The owners of the Pacific Rim Supper Club and Ballroom aim to give their patrons a taste of entertainment to accompany their evening meals.
Mark and Cindy Langmas began renovating the establishment, adjoining the Best Western Inn in Tulalip, late last year, and found a stage behind what had been a bar.
Third Street is hosting its second annual Fit-Tastic Easter Egg Hunt April 4, starting at 11 a.m. in the parking lot of the Carabinieri Bar espresso stand.
Gottschalks Inc., which has an outlet at the Marysville Mall, announced March 31 that it is proposing liquidating assets, pending the approval of a bankruptcy court.
The Bookworks on Third Street will host Mount Vernon author Heidi Thomas April 4, as she talks about cowgirls.
Shoultes Elementary first-grade teacher Carolyn Clark and her students received a welcome surprise in their classroom on the morning of March 27.
Law enforcement agents from across the country were able to hone their skills at the Tulalip Resort Hotel March 23-27, as the Snohomish County Sheriff’s Office staged the National Sheriffs’ Association First Responder Program.
Shoultes Elementary first-grade teacher Carolyn Clark and her students received a welcome surprise in their classroom on the morning of March 27.
Not only is this the first year that the Marysville-Pilchuck High School mock trial team is heading to state competitions, but it’s also the first year that M-PHS has had a mock trial team at all.
The city of Marysville’s decision to operate the Cedarcrest Family Restaurant and Grill has drawn objections from the current operators, as well as from customers.
Shoultes Elementary staged two showings March 20 of its first school play in as long as many staff members could remember.
The Tulalip Tribes recently awarded the bid for the thinning of 78.5 acres of Tulalip forest land to Precision Thinning of Sedro-Woolley, which began thinning 28-year-old Douglas fir plantations to a stocking level of 160 trees per acre in February.
The Marysville-Pilchuck High School auditorium was vibrating from the volume of the Battle of the Bands March 21, as eight bands performed in support of the M-PHS sophomore class.
Even though Kayleen Shepherd never had Heather Moll as her own teacher, the 18-year-old Shepherd was so inspired by Moll’s teaching that the Lakewood High School senior made the Marshall Elementary music teacher a quilt, which Shepherd presented to Moll March 20.