For the second week in a row, the Enumclaw High football squad traveled to Harry E. Lang Stadium in Lakewood Friday.
The Enumclaw High volleyball team split a pair of matches, beating Sumner in four games Sept. 28 before losing at Auburn Mountainview two days later.
The Buckley City Council hosted its first formal budget discussion to address what will be done about a deficit of approximately $278,000 heading into discussions surrounding its 2010 financial plan.
As the old axiom goes, “It ain’t over ‘til the fat lady sings.”
Enumclaw High’s gridders stunned the No. 1 3A squad in the state, the Lakes Lancers, Friday evening by going ahead 14-7 at intermission in the friendly confines of Harry Lang Stadium.
Guitarist and crooner extraordinaire Raliegh Jay dropped by the Buckley Senior Center Friday morning to furnish the entertainment at the center’s annual progress report meeting.
Friday evening was “throwback night” at Pete’s Pool, as fans got a real notion of what football was like before electronic scoreboards were in vogue.
When Enumclaw High’s volleyball squad beat visiting Capital of the Western Cascade Conference, it wasn’t important in the standings and it was just a nonleague encounter.
White River’s volleyball squad is off to an 0-4 start, but is making progress daily, according to new coach Stryder Argo.
Unlike past seasons, the Enumclaw High volleyball squad seems to be coming out of the gate a bit faster.
The Enumclaw High football squad traveled for the second week in a row, this time to Franklin Pierce’s field nestled in Tacoma’s Midland area and is now an unblemished 2-0 after trimming the Cardinals’ tail feathers 9-6.
Interwest Development Northwest wants to become acquainted with the people on the Plateau.
The Buckley-based company will host a public open house from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 12.
The Buckley City Council has scheduled a public hearing to discuss changes to city regulations governing recreational vehicle parks.
The meeting is planned for 7 p.m. Sept. 22 in the Buckley Multi-Purpose Center Building, 811 Main St.
Unless Buckley City Council members come up with money in an already-tight 2009 budget, the associate city planner’s position will be eliminated at the end of September.