Skip to main content

Search the Special Collections and Archives Portal

Search Results

Display    Results Per Page
Displaying results 569681 - 569690 of 865748

Jack Zunino and Stan Southwick at the Pink Flamingo Awards Banquet Southern Nevada American Society of Landscape Architects: photographic print

Date

2000-12-01

Description

From the Tammi Gaudet Photograph Collection (PH-00360) -- Activities of the Southern Nevada American Society of Landscape Architects (SNASLA). Pink Flamingo Awards Banquet. Jack Zunino and Stan Southwick.

Image

Transcript of interview with Jack W. Zunino by Stefani Evans and Claytee White, August 30, 2016

Date

2016-08-30

Description

Landscape architect Jack W. Zunino is a Fellow of the American Society of Landscape Architects (ASLA) and president of the Society's local chapter. He has designed many of Southern Nevada's iconic landscapes: the Rio Hotel, the M Resort, the Desert Demonstration Gardens, the gardens at Ethel M. Chocolates, the Cactus Avenue overpass, and most notably, the Springs Preserve. He's also a third-generation Nevadan from Elko, grandson of Italian immigrants who met and married in the Silver State and raised their large family in that Nevada mining town. The product of Elko schools, he graduated from the University of Utah in psychology and Utah State University in landscape architecture while earning his tuition as a road construction laborer. In this interview, Zunino tells of his employment with G.C. Wallace Engineering and JMA architects before founding his own landscape architecture firm in 1989. He speaks to the importance of planners and landscape architects on Southern Nevada's conser

Text

Zunino, Jack W., 1948-2024

Alternate Names

Jack Wayne Zunino

Jack Wayne Zunino was born July 13, 1948, in Elko, Nevada to John Wilson Zunino and Loretta Yvette Hansen. He earned a bachelor's degree in psychology from the University of Utah and a master's degree in landscape architecture and environmental panning from Utah State University. In 1989, Zunino established JW Zunino Landscape Architecture, a firm that became a cornerstone of landscape design in the Southwest.

Person

Photograph of Karen Galetz and Lois Tarkanian, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, circa 1970s

Date

1975-11-01

Description

Members of library board Karen Galetz (left) and Lois Tarkanian (right) at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV).

Image

Photograph of UNLV Basketball Alumni Association honoring Lonnie Wright, 1990

Date

1990

Description

Color photograph of Lonnie Wright (center) being honored for success. He stands with Lois Tarkanian, Sherri Wright, and UNLV President Carol Harter.

Image

Transcript of interview with Lois Esther Tarkanian by Claytee D. White, September 24, 2014

Date

2014-09-24

Description

Jerry Tarkanian, legendary and formidable basketball coach, met his match the day he was called before student court at Fresno State College and had to face as one of his judges Lois Esther Huter. Lois, a no-nonsense military daughter, eventually agreed to date Tarkanian and to marry him. The City of Las Vegas got lucky when UNLV recruited Lois’s husband as basketball coach. After picking cotton in California’s Central Valley Lois earned her Master’s degree in speech pathology and holds national certifications in speech pathology, language, and audiology. In 1969 she opened California’s first private day school for the hearing impaired, Oralingua School for the Hearing Impaired in Whittier. In Las Vegas she taught hearing-impaired children in her home on an individual and pro-bono basis. In this interview Lois recalls her teaching career, debates in deaf education, her 12 years on Clark County School District School Board, and the people and the neighborhoods that make up Las Vegas’s Ward 1, the area she has represented on the Las Vegas City Council continuously since 2005.

Text

Tarkanian, Lois, 1934-2024

Lois Tarkanian was born on April 28, 1934 to Josephine Agnes Hunter and Elmer Gustav Hunter. She married Jerry Tarkanian in 1966 in Fresno, California. Together, the couple moved to Las Vegas, Nevada in 1973. That same year, her late husband, Jerry Tarkanian, began his legendary career as UNLV Runnin' Rebels basketball coach, a role that cemented their family’s place in the state’s history. Dr. Tarkanian served on the Clark County School Board and as a Las Vegas City Councilwoman, where she represented Ward 1 for over a decade.

Person

Cabourg

No description.

Latitude/Longitude

49.2885, -0.1153

Feature

fourth-order administrative division

Geographic Location

Alpes-Maritimes

No description.

Latitude/Longitude

43.91307, 7.20436

Feature

second-order administrative division

Geographic Location

Arrondissement de Nice

No description.

Latitude/Longitude

44.02721, 7.16095

Feature

third-order administrative division

Geographic Location