Skip to main content

Search the Special Collections and Archives Portal

Search Results

Display    Results Per Page
Displaying results 3551 - 3560 of 60437

McDuff, ("Brother") Jack: Organ, 1989 July 20

Level of Description

File

Archival Collection

KNPR: "Monday Night Jazz" Program Documentation and Recordings
To request this item in person:
Collection Number: MS-00456
Collection Name: KNPR: "Monday Night Jazz" Program Documentation and Recordings
Box/Folder: N/A

Archival Component

Foster, Gary: Alto Sax, 1990 July 26

Level of Description

File

Archival Collection

KNPR: "Monday Night Jazz" Program Documentation and Recordings
To request this item in person:
Collection Number: MS-00456
Collection Name: KNPR: "Monday Night Jazz" Program Documentation and Recordings
Box/Folder: N/A

Archival Component

Harris, Eddie: Tenor Sax, 1995 July 27

Level of Description

File

Archival Collection

KNPR: "Monday Night Jazz" Program Documentation and Recordings
To request this item in person:
Collection Number: MS-00456
Collection Name: KNPR: "Monday Night Jazz" Program Documentation and Recordings
Box/Folder: N/A

Archival Component

Muriel Stevens show promo, 1980 July 01

Level of Description

File

Archival Collection

Muriel Stevens Papers
To request this item in person:
Collection Number: MS-00269
Collection Name: Muriel Stevens Papers
Box/Folder: N/A

Archival Component

Frank Bell (Lander County) oral history interview, 2013 July 18

Level of Description

File

Scope and Contents

Bell, a native of Amargosa Valley, Nevada, first took an EMS course at Battle Mountain in 1987. He completed paramedic training in Winnemucca and Carson City in 1995. He became commander of the Battle Mountain ambulance service in 2012.

Archival Collection

History of Emergency Medical Services in Nevada Oral History Interviews
To request this item in person:
Collection Number: OH-00000
Collection Name: History of Emergency Medical Services in Nevada Oral History Interviews
Box/Folder: Digital File 00

Archival Component

Transcript of interview with Toni Clark by Joanne Goodwin, July 2, 1996

Date

1996-07-02

Archival Collection

Description

Toni Clark (born Lena Gaglionese) spent her youth in Seattle, Washington where she was born on April 4, 1915 to Angelene and Salvatore Gaglionese. Her father and mother moved to the Seattle area when they immigrated to the United States from Naples, Italy years earlier. Salvatore worked as a street cleaner for the city of Seattle and Angelene cared for the house and family until her early death. Toni grew up with three siblings, her father and step-mother, and an uncle and cousins next door. After attending Seattle’s Franklin High School for three years, she left. “I just didn’t like school so I quit,” she said, and spent the next couple of years at home. From these simple origins, Toni became “the first lady of Las Vegas” as some admirers called her, referring to the role she played in the transformation of Las Vegas from a frontier town into a glamorous resort town during the 1950s and 1960s. In 1941, before the Second World War began, Toni traveled to San Diego to visit friends and decided to stay. After a year of caring for a young boy, she moved into the Barbara Worth Hotel which was owned by Wilbur Clark. Clark’s father ran the hotel and suggested that Toni apply for a job at his son’s new bar and restaurant, the Monte Carlo. She had not met Wilbur Clark at the time and her shyness dissuaded her from making the move. Nevertheless, she did apply and went to work as the hostess of the Monte Carlo in downtown San Diego. Wilbur and Toni’s courtship began slowly. He gave her the name Toni, saying she “looked more like a Toni than a Lena,” and she kept it. In 1944, around the time Wilbur Clark relocated to Las Vegas where he had purchased the El Rancho Hotel, the couple married in Reno, Nevada and permanently made Las Vegas their home. Clark’s involvement in Las Vegas clubs and gambling expanded with the Monte Carlo downtown and the Player’s Club on the strip. But his dream to create a luxury resort hotel came to fruition when the Desert Inn opened in 1950. The fifth major property on the strip, the Desert Inn had several features that distinguished it from other places. The Skyroom offered a private club atmosphere for talking, music, and dancing. The Monte Carlo Room served French cuisine. The Doll House provided round-the-clock childcare for children of hotel guests. The Painted Desert Room, the property’s showroom, featured top performers and the Donn Arden Dancers. All these features combined to create a resort that offered guests an exquisite setting for a gambling vacation. Toni Clark had a special place at the heart of the Desert Inn’s social life. She brought a gracious and elegant charm to social events associated with the property. Although she said she was never involved in the business of the hotel-casino, she played a unique role setting a new tone for the enterprise. She entertained guests and dignitaries at the hotel as well as her home; organized fashion shows featuring the top designers of the time for the wives of high-rollers; and created celebrations of special events, notably her husband’s late December birthday, with annual parties. When Wilbur Clark died in 1965, Toni Clark remained active in the city’s social life. She did not disappear as others had, but continued to plan and attend social functions. As part of her service to the community, she took particular pleasure in her work with the Variety Club. She continued to reside in Las Vegas until her death in 2006.

Text

Cover of Las Vegan: The City Magazine, August 1981

Date

1981-08

Archival Collection

Description

Donn Ardenn and two showgirls from "Jubilee!" on the cover of Las Vegan: The City Magazine in August 1981. Printed on the cover: "Don Arden's Jubilee The MGM Reopens in Grandeur / Private Schools on the rise / Frank Waters interviewed."
Show Name: Jubilee!

Image

Photograph of Las Vegas Businessmen, Boulder City, circa 1930s

Date

1930 to 1939

Description

Black and white photograph of Las Vegas businessmen from six companies in Boulder City.

Image