ARLINGTON — John Henken, a longstanding member of the Rotary Club of Arlington, will be remembered by those who knew him at two separate events on Saturday, June 23.
While overcast skies put a slight damper on this year’s attendance, the 13th annual Show ‘N’ Shine car show on Saturday, June 9, still drew hundreds of automobiles and onlookers to Olympic Avenue to help support Arlington’s local businesses and community service organizations.
The Village Community Services’ annual Taste of Decadence returned to the Smokey Point Community Church on Friday, June 8.
ARLINGTON — Father Jim Dalton celebrated his 70th birthday on April 11 of this year, and on May 18, he’ll have served as a priest for 44 years.
While this year’s Marysville-Tulalip Relay For Life is done, the 2012 Arlington Relay For Life still lies ahead, on the weekend of June 23-24.
After years of discussions and plans, the Blue Stilly Players expect that they’ll finally spread their wings this summer, once they get maybe just a few more players.
On May 19, the Regency Care Center became home to a much younger crowd than they usually serve.
ARLINGTON — Jill Murphy, owner of the Tobacco Express roll-your-own cigarette store in Arlington, is wondering whether her business will last the summer.
ARLINGTON — The stage of the Linda M. Byrnes Performing Arts Center was starkly unfurnished, to match the all-black outfits worn by the 20 Arlington High School French class students who spoke and sang that evening, and to reflect the somber mood of the passages from which they read.
ARLINGTON — A trio of Arlington citizens who have devoted themselves to helping the Stillaguamish Valley Genealogical Society grow over the years were recently named this year’s recipients of the Howard Christensen Citizen of the Year Award from Arlington Lodge 129 of the Free and Accepted Masons.
ARLINGTON — The Olympic Theater shined a spotlight on the farming industry with its Saturday, May 26, screening of “Fresh,” a 2009 documentary highlighting the differences between industrialized farming practices versus those of more local, organic, family-owned farms.
SMOKEY POINT — As the Arlington Community Food Bank heads into fundraising for a permanent building, it recently received much more than a drop in the bucket from the Smokey Point Walmart.
ARLINGTON — By the time he’s officially installed at Our Saviour’s Lutheran Church in Arlington on Sunday, June 3, Scott Summers will have already served as its pastor for a month.