Marysville Globe, January 24, 2015

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GLOBE THE MARYSVILLE

Basketball:

Lakewood High boys short. Page 8.

WEEKEND EDITION 25,2015  WWW.MARYSVILLEGLOBE.COM  75¢ WEEKEND EDITION JANUARY JUNE 8TH, 2014 WWW.MARYSVILLEGLOBE.COM  75¢

Herald THE SUNDAY

An Edition of

Kids keep King’s dream alive BY KIRK BOXLEITNER kboxleitner@marysvilleglobe.com

Tribes: Tulalips share culture. Page 10.

Wrestling: M-P’s Page pins. Page 8.

MARYSVILLE – Lakewood High School senior Kalan Knott had never volunteered for community service during Martin Luther King Jr. Day before, and had never volunteered at a food bank before, but this year, he wanted to get involved. So, after checking the United Way of Snohomish County’s website, he found himself helping families shop for their meals at the Marysville Community Food Bank Jan. 19. “I like feeling connected to these people,” said Knott, who praised the convenience and organization of the food bank. “It’s like the slogan says; ‘Take a day on, not a day off.’ You can do it during any holiday.” Arlington High School senior Hunter Stevenson was struck by the variety of people who volunteered with him at the food bank that day, all of whom had their own reasons for con-

Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo

Yulissa Bautista, Elena Everybodytalksabout and Loren Anderson of Marysville-Pilchuck sort bags at the food bank. tributing. “Which is good, because a lot of people come here for meals,” Stevenson said. “I didn’t expect so many.” While Stevenson and Knott helped clients load up their shopping carts, a trio of Marysville-Pilchuck High School students worked in

the back of the food bank, sorting bags of food. “So often, we think only about ourselves, but this reminds us that others have greater needs than us,” junior Yulissa Bautista said. Sophomore Elena Everybodytalksabout, a fellow first-year MLK Day

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OPINION

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SPORTS

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WORSHIP

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Everett, where he also volunteered at the food bank. “I just like seeing how the community can come together for a common cause,” Anderson said. These teens were not alone. The United Way’s SEE MLK, PAGE 2

2 die in mobile home blaze in Arlington

INDEX LEGAL NOTICES

volunteer, agreed: “I like helping people who don’t have enough food to eat. Not everyone can get meals as easily as we do.” Fellow sophomore Loren Anderson has been volunteering at the Marysville food bank for the past two years, after moving from

TIMES STAFF

Vol. 121, No. 29

Kirk Boxleitner/Staff Photo

Fire marshal crews at right look at a mobile home destroyed in a blaze that took two lives.

ARLINGTON – One of the victims who died in a fire in Arlington Jan. 19 has been identified. The man was Brian C. Wiley, 58, the Snohomish County Medical Examiner’s Office reported Jan. 22. The report says the cause of the accidental death was inhalation of soot and products of combustion.

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The identification of the other individual in the fire is pending. The two men died in a mobile home fire in the 14200 block of Club Way near Arlington. The two bodies were recovered the day after the fire because of the danger to rescuers. A neighbor first report SEE FIRE, PAGE 2


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