- 5.1.2--TNT0017C
- Item
- 1973/08/12
Back of photo: Cascadia Juvenile Reception Diagnostic Center Photograph by Jerry Buck
Back of photo: Cascadia Juvenile Reception Diagnostic Center Photograph by Jerry Buck
Back of Photo:
Cheney Stadium
Kellman
Back of Photo:
Cheney Baseball Stadium
Dedication
Back of Photo:
Crowd shot with Matty Alou Rounding 1B on Home Run.
Back of Photo:
Cheney Baseball Stadium
Northwest Trek Pictures 1979 and Prior - 3
Back of Photo:
Northwest Trek
Moose Name: Chocolate Mousse
Photo by Bruce A. Kellman
Back of Photo:
Norwegian Independence Day
Oil Slicks and Spills--Washington State - 3
A cooperative of 14 oil pipeline and marine companies placed a 58-foot oil recovery vessel called the Clean Sounder into service. They claim it is the largest and most advanced skimmer in the country. The Clean Sounder cost $720,000 and was built by the Marine Construction and Design Co. of Seattle. The vessel should be able to pick up 600 gallons of oil per minute. The boat's purpose is to increase the capacity of the Clean Sound Cooperative to handle accidental oil spills in the Sound. It joined four other skimming vessels in Seattle, Tacoma, Bellingham, and Anacortes. The skimmer has twin hulls and is powered by water jet propulsion units. The skimmer used two oil attracting belts to pick up oil from the surface, and that oil is squeezed from the belts and stored aboard. The vessel was designed specifically for Puget Sound.
Back of Photo:
Clean Sounder
Oil Slicks and Spills--Washington State - 7
Back of Photo:
Steve Green of Marysville creeps up on an oil-soaked White Wing Scoter that washed up near Ocean City.
Haley
Olalla Murder Farm (Starvation Heights) (Hazzard, Dr. Linda B.) (NE of Purdy on the Peninsula) - 2
Back of Photo:
Theresa Hyer Explores the Furnace of the Sanitarium.
Peck Field (Roger Peck Field)(Tiger Field)(Athletic Field) So. 14th & Sprague - 1
Back of Photo:
Peck Field
Police--Assaults and Deaths - 2
Back of Photo:
Brenda Cook, sister of Samuel Johnson who was killed by an Auburn police officer, is consoled by Tanya Nelson, step-daughter of Samuel Johnson, and Dawncelie Johnson, daughter of Samuel Johnson comes up the hall.
Cook was overcome with grief in the court room and fled to the hallway in tears after gruesome descriptions of the physical evidence of her slain brother during the inquest into the shooting b Auburn police officer Michnik.
Haley
Located in a corner of the Nisqually Reservation stands the Pentecostal faith church. Photo by Wayne Zimmerman.
Back of Photo:
In a peaceful corner of scenic Nisqually
A house made of logs sits among the trees.
Frank Mounts conversing with Jo Anne Mounts while Frank works on his car’s transmission.
Back of Photo:
On Nisqually Reservation
Edna Lilly tends to her chickens in yard of log cabin home.
Back of Photo:
Mrs. Edna Lilly
Back of Photo:
John Vigil Chiquiti
Indian Fishing Dispute
Game Department officers stand looking towards two Nisqually tribal members who illegally set nets on the Nisqually river.
Back of Photo:
Indians, Nisqually
Photograph by Jerry Buck
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 3
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Confrontation between Puyallup tribal members and police about fishing rights guaranteed in the Medicine Creek Treaty (1854) resulted in a riot police unit being brought in to disperse the fishing camp. Shots were fired and tear gas was used. Two officers stand behind a truck as people look on in the background, including a person filming using a movie camera. Photo taken by Tribune staff member Warren Anderson.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 9
Back of Photo:
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) - 11
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Photo by Bob Rudsit
Police and state revenue agents seized cartons of unstamped cigarettes and other Tabacco products allegedly headed for the Satiacum Smoke Shop. The raid was based on a state law prohibiting unlicensed distributors from handling unstamped cigarettes. Puyallup Tribal member Robert Satiacum was not a licensed dealer according to Robert Munzinger, who served as assistant director of field operations for the Revenue Department. Photo by Tribune staff member Bob Rudsit.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 12
Back of Photo:
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) - 13
Back of Photo:
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) - 15
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Two people, one is holding a clipboard, sort through various boxed and canned food items.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 17
Back of Photo:
Ramona Bennett
Cascadia now "Leschi"
Photo by Bruce Kellman
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 18
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Two children stand in Native dress.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 20
Back of Photo:
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) - 23
Back of Photo:
Indians, Puyallup
Photo by Russ Carmack
People sit and chant or sing in a circle as the crowd behind them raise one of their arms with their hands in a fist.
Indians, Puyallup (General) - 31
Back of Photo:
Demonstrators
Photo by Bob Rudsit
Demonstrators gather in front of a bridge with signs reading, "Save our fish" and "Supreme Courts decision unclear."