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Down the Hatch

"Down the Hatch: News Material & Redistributed Chatter" was a bi-monthly, four-page newsletter published by the U.S. Naval Storehouse at Tacoma, Wash., "in compliance with directive 45-526, Navy Department Bulletin of 31 May 1945, at Government expense" and later the Tacoma Annex, U.S. Naval Supply Depot, Seattle.

Iconoclast

A periodical published by area students. Includes local and national information on student activism around the war in Vietnam and racial equity. The April 1968 edition is a special issue on "America's Race Dilemma."

Spokane Natural

Eastern Washington publication with articles, editorials, images, and cartoons related to local and national politics, community activism, art, and the environment. Coverage includes the Spokane Flour Mill Labor Union, Bobby Seale and the Black Panthers, Sky River music festival, and pollution.

Crusading American

Also titled "Crusading American Political Bulletin." Includes articles, illustrations, and letters to the editor about local politics, particularly recall efforts against Major Gordon Johnston and members of the City Council.

Frisco Outcry

Four-page newsletter out of San Francisco with leftist columns and various alternative advertising. One article written by Ed Jeffords in Seattle's "Helix" is reprinted here and mentions the KAYE (Tacoma) radio station and Fred Crisman.

Western Front

Subtitled "A Paper for the Working People of Puget Sound." Includes article, images, and illustrations on labor issues included strikes, unemployment, boycotts, and pay equity.

Truth

Conservative publication based out of Tacoma, Wash., by Jon Gold that has written on its masthead "A different form of Washington journalism". Holdings: February 1972, February 1, 1972 (different publications).

Tacoma Indepedent

Includes articles, images, and illustrations related to local activism, particularly around labor, the war in Vietnam, police brutality, and racism. Coverage includes housing justice activism, gender pay gap, United Farm Workers boycott, the Equal Rights Amendment, and the Hanoi bombings.

Skyway Magazine

Local publication that combines humor, sports, advertising and local news with photos. Article on Stadium High School. Printed by Sunrise Printing and Graphic Design, 6111 Steilacoom Blvd., Tacoma.

Seattle Worker

The newspaper of the Seattle Workers movement, under the leadership of the Seattle Branch of the Central Organization of U.S. Marxist-Leninists. Includes information on labor activism, national politics, environmental activism, anti-fascism, and racial justice.

View Northwest

January 1976 edition is a "Bicentennial issue plus New Western Travel Section"
January 1977 edition is a "Special Women's issue" with articles on women's history and activism in the Pacific Northwest.

Pacific Citizen

The Pacific Citizen is an Asian Pacific American semi-monthly national newspaper. Starting in 1929, the Pacific Citizen has been published by the Japanese American Citizens League (JACL). JACL is the United States’ oldest and largest APA civil rights organization. The goal of the Pacific Citizen is to provide the community with APA stories and opinions. The newspaper was originally called the Nikkei Shimin (Japanese American Citizen) and it was based in San Francisco, CA.

With World War II and the internment of Japanese Americans, the Pacific Citizen was moved to Salt Lake City, Utah. Many articles are focused on hearings held on the topic of Japanese relocation and incarceration. Following WWII, the Pacific Citizen returned to the west coast moving operations to Los Angeles’ Little Tokyo. Presently, the newspaper remains at that location.

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