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Latter from J. Ross Clark to T. E. Gibbon, March 14, 1905

Date

1905-03-13

Archival Collection

Description

Latter from J. Ross Clark to T. E. Gibbon, March 14, 1905

Text

Letter from J. Ross Clark to W. H. Bancroft, March 23, 1905

Date

1905-03-23

Archival Collection

Description

Letter from J. Ross Clark to W. H. Bancroft, March 23, 1905

Text

Letter from J. K. W. Bracken to J. Ross Clark, December 28, 1904

Date

1904-12-28

Archival Collection

Description

Letter addresses the situation of people coming to the Las Vegas townsite and attempting to get land by illegal schemes.

Text

Minutes of the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Directors of Goldfield Belmont Extension Mining Company, August 12, 1912

Date

1912-08-12

Archival Collection

Description

Minutes of the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Directors of Goldfield Belmont Extension Mining Company, August 12, 1912

Text

Telegram from T. E. Gibbon to J. Ross Clark, February 18, 1905

Date

1905-02-18

Archival Collection

Description

Telegram from T. E. Gibbon to J. Ross Clark, February 18, 1905

Text

Letter from W. H. Bancroft to J. Ross Clark, March 26, 1905

Date

1905-03-26

Archival Collection

Description

Letter deals with the necessity of prompt selling of lots in the Las Vegas townsite.

Text

Telegram from C. O. Whittemore to J. Ross Clark, May 15-16, 1905

Date

1905-05-16

Archival Collection

Description

Telegram reports Las Vegas townsite sales.

Text

Telegram from J. Ross Clark to H. I. Bettis and C. O. Whittemore, May 17, 1905

Date

1905-05-17

Archival Collection

Description

Telegram regards a private sale plan and the temporary water supply.

Text

Letter from A. S. Halstead to C. P. Smith, September 23, 1922

Date

1922-09-23

Archival Collection

Description

Caption: Automobiles bought by company during strike

Text

Transcript of interview with Rosemary A. Vassiliadis by Stefani Evans and Claytee White, April 12, 2017

Date

2017-04-12

Description

“My very first car… Oh, boy, I can't remember the year. It was old. But it was a [Chevrolet] Monte Carlo. Oh, my gosh, I was so excited. . . . It was my pride and joy. I'm a teenager, right? It was freedom. That's what it was.” It might seem incongruous that the aviation director for the nation’s eighth busiest airport ranked by passenger volume would begin an oral history rhapsodizing over the freedom her first car represented. But despite the powerful role she occupies professionally, Rosemary Vassiliadis remains true to her Chicago upbringing in a tight-knit Italian family, in which she was the first female on both sides to go to a four-year college. Rosemary attended nearby DePaul University, where she earned her degree in accountancy. Shortly before she graduated she was a bridesmaid for an Italian friend whose Greek Orthodox groom had asked Billy Vassiliadis to be his groomsman. Over the three days of the wedding Rosemary and Billy became acquainted and began a long-distance courtship that continued for nearly nine years before Rosemary finally agreed to marry Billy and make Las Vegas her home. This oral history chronicles Rosemary Vassiliadis’s Las Vegas career from financial analyst with the City of Las Vegas under Myron Leavitt to working with Randy Walker at Clark County to working with him again as deputy director of aviation at McCarran Airport; she shares how both men mentored her, and how their teaching has in turn inspired her to mentor younger women leaders. She talks about managing the airport in the six days after the Nine-Eleven (9/11) Terrorist Attacks, during which time Walker, who had been attending a conference in Montreal, was grounded there when all North American airports closed; she talks about working cooperatively with the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority to transport tourists once the other airports opened, and she confides her determination to get her New York passengers home first so they could learn the fates of, comfort, and draw comfort from their loved ones. She walks listeners through the process of planning for Terminal 3, including financing it during the downturn, selecting its art, and seizing the opportunity to thank President Obama in person for making Terminal 3 possible-a “thank you” that resulted in an autographed photograph of the aviation director with the President as they stood on the tarmac in front of said terminal. While Rosemary’s ideas of freedom and transportation have likely matured since she bought her first gas guzzler in Chicago, she has acquired a firm grasp on what it takes to run the eighth-largest passenger airport in the U.S., which in 2017 serves the second-most popular U.S. travel destination (after New York City, according to TripAdvisor). Las Vegas is lucky that Rosemary agreed to serve as her friend’s bridesmaid and to eventually say “yes” to the persistent (and patient) Billy Vassiliadis. In 2017, Clark County School District recognized the couple’s many contributions by establishing the Billy & Rosemary Vassiliadis Elementary School.

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