ARLINGTON — A snowy day did not deter the Rotary Club of Arlington, as they delivered 55 baskets of food to homes in the greater Arlington area Dec. 18.
EVERETT — Several nonprofit organizations that serve Arlington’s community have received grants through the Greater Everett Community Foundation.
OSO — If a hay barn collapses and nobody hears it, it still collapsed indeed. Just ask Monica and Ted Yantis, whose barn went down under the weight of the snow in the middle of the night, Dec. 26.
ARLINGTON — Another culturally significant barn in the Arlington area collapsed under the snow during the Big Storm of ‘08.
SEATTLE — Terry L. Davis, the longtime Arlington city employee who was accused of embezzling more than $700,000 from the city coffers, pleaded guilty, Dec. 30, in U.S. District Court in Seattle to mail fraud and filing false tax returns.
ARLINGTON — Arlington got off easy in November when flooding hit other areas around Puget Sound, but it wasn’t so lucky when the snow started Dec. 13.
The former Human Resources Administrator for the city of Arlington pleaded guilty Dec. 30, 2008 in U.S. District Court in Seattle to Mail Fraud and Filing a False Tax return.
ARLINGTON – Marysville Fire District crews were dispatched to a motor vehicle collision at 3621 168th Street NE, a United States Post Office, at approximately noon on Dec. 30.
• Ken Baxter Senior/Community Center seeks Instructors
Noiseguy Charlie Williams will present Loud at the Library at 2 p.m. Monday, Dec. 29. This guy roars like a lion, sings like a mermaid and flushes like a toilet. Kids and their families will be encouraged to laugh out loud with this vocal sound impressionist, kids’ comedian and author. Supported by the Friends of the Arlington Library, at 135 N. Washington Ave.
Al-Anon weekly meetings:
ARLINGTON — A winter blast that closed schools, delayed garbage pickup and made for some hazardous driving finally left town as temperatures began rising over the weekend.
ARLINGTON — Sometimes it seems like the same ol’ story over and over again — especially lately with the Island Crossing situation. Readers who think that’s the case may like to consider the number of stories The Times has published about the 18-year land-use conflict at Island Crossing.
