The Gleneagle Golf Course and Restaurant’s current owners are celebrating their first anniversary at the establishment this month with a series of fundraising tournaments that they hope will showcase the improvements they’ve made.
She goes by many names, but regardless of whether she answers to “Mom,” “Grandma” or “Auntie Yo,” Yolanda Larsen is known for her years of community service, which earned her the Stillaguamish Senior Center’s Lifetime Achievement Award Sept. 8.
Stillaguamish Senior Center Board Co-Chair Dale Duskin opened the morning’s ceremonies in Larsen’s honor by praising her skills as a communicator.
The Arlington Heights Improvement Club’s annual beef barbecue and auction drew an estimated 125 attendees and raised approximately $375 in scholarship donations alone on July 25.
ARLINGTON — Close to 30 veterans from Marysville, Arlington, Everett and Lynnwood descended upon Jim Eastbury’s Arlington estate to give…
ARLINGTON — This year’s Arlington Street Fair only ran for two days, July 9-10, rather than its usual three days, but Julie Tate thinks the event went well overall.
One thing that regular visitors to the Arlington Fly-In noticed this year is how much the five-day event has grown over the course of its 43 years.
Children from Marysville, Arlington and beyond showed up at 9 a.m. on July 7, the first day of the Fly-In, as part of an Arlington Assembly of God youth trip.
The 14 graduating seniors of Highland Christian School reflected on the ways in which the world has changed, and themselves with it, during their June 11 graduation ceremony.
The Gleneagle Golf Course once again hosted the Arlington-Smokey Point Chamber of Commerce’s annual golf tournament June 11, as 72 golfers descended upon the links to enjoy the window of good weather and support their chamber.
Arlington’s first-ever Relay For Life to benefit the American Cancer Society was the most successful first-year Relay in ACS history.
The June 4-5 event at the Arlington High School stadium raised more than $228,000 and drew 119 teams of 1429 participants, as well as 32 corporate sponsors, breaking the national record set for a first-year Relay that was previously set by New York City. Arlington’s 60-member Relay For Life Committee is continuing to receive donations through August, and will have representatives on site at the Arlington Fourth of July Parade and Street Fair on Olympic Avenue July 9-10.
Sherri Jira captained six Relay teams, one of which was honored as one of the top five fundraising teams of the Relay, for generating more than $7,500 in funds.
“We had 15 people on each team,” said Jira, whose son plays basketball at Arlington High School. “All the kids wanted to be on board. We started with two teams and added on from there. We could have added even more, but I finally told them that they needed to start their own teams,” she laughed.
Olympic Avenue boasted a record turnout for the Downtown Arlington Business Association’s Show N Shine June 12.
After 21 years at the Smokey Point Community Church, the Praise and Promise Preschool bid farewell to its old home with its May 27 graduation ceremony.
After 21 years at the Smokey Point Community Church, the Praise and Promise Preschool bid farewell to its old home with its May 27 graduation ceremony.
