EHS’s Rebekah Johnson and Gina Sanders and WRHS Courtney Hall go two rounds at state tennis tournament.
White River High School teacher Karen Fugate was honored with the Mary Meisenbach Excellence in Education Award May 25.
Enumclaw High’s girls doubles team of Rebekah Johnson and Gina Sanders are headed to the 3A state tournament Friday and Saturday at the Tri Cities Court Club and Kamiakin High School. White River High’s Courtney Hall will be the team’s lone representative into the Class 2A state tournament Friday and Saturday at the Nordstrom Tennis Center on the University of Washington campus in Seattle.
Freshman Maria Blad will compete in two individual events at the upcoming state Class 3A track and field championships, leading a crew of nine Enumclaw High athletes who qualified for the three-day meet.
With an 8-5 win over Puyallup, the Enumclaw High girls water polo team came home with a seventh-place finish from the state water polo tounrmanet Saturday at Rogers High in Puyallup.
The Enumclaw and White River school boards gave their superintendents the thumbs up and renewed their contracts with few if any changes.
Bedda Johnson and Gina Sanders will represent Enumclaw High at the girls district tennis tournament today, Wednesday, at Sprinker Recreation Center in Parkland.
Enumclaw High School juniors Michelle McKinlay and Tyler Salsbury were named this year’s Ray Limbo Masonic Junior Achievement Scholarship winners at the banquet April 21.
White River High’s Shelby Davis powered her way to a state high school weightlifting record during the recent state meet in White Salmon, Wash.
The Enumclaw High School girls water polo team tips off the state tournament today, Wednesday, at Rogers High in Puyallup. The Hornets, who finished seventh in state last season, will meet Wilson in a 4:30 p.m. contest.
The Balance Master Katey Lent and Suzanne Lewis set up in the community room at Living Court Assisted Living facility looked and played like a video game.
While Enumclaw Senior Activity Center volunteers bustled in the kitchen flipping flapjacks, teenagers from Enumclaw Youth and Family Services’ center were busy seating and waiting on community members eager for breakfast. The smell of sausage was strong. The strains of bluegrass from the band Original Recipe spurred dancing, and the relationship built between the youth and seniors was immeasurable.
When teenagers get caught shoplifting, they are usually shuffled off to a big-city courthouse.
In Enumclaw, kids who commit low-level, first-time offenses have another option.