY — Marysville swimming standout Trevor LeValley already knew what it was like to win a state event.
The Marysville-Pilchuck High School Naval Junior ROTC “Tomahawk Company” will be conducting its annual evening parade Feb. 26 at 6:55 p.m. in the M-PHS gym, and the public is invited to attend.
The Marysville Police Department will be holding a public notification meeting to release information regarding a Level II Sex Offender residing within the city limits of Marysville.
More than 100 people — mostly parents and staff of Liberty Elementary and the Marysville Cooperative Education Program — attended Tuesday night’s meeting of the Marysville School Board expecting to learn if their school would be closed as part of the district’s efforts to trim more than $3 million from is budget.
You start out in school and have classmates, acquaintances and friends. And if you’re lucky, some become lifelong special friends….
In all the controversy surrounding the WASL and its proposed replacement, I believe we are neglecting a key part of…
I also want president Obama’s policies to fail. I believe him to be a socialist. Total government control of our…
BI-MONTHLY MEETINGS Arlington Masonic Lodge No.129 meets at 7:30 pm the 2nd and 4th Wednesday of each month. There is…
Marysville • Ken Baxter Senior/Community Center seeks Instructors The Ken Baxter Senior/Community Center is seeking people who are interested in…
Al Treacy and Jennifer Millett were recently hired as prosecutors for the city of Marysville because of the city’s growing needs, but they chose to come to Marysville because of how much the city has retained its small-town feel.
Karate is a huge sport at my house. Soccer is big, too. My boys also love football, and they have tried T-ball and gymnastics. It is easy to get active in Marysville because we have so many great choices for the entire family. However, there is also the rub — we have great opportunities, but are limited by time and money. How do we make the best choices for our families?
In December 2008, the Snohomish Health District released a report by ZIP code of the most obese areas in Snohomish County. Marysville tipped the scales at 33.8 percent to become the “fattest city,” with one in three residents identified as obese.
