- Item
- 05/07/2022
Part of Community Event Collection
Melody Hennigh holds a sign reading "Protect safe, legal abortions."
"As I explained to my five-year-old, we are sticking up to bullies."
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Part of Community Event Collection
Melody Hennigh holds a sign reading "Protect safe, legal abortions."
"As I explained to my five-year-old, we are sticking up to bullies."
Part of Community Event Collection
Kat Wood holding a sign reading, "Fundamental human rights should NOT depend on your zip code!" with an LGBTQ pride flag sticker and a map of the United States with x-marks over states that restrict or outlaw abortion access.
Interviewer: What brings you here today?
"Oh, so much anger and so much sadness. Um, Roe has been around my entire life and I can’t believe we’re fighting the fights of our grandmothers again and again and again… and trans people and non-binary people are especially gonna be hurt by these laws. I mean, really, all people who need abortion care and need health care deserve to be able to have that equitably and safely and with dignity and I can’t believe we’re having to fight this again."
Part of Community Event Collection
Kat Moulton holds a sign reading "Expand abortion access."
Declined to comment.
Part of Community Event Collection
Serena Jouers holds her small dog and a sign reading, "If I wanted the government in my uterus I'd fuck a politician."
"I feel like I need to do what I can to help spread the message and to help show that we will stand up for our rights and not let this get overturned and that there’s people out here, everywhere, that want – that feel passionately about it."
Part of Community Event Collection
Autumn Fiore holds a sign reading, "If your activism isn't intersectional, then who is it for?"
"Overturning Roe v. Wade is much more than just taking away a person’s bodily autonomy, it could be a slippery slope into other landmark Supreme Court decisions that protect our rights to privacy, bodily autonomy, and just, our choices to do what we would like. Uh, and so I wanna take a stand and make sure that doesn’t happen. Um, the government doesn’t have a right to dictate who we choose to marry, whether we choose to keep a pregnancy, none of it. Um, and I know that there worst fear is us standing up for our rights, but, that doesn’t mean that we just let them do whatever they want."
GCS 5 Julia Berg, Seaport Museum
Part of Radio Tacoma Programs
Joe Bomar visits the Foss Waterway Seaport and talks with Julia Berg, Director of Education, about the Seaport facility and the fascinating exhibits on display there.
GCS 7 John Haley, Buffelen Lumber Co.
Part of Radio Tacoma Programs
Joe Bomar interviews John Buffelen Haley about the Buffelen Lumber Company and its role in building early Tacoma.
Part of Stadium High School Publications
The Mazama Bulletin is published by Mazamas, a non-profit mountaineering organization that was founded in 1894 and is headquartered in Portland, Oregon. The Mazama Bulletin is published bi-monthly, and, in the past, has had a monthly and yearly edition as well. The bulletin publishes articles about hikes, classes, and climbs put on by Mazamas, issues surrounding conservation, responsible recreation, and outdoor education.
The Northwest Facts, April 20, 2022 (Seattle)
Part of The Tacoma Facts
GCS 8.5 Trenton Quiocho, Gather, Hilltop Exhibit Opening
Part of Radio Tacoma Programs
Joe Bomar interviews Trenton Quiocho, curator of the new exhibit at Tacoma Art Museum, GATHER: 27 Years of Hilltop Artists, which runs March 26 - September 4, 2022.
GCS 11 Erin Lasley, McChord Air Force Base History
Part of Radio Tacoma Programs
Joe Bomar interviews local historian Erin Lasley about the history of McChord Air Force Base (now part of JBLM).
GCS 13 Kathi Rennaker, Brown & Haley Candy Co.
Part of Radio Tacoma Programs
Joe Bomar interviews Kathi Rennaker, Director of Marketing for Brown & Haley Candy Co., and self-appointed B&H historian.
Part of Community Event Collection
Kip Howell holds a sign reading, "Forced birth in a country with the highest [maternal] mortality rate, no paid maternity, no universal subsidized childcare, no continued birth parent care, and frequently inaccessible mental health care. - Tocarra Mallard."
"I feel that because they have decided this is not, like, a right under the constitution, this gives way for a lot of other issues. Especially, since they say, like, this is not, like constitutionally worth it for privacy specifically. Um, it gives way for them to attack things like gay marriage rights and many other things. So, I feel that it’s my civic duty to come here and protest."
