Left to right, seated: Irwin Molasky, Susan Molasky, unknown, unknown. Left to right, standing: Nat Hart, Silvia Hart, Jean Weinberger, Joyce Mack, Jerry Mack
Group of photographs showing Irwin Molasky and others at a podium during the groundbreaking ceremonies for the Molasky Corporate Center at 100 N. City Parkway in Las Vegas, Nev.
Oral history interview with Susan Molasky conducted by Barbara Tabach on March 11, 2014 for the Southern Nevada Jewish Heritage Project. In this interview, Susan Molasky discusses her childhood and teenage years growing up in London, England where she worked in a fabric store. Molasky also talks about originally coming to Las Vegas, Nevada with her first husband in the late 1950s. She discusses raising her children in Las Vegas, Nevada and her battle with ovarian cancer, which prompted her involvement in Nathan Adelson Hospice. She then discuss her life with second husband, Irwin Molasky, and the causes they are involved in.
L-R: Lynn Weisner, Lovee Arum, Irwin Molasky, Elaine Newton, Barbara Molasky, (unknown), Pam Wald at premiere of Cotton Club (movie produced by Lorimar) held as a fundraiser for Nathan Adelson Hospice.
Bond dinner with statesman Simcha Dinitz. Standing (L-R): Irwin Molasky, Sammy Davis Jr., Susan Molasky, Sen. Howard Cannon, unknown, Carolyn O'Callaghan, Frank Sinatra, Totie Fields; seated: Billy Weinberger, Jean Weinberger, Simcha Dinitz.
Oral history interview with Ann Lynch conducted by Sandra Klimik on October 17, 1985 for the UNLV University Libraries Oral History Collection. In this interview, Lynch briefly explains how she started working in hospitals as a volunteer in 1959 and then gives an overview of the development of hospitals in Las Vegas, Nevada. Most of the interview is directed at the development and history of Sunrise Hospital and Medical Center in Las Vegas. Lynch discusses the developers, Irwin Molasky, Moe Dalitz, Allard Roen and Merv Adelson, and their the original goal to build a physician medical building to attract doctors to their planned community, which included the Las Vegas Country Club and gold course, the Boulevard Mall, and the Boulevard Apartments. She describes the opening of the hospital in 1958, and then moves into a more detailed discussion of nurses and how their roles have shifted since the 1960s. Finally, she talks about the city's growth and the economic burden insurance companies and federal programs like Medicare and Medicaid have on hospital profitability.