The Arlington Times and The Marysville Globe have had a long-standing policy that all Letters to the Editor must be signed. But, at the same time, our online readers have been able to make anonymous comments to our stories posted on our websites.
Having already clinched a spot in the upcoming Districts playoffs, the Arlington Eagles girls softball team faced off against Stanwood, May 4, and battled back from an early deficit for a 11-10 victory.
The Arlington Eagles got swept in their recent three-game series against the Marysville-Pilchuck Tomahawks, but there is still an opportunity for the Eagles to make post-season play.
The 2011 Washington Legislative Session began this week in Olympia and it’s clear that the No. 1 issue they’ll have to deal with is Washington’s projected $5 billion spending gap in the 2011-13 budget and the decisions made will affect every one of us.
No one was injured today when a logging truck and school bus collided at approximately 3 p.m. on State Route 530 near Oso.
Ahead of schedule and under budget are two things you would not normally associate with construction projects being handled by…
We are constantly striving to improve both the print and on-line editions of The Marysville Globe and The Arlington Times….
An Arlington resident, Dave Van Ess, has written an article that will be published in Scroll Saw Woodworking & Crafts magazine, due out on newsstands July 14.
When we let freedom ring, when we let it ring from every village and every hamlet, from every state and every city, we will be able to speed up that day when all of God’s children, black men and white men, Jew and Gentiles, Protestants and Catholics, will be able to join hands and sing in the word of that old Negro spiritual ‘Free at Last! Free at last! Thank God almighty, we are free at last.’
In early December we put out a call asking for local residents who would be interested in being community columnists for The Marysville Globe and The Arlington Times.
As we take a look back at 2008, we should take a moment to remember those whom we have lost in the past year and honor their contributions to our communities. It is, after all, the people who make our communities such great places to live.
December got off to a great start with Marysville celebrating the 20th anniversary of Merrysville for the Holidays and Arlington welcoming adults and children alike to its Hometown Holidays.
I’m a strong believer that everyone wins when it comes to partnerships and that belief was reinforced recently with a number of events that would not have been possible without both public and private involvement and cooperation.