Las Vegas High School Basketball Team in their uniforms. L-R: Coach Carver , Jack Sandy, Fred Whiteneck, Clair Wadsworth, Ebbie Davis, Fermin Goodwin, Berkley Bunker.
Promotional video created for Boyd Gaming for in-room television. Voiceover describes how Boyd Gaming properties are "the perfect vacation" and also includes the slogan of "BOYD: Bring On Your Dream" while images of various hotel/casino properties flash on-screen. Then lists all Boyd Gaming properties with statistics including number of rooms and restaurants, entertainment show names, sporting options, and contact information (including properties outside of Las Vegas). Original media VHS, color, aspect ratio 4 x 3, frame size 720 x 486.
Archival Collection
Stardust Resort and Casino Records
To request this item in person:
Collection Number: MS-00515 Collection Name: Stardust Resort and Casino Records Box/Folder: Digital File 00, Box 021
Promotional video created for Boyd Gaming for in-room television. Voiceover describes how Boyd Gaming properties are "the perfect vacation" and also includes the slogan of "BOYD: Bring On Your Dream" while images of various hotel/casino properties flash on-screen. Then lists all Boyd Gaming properties with statistics including number of rooms and restaurants, entertainment show names, sporting options, and contact information (including properties outside of Las Vegas). Original media VHS, color, aspect ratio 4 x 3, frame size 720 x 486.
Archival Collection
Stardust Resort and Casino Records
To request this item in person:
Collection Number: MS-00515 Collection Name: Stardust Resort and Casino Records Box/Folder: Digital File 00, Box 021
In 1964, the year that Vincent Kethen was born, desegregation of Las Vegas schools began. Like many African-American children living in the Las Vegas Westside neighborhood, Vincent was bused out of his neighborhood in third grade to attend a white school. In his case, this meant attending John S. Park Elementary and later other predominantly white schools. He talks about these experiences. John S. Park was a neighborhood of manicured lawns, while the school bus and the classroom were places fraught with fisticuffs. The experience of growing up during that era are recalled. Vincent provides a sense of that it was like to reside in his home neighborhood and the onslaught of the drug culture altered gang-lead neighborhoods. Being bused had positive results he explains, such as athletics, which served as an equalizer. For Vincent, a solid upbringing, which included love of church and the chance to attend college, encouraged him to make good decisions about his future. He received a four-year degree and he returned to Las Vegas to "give back." For over a decade and a half, her has coached young basketball players and helped them see their options for a brighter future than they might otherwise have seen.