Tacoma Reads Community Cookbook, 2022
Part of Cookbook Collection
Part of Grit City Magazine
This edition includes sections:
-In Bloom: The Forgotten Tacoma Barn Where Nirvana Found Their Voice
-The Fisherman
-Examining Whiteness
-/imagine Tacoma
-Moving to Tacoma: A Gentrifier’s Guide
-How to Cook a Husband
-The Tigers of South Tacoma
-Uncovering Footage of the Narrows Bridge Collapse
-The Spicy Colors of OviArt
-WiFi Network Names According to Tacoma Neighborhoods
Includes 11/17 print by local artist OviArt.
Rally for Reproductive Rights, May 7, 2022
Part of Community Event Collection
The Rally for Reproductive Rights on May 7th, 2022, was organized by Democratic Socialists of America, Tacoma and Serve the People Tacoma, outside the Union Station building on Pacific Avenue in Tacoma, Washington. This event was organized following the May 2nd leak of a first draft of written opinion by Justice Samuel Alito that suggested an upcoming overturning of the 1973 ruling on Roe v. Wade, which secured federal abortion rights on the grounds of privacy. Approximately two hundred people gathered on the sidewalk around 12pm to hold signs, chant, and listen to several pro-abortion speakers, including founder of La Resistencia, Maru Mora Villalpando. Community Archives Center staff photographed a handful of protestors, and asked about their motives and reasons for coming to the rally.
Part of Community Event Collection
Carolyn Treleven holds a sign reading, "This doesn't stop abortions... it stops SAFE abortions."
Interviewer: What brings you here today?
"Outrage. Frustration. Exhaustion... this is for everybody that has a fundamental right to make decisions about their own medical care."
Runbeck, Jan RN and Mowat, Mike
Part of Community Event Collection
Jan Runbeck, RN and Mike Mowat hold sign, made by Planned Parenthood, together reading "Protect safe, legal abortion."
"My aunt was orphaned uh, at about six months of age when her mother, uh, had, and we don’t know if it was self-induced abortion or if she went to a, uh, alley abortionist, was found dead on the kitchen floor in a puddle of blood from the fact that she knew she had more children than the family could support. So, uh, that’s the personal story, but I’m also a public health nurse and demographically, when women have access to abortion, they have better long-term outcomes, society has better outcomes as far as literacy rate, poverty rates, health rates, and all that. So, from a public health long-term perspective, it’s better for society, and individually, um, my aunt would have had a much better life, had she had a mother." - Jan Runbeck, RN
"I’m just generally opposed to taking advantage of people or keeping people down, I mean there’s a huge movement all over the world and all through history of keeping uh people down, so we have low wages, people without rights, so even in our own constitution, which they use as a preface for-for overturning Roe vs. Wade, women had no rights at that time. So if they can take away those particular rights, they can take away all the rest of them." - Mike Mowat
Part of Community Event Collection
Katt Merilo hold a sign reading "Pregnant, pro-choice, + pissed off." The back of her sign, unpictured, reads, "Here for my unborn's rights - to protect her body + plan her own future."
"I am here because of abortion rights affects all people, not just women, not just cis women, but women of color, trans women. And, abortion rights are very important for all of us to be able to plan our futures, and our families, and keep ourselves safe. I’m also nine months pregnant, I’m due on Monday... It's a girl."
Part of Community Event Collection
Brian Schmidt, carrying a child on his back, holds a sign reading, "The majority draft opinion does not represent the majority of Americans!"
"It’s [laughs] it’s uh not fair that a small percentage of people can dictate the rights of a large, I mean, millions of people."
Part of Community Event Collection
Aja Fulani pictured in black tactical gear.
"We’ve seen the reality of what happens to people who want to make their voices heard, call for justice whether it be peacefully or otherwise, we have seen that when that runs counter to what the state’s interests are, they are silenced one way or another. And our presence is hopefully at least a small deterrent if nothing else. We’re a symbol of security to the people that are here to make them feel like they can engage with their community and be heard without fear of retribution."
Part of Franklin Pierce High School Ethnic Studies Interviews
GCS 6 Katie Buckingham, Museum of Glass
Part of Radio Tacoma Programs
Joe Bomar visited the Museum of Glass and spoke with MoG curator Katie Buckingham about the origins of the museum and its role in the revitalization of downtown Tacoma.
GCS 8 Margaret Bullock, Tacoma Art Museum
Part of Radio Tacoma Programs
Joe Bomar interviews Margaret Bullock, Chief Curator of Tacoma Art Museum, about the history of TAM.