- 5.1.2-TNT0017B
- 04/06/1980
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B & I egg hunt
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B & I egg hunt
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David Dye
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Governor Dixie Lee Ray
Frank Mounts conversing with Jo Anne Mounts while Frank works on his car’s transmission.
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On Nisqually Reservation
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The Chang family watches some of the Olympics in their Puyallup home. They are from Korea, now American residents (citizens).
L to R: Chase, Carol, Oak (mother) and Soo Nam.
Story by Voelpel
Photo by Peter Haley
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Dr. David Dye
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Hispanic Americans
Edna Lilly tends to her chickens in yard of log cabin home.
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Mrs. Edna Lilly
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Many Asian businesses can be found along South Tacoma Way.
Story by Dorian Smith
Photo by Bill Hunter
“Signs in two languages light up the Royal Box in South Tacoma.” There were seven Korean nightclubs along South Tacoma Way and Pacific Highway NW, possibly making the highest concentration of Korean nightclubs on the West Coast according to the New Tribune. Along with serving food and drinks, they served as cultural meeting places for Tacoma’s Korean community.
MCNEIL ISLAND CORRECTION CENTER--GENERAL 1950-1979-2
Narcotics Anonymous
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B & I Water Slide
Kellman
Dunbar, Bonnie (Astronaut, Yakima native) - 1
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Bonnie Dunbar
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El Comite
Alex Almonte (left) Paul Castillo (right)
Photograph by Jerry Buck
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Indians, Nisqually
A person in rubber boots weighs a bucket
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Peter Kim drinks his Sake while talking with James Jee (L) and his sister Joanne Jee (R). The three are from Vancouver B.C. and think the Torch Light is one of the best Korean nightclubs in the northwest.
Story by Dorian Smith
Photo by Bill Hunter
Barnacle Bill's (11th St. and Port of Tacoma Road) - 1
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Old Barnacle Bill's Leveled- A longtime Tacoma waterfront landmark, Barnacle Bill's Cafe at the intersection of 11th Street and Port of Tacoma Road, was leveled early last week. The structure has been a cafe since the 1930s and was moved to the site from across 11th Street in 1941, according to owner Ben Erhart, who bought the establishment in 1950. The cleared site will be developed as a parking lot for the new, enlarged Barnacle Bill's, which has opened its doors to the rear of the site.
Dunbar, Bonnie (Astronaut, Yakima native) - 2
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PHOTO 12221...ASTRONAUT by Manuel...Bonnie Dunbar -- she will fly in the Space Shuttle in the next four years. Credit: Peter Main. The Christian Science Monitor News Services. Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
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Bonnie Dunbar
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Cubans
Photograph by Bob Rudsit
Two Nisqually tribal members prepare nets in lower Nisqually River in defiance of state regulations. Nisqually tribal members planned to exercise their right to fish under the Medicine Creek Treaty following a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision which allowed states to regulate off-reservation Native fishing.
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Fisheries Men Watch
Back of photo: McKinley Hill Area
Barnacle Bill's (11th St. and Port of Tacoma Road) - 2
Dunbar, Bonnie (Astronaut, Yakima native) - 3
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PHOTO 12220...ASTRONAUT by Manuel...Bonnie Dunbar, astronaut. Credit: Peter Main. The Christian Science Monitor News Service. Distributed by Los Angeles Times Syndicate.
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Bonnie Dunbar
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El Comite
Mrs. Yenin Webster
Photograph by Jerry Buck
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Indians, Nisqually
Nine people stand around a campfire.
Back of photo: McKinley Hill Area
Barnacle Bill's (11th St. and Port of Tacoma Road) - 3
Dunbar, Bonnie (Astronaut, Yakima native) - 4
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Dunbar, Bonnie
Astronaut: Sunnyside, WA
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Hilltop Area
SCAM (Sheridan, Cushman, Ainsworth, and M Street) neighborhood group members are shown picking up litter in the alleyway between South Sheridan and South M Street. It was the second annual clean up hosted by SCAM. “In addition to cleaning the alleys, the group has put pressure on neighborhood landlords to clear vacant lots of trash and high weeds and to demolish the remnants of partially raised structures.” Photo by staff member Jerry Buck