Color image of activists from from the Lenten Desert Experience (also called the Nevada Desert Experience), a group protesting nuclear testing, sowing a desert plant.
View of the Big 4 Ranch, displaying the writing on the side of the building as well as the neon cord wrapping around the top edges of the building itself. Included are shots during the day and at night. The Big 4 Ranch is the oldest brothel and bar in Ely, NV.
The Nevada Burial Records of Stewart Ranch (1905-1913) consist of a ledger recording those buried at Stewart Ranch in Las Vegas, Nevada. The entries in the ledger document the names of the deceased and where they died. Some entries have additional information explaining how the person died and their height and weight.
The University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) Faculty Records (approximately 1956-2006) contain materials related to faculty members at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas. The collection contains summaries of student evaluations, alleged violations by faculty members and disagreements over code changes, course schedule cards, and various faculty group newsletters, bulletins, and handbooks. The collection also contains faculty travel procedures, handbooks, blank forms and instructions, and disbursement documentation.
The Charles S. Sprague and Benjamin Gill Papers on Nevada Mining (1904-1925) are comprised of various records from the mining companies owned and operated by businessmen Charles S. Sprague and Benjamin Gill who were active in the central Nevada boomtowns of Goldfield and Tonopah in the early twentieth century. Documents include correspondence, receipts and invoices, detailed records and copies of government legislative bills relating to the mining industry, and other business correspondence. Sprague's collection consists of his mining business correspondence dating from 1906 to 1925. Gill's papers are comprised of his business correspondence from 1916 to 1922.