Many patrons of the Red Robin at Lakewood Crossing April 18 were surprised to find their meals being served by wait-staff who already work demanding jobs.
With childhood obesity rates on the rise nationwide, Marysville isn’t the only “fat city” in America, and the YMCA of Snohomish County has provided families throughout the region with one way of helping them fight the new “battle of the bulge” successfully.
Jonathan Richard Cring is not only a published author, a movie screenplay writer and a music composer, he’s also a live entertainer who uses comedy to deliver spiritual messages.
MARYSVILLE — The 2009 Marysville Strawberry Festival Talent Show will take place June 18 at 6:30 p.m. in the Marysville-Pilchuck…
Tulalip Tribes Chair Mel Sheldon Jr. was brisk in his delivery of the “State of the Nation” for 2009 at the Tulalip Resort Casino March 27.
More than 2,000 Easter egg hunters and their families flocked to Jennings Park April 11, to fill their Easter baskets with an estimated 12,000 plastic eggs.
In spite of the current economy, the second annual Marysville Arts and Technology School Senior Legacy Auction has raised more than $40,000, an increase from last year’s total.
It started with the idea of “drumming bunnies,” and on April 4 the second annual Fit-Tastic Easter Egg Hunt on Third Street offered drumming bunnies and more for children and families alike.
The Marysville chapter of Soroptimist International attracted more than 200 shoppers to their annual “Junktique” sale, April 4 from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Jennings Park barn, on behalf of their work in support of the community.
More than 900 walkers gathered at the Tulalip Amphitheater on the morning of April 4 to take steps toward finding a cure for multiple sclerosis.
Liberty Elementary fifth-grader Litzahaya Macias may be just 11 years old, but she already knows what freedom means to her.
Area author Bonny Beckler gave the students of Quil Ceda Elementary a chance to ask a professional writer how she creates children’s books, when she appeared at their school March 18 to read “A Visitor for Bear.”
DeAnna Emborski believes that local newspapers are “lifelines” for their communities, and as someone who has already been involved in the local community, she looks forward to supporting it further as the newly hired publisher of The Marysville Globe and The Arlington Times, as well as the Wenatchee and Bellingham business journals.