At the time, Ian Anderson said he was on call 24 hours a day, seven days a week.
Two Japanese high-school exchange groups will be coming to the Bothell-Kenmore area in March.
Working with Community Transit to help set up employee transportation programs has paid off for five local companies.
Internships, networking and a well-written resume.
Visiting Inglemoor High was struggling from the field, but fortunately, Bothell High had an even worse night last Friday. In the end, Inglemoor beat rival Bothell, 39-33, in 4A Kingco boys basketball action.
In its next-to-last 4A Kingco gymnastics meet of the season, Inglemoor (166.05) handily beat Roosevelt (139.45) and Lake Washington (139.0) last Thursday at Lake Washington High.
Players are reeling after the Jan. 8 announcement of the dropping of Western Washington University’s football program.
The powerhouse Inglemoor High wrestling team beat two stellar programs during last Thursday’s 4A Kingco double-dual meet at Bothell High. The event pitted Inglemoor and Woodinville against Bothell and Mercer Island.
Building height was decidedly one of the main issues on the minds of residents who attended the latest public hearing on plans to revamp downtown Bothell.
With a break for lunch, a Kenmore hearing examiner received nearly eight hours of testimony Jan. 29 regarding Bastyr University’s plans to build 11, three-story dorm buildings.
Feeling the current system is far too open, a group of parents has proposed the Northshore School District radically change its curriculum selection process.
Sitting in Bothell’s Northshore Senior Center enjoying a hot lunch surrounded by others who face some of the same difficulties she does, Barbara Myerson, 71, said a year ago she was suffering from depression among other health problems and ready to move into a nursing home.
The numbers are in and Kenmore received 14 bids from contractors for its new city hall, with the lowest construction bid coming in at around $7.5 million, according to Assistant City Manager Nancy Ousley.
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Inglemoor High senior Benji Bryant has been around the game of basketball even before he learned to talk.
Thank you for attending the Frederick & Nelson tea (Reporter Jan. 21). I truly appreciate it. You put together a great spread (and even caught me red handed with my cake!). This whole Frederick & Nelson thing really took off in a way I never imagined, and I’m grateful for your coverage.
The political battle for a balanced 2009-2011 state budget has begun. The elected participants define the high ground as each envisions it. Sound bytes flood the media (i.e. Seattle Times front page, Jan. 12). We particularly favor the bluntness of House Speaker Frank Chopp, “It’s important that we look at the budget both as a financial document and as a moral document as well.” As former nonprofit administrators, we believe he has nailed it. The battle will impact life and death realities. The depth of human need, statewide, this time around requires that we heed the speaker, “If we don’t handle this situation correctly, many people could die.”
Thank you for running your article on “Persepolis” last issue. Parents need to be informed of what’s going on in their children’s schools, and you’ve done a great job in spreading the word. I think that most parents who read the book would be concerned, and would question its use for eighth-graders. Why the Northshore School District would not be more responsive to the objections of so many parents is a mystery to me.
Those interested in helping Northshore schools to continue to offer high-quality instructional programs are encouraged to provide input via a short online survey. The survey will be posted on the district’s Web site, www.nsd.org, through Feb. 4.