Cascade chapter of DeMolay was hosting a costume ball at Floral Hall in Forest Park. It was open to all Everett High School and Everett Junior College students. Wayne Bradford chairrd the committee in charge, which also included Jim Bowles, Mike Whitehead, Willard Bunney, Allen Kelley, Pat Terry, Norm Olsen, Fred Branson and Doug McKenzie.
The old Quinn-McGuiness house in Snohomish was being demolished to make way for a 12-room school, to be called Emerson Elementary. It was needed to ease classroom overcrowding due to the baby boom generation.
The Everett Herald and Western Sun named three people to management positions: Adele Brady Bolson, controller and accounting manager, reporting to Jerry Distefano; Nancy Erickson, Leisure editor, reporting to editor Ralph Langer; Larry Henry, executive sports editor, also reporting to Langer.
The Old Thomle Bridge spanning the Stillaguamish River a mile south of Stanwood was to be demolished, but travelers would have at least another month to find alternate routes. Tom Slayton of the Snohomish County Department of Public Works said residents of the 12 homes west of the bridge would be able to use it for 30 to 40 days.
By Jack O’Donnell from Herald archives at Everett Public Library.
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