- Item
- 2021
Part of Dear Tacoma Project Collection
Kellen Drury visually describes what he misses and appreciats during the Covid times in this short film.
165 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects
Part of Dear Tacoma Project Collection
Kellen Drury visually describes what he misses and appreciats during the Covid times in this short film.
Part of Community Event Collection
Video recording of Lin Zhou, President & CEO, Bates Technical College, from the 2019 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Part of Tacoma Actors Guild Records
Video recording of Lua Pritchard, Executive Director, Asia Pacific Cultural Center, from the 2015 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Part of Reverend David Alger Interviews
Marcia Arunga Leads Closing Prayers for Dr. Maxine Mimms' Critical Conversations
Part of Paul Jackson Digital Videos
Marcia Arunga leads the monthly Dr. Maxine Mimms Critical Conversation closing prayer at the Life Enrichment Bookstore in Seattle.
Video recording of Marilyn Strickland, City of Tacoma Mayor, from the 2014 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Video recording of Marilyn Strickland, Mayor of Tacoma, from the 2017 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Video recording of Maxine Mimms, Founder of the Maxine Mimms Academy, from the 2014 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Part of Community Event Collection
Part of Community Event Collection
Meeting with Norm Rice and Black Collective (VHS)
Part of Mayor Karen Vialle Papers
Video recording of Melissa Jorgensen and Friends, Bottom up Hilltop Community Activists, from the 2014 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Video recording of Miriam Barnett, CEO of the YWCA of Pierce County, from the 2017 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Part of Community Event Collection
Part of Community Event Collection
Video recording of Pamela Transue, President Emeritus, Tacoma Community College, from the 2015 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Panel Discussion at the Lemonhaze Cannabis Convention, 2019
Part of Paul Jackson Digital Videos
Panelists discuss the "ongoing vape crisis" in the cannabis industry, including federal policy made around health concerns.
Video recording of Pat Lantz, Representative, 26th District, Retired, from the 2015 WILLO Storytelling Festival.
Paul Jackson Interviews Superintendent Candidate Erin Jones
Part of Paul Jackson Digital Videos
Videographer Paul Jackson interviews Erin Jones, candidate for Washington Superintendent of Public Instruction in the 2016 election. Jones discusses her adoption, growing up in the Netherlands, and her adulthood in the United States. Jones has been working to advocate for children marginalized in public education since she was nineteen years old.
Peaceful Black Lives Matter protest on WA-509
Part of Dear Tacoma Project Collection
A peaceful Black Lives Matter protest on WA-509 that stopped traffic.
Penton, Rev. Bob video interview
Oral history interview conducted by dindria barrow at the Tacoma Public Library Main Branch's Digital Media Lab on June 1, 2022. Reverend Robert T. Penton was born on December 11, 1947 in Bogalusa, Louisiana. He was born in a segregated town with a large Ku Klux Klan chapter in a shotgun (one-room) house. Bob felt he had no voice in this town and grew disenchanted with his life there. He believed he could make a difference by joining the VISTA program. He was sent to South Central Los Angeles in 1967 to be a community organizer, two years after the riots in Watts. Bob joined the Black Panther Party and became a Minister of Information. He found his voice in Los Angeles. His second year in the VISTA program brought him to Tacoma, WA and the largest public housing complex west of the Mississippi river, Salishan. Bob worked in the anti-poverty program and helped to organize a community center, a family food coop, and youth programs. In the 80’s, Reverend Bob ran campaigns against fear and gang violence by fasting. One of his guiding quotes is: “Poverty of purpose is worse than poverty of purse.” When addressing trauma and divisive politics “it takes something bigger than all of us to break down those walls to bring that common purpose.” Overall, he reminds us that “people need to know how much you care, not how much you know.” Listen to Rev. Bob’s personal purpose and his insights into how to navigate life.