MARYSVILLE – Sunnyside Elementary School third-graders learned May 29 how to make simple machines to make work easier.
MARYSVILLE – The City Council does not like giving out money.
That message was loud and clear at its May 26 meeting when it voted to give the Marysville-Tulalip chamber $20,000, instead of the requested $40,000.
The Marysville City Council continues its Shakespearian tragedy with the divisive fireworks issue after months of research and debate.
Whether ’tis nobler to keep fireworks in our fair city, or to take arms against them, and by opposing, end them?
MARYSVILLE – Kids in orphanages in Africa soon will be wearing colorful pillow-case dresses made by Marysville students.
MARYSVILLE – On the heels of Gov. Jay Inslee signing a bill to make train shipments of crude oil safer, the Marysville School District passed a resolution asking for even more controls.
Memorial Day Weekend is always a precursor to summer in the Pacific Northwest.
Many people still like to go camping or have a short stay-cation on the three-day weekend.
MARYSVILLE – Students can’t learn if they are not in class, so the Marysville School District is doing what it can to keep them there.
MARYSVILLE – Partnerships are key to having successful schools in the future.
That was one of the lessons learned by Marysville School District officials who recently attended a national convention on professional development in Nashville, TN.
MARYSVILLE – Of paramount concern to the Marysville School District is keeping its students, staff and even the community safe.
MARYSVILLE – The City Council had questions about how the chamber wanted to spend $40,000 in a grant request, and CEO Jesica Stickles provided the answers May 11 at a special meeting.
MARYSVILLE – When Kellogg Marsh teacher Barbara McKinney invited Mayor Jon Nehring to visit her second-grade class May 13, she should have warned him to “bee” surprised.
MARYSVILLE – Becky Berg has a doctorate from Columbia University, and as Marysville schools superintendent has one of the most-prominent jobs in the city.
MARYSVILLE – With the culminating project no longer a state requirement to graduate, the Marysville School District is looking at other options to help students prepare for high school and beyond.