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Indians, Puyallup (General) - 4
- 5.1.2-TNT0033I
- 09/10/1977
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Indians, Puyallup
U.S. District Court Judge Walter T. McGovern signed a temporary injunction citing a federal statute that prohibits liquor sales on tribal lands unless under a tribal liquor code. Judge McGovern stated that because the Puyallup Tribe does not have a liquor code it was illegal to sell liquor there. Some establishments continued to sell alcohol throughout the day. The image is of the Indian Trading Post located on Puyallup Tribal land and owned by Robert Satiacum and Victoria Satiacum.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 16
- 5.1.2-TNT0045I
- 08/30/1977
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Indians, Puyallup
Joe Washington, shaman of the Lummis, led the Puyallup Tribe in a ceremony marking the start of the salmon run. The ancient ceremony was held on tribal land near the Portland Avenue Bridge. The ceremony ended with a wedding. Joe Washington asked for the tribe’s adults to remember what they had seen and to pass the knowledge on to their children. Photo by Tribune staff member Russ Carmack.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 10
- 5.1.2-TNT0039I
- 05/12/1979
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Indians, Puyallup
Dan Thayer, a fisheries biologist for the Puyallup tribe helped to release 16,500 chum salmon from the tribe’s hatchery into a tributary of the Hylebos Creek in South King County.
Sterud, Bill (Puyallup Tribal Official) - 1
- 5.1.2--TNT0161S
- Item
- 06/19/1980
Back of Photo:
Bill Sterud
Front of Photo:
Photo by Bruce A. Kellman
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 26
- 5.1.2-TNT0055I
- 06/12/1980
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Indians, Puyallup
Puyallup Tribal members blocked all entrances to the Cascadia Juvenile Diagnostic Center in protest of a U.S. Supreme court ruling allowing for all cigarettes sold on reservation smoke shops to be taxed by the state and to force the state to pay rent for use of the facility.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 9
- 5.1.2-TNT0038I
- 01/15/1981
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Indians, Puyallup
Employees of the Puyallup tribe’s fish hatchery released young trout into a tributary of the Puyallup river leading the trout to the Puget Sound and eventually the Pacific Ocean. The trout were around a year old and had been raised by the Puyallup Tribe at the tribal hatchery on Pioneer Way West. The Puyallup Tribe obtained the trout from the Quinault Tribe and the fish are the Quinault River steelhead. Photo by Tribune staff member Bob Rudsit.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 20
- 5.1.2-TNT0049I
- 01/15/1981
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Indians, Puyallup
Employees of the Puyallup tribe’s fish hatchery released young trout into a tributary of the Puyallup river leading the trout to the Puget Sound and eventually the Pacific Ocean. The trout were around a year old and had been raised by the Puyallup Tribe at the tribal hatchery on Pioneer Way West. The Puyallup Tribe obtained the trout from the Quinault Tribe and the fish are the Quinault River steelhead. Photo by Tribune staff member Bob Rudsit.
Bennett, Ramona (Puyallup) - 10
- 5.1.2-TNT0098B
- Item
- 01/31/1984
Front of Photo:
Ramona Bennett shown with her daughter, Ee-Nuck-A-Mee, 7, is best known for her years of activism as Chairwomen of the Puyallup Tribe in Tacoma, Wash. Today, Ms. Bennett is Director of Family Services at the Seattle Indian Center where her job involves finding Indian foster homes for homeless Indian children.
Staff photo by Bruce Kellman
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 18
- 5.1.2-TNT0047I
- 09/02/1984
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Indians, Puyallup
Two children stand in Native dress.
Indians, Puyallup--Government and Politics - 1
- 5.1.2-TNT0009I
- 02/27/1988
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Puyallup Tribal members (L-R) Misty Stafford, Dianne Ward, Nancy Shippentower, Kathy Lopez, Barbara Richards, Jenny Williams and Maggie Bostrom wait outside the Elders Building for the results of an election to fill three vacant seats on the tribal council.
News/Martin
Bill Hunter Photo
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 6
- 5.1.2-TNT0035I
- 09/02/1989
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Three-year-old Calvin Medina, Tacoma, checks out his competition and other tribal dress during the Puyallup tribe's Pow Wow. There was singing, dancing, eating, and competition for best dress and dance.
Photo by David Brandt
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 38
- 5.1.2-TNT0067I
- 08/24/1990
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News/ Puyallup Women Protest Spouse Fishing Ruling
Angry Puyallup Tribe women gathered at the Tribal administration building to protest a new rule disallowing spouses fishing rights. From left, Laura Rivera, Ramona Bennet, Deanna Val Peterson, and Betsy Terrones (holding kids Joaquin 1, and Richard, 2 months). After meeting with the group of women the rule was dropped and the spouse fishing right was restored.
Photo by Dean J. Koepfler
Landry, Gabriel (Puyallup Indian) -1
- 5.1.2--TNT0017L
- 11/05/1990
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Gabriel Landry (Puyallup Indian)
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 13
- 5.1.2-TNT0042I
- 10/21/1990
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Indians, Puyallup
“Members of the Puyallup Tribe celebrate Yekabotsa Mills’ ninth birthday with a Native American Church prayer ceremony.” A tepee is backlit, showing the people sitting inside. Photo by New Tribune staff Dean J Koepfler
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 8
- 5.1.2-TNT0037I
- 10/22/1990
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Puyallup Project/Patty Butler
Patty Butler enjoys the closeness of family and the feeling of living in an Indian community in Youngsville.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 7
- 5.1.2-TNT0036I
- 03/17/1991
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Artist rendering of Puyallup Tribal Bingo Hall
A year after the Puyallup Tribe reached a $162 million settlement which guaranteed hundreds of new jobs, social services, and economic rebirth programs began to receive funding. “Among the tribe’s projects for economic improvement is a $2.1 million state-of-the-art bingo hall, seating up to 1,500 people, to be built in east Tacoma.” The bingo hall was estimated to generate between 90 to 150 jobs.
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