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Displaying results 4361 - 4370 of 19295

Slide transparency of performers in a Donn Arden production during the curtain call, circa 1960s to 1970s

Date

1960 to 1979

Archival Collection

Description

Male and female performers in a Donn Arden production during the curtain call at the end of the show

Image

Photograph of Copa Girls in polka dot dresses performing onstage, Las Vegas, November 1958

Date

1958-11

Archival Collection

Description

Copa Girls performing onstage in short polka dot dresses in November 1958
Site Name: Sands Hotel and Casino

Image

Photograph of a woman at Fanny's Dress Shop opening day celebration, Las Vegas, August 17, 1947

Date

1947-08-17

Archival Collection

Description

Black and white photograph of a woman at the opening day celebration of Fanny's Dress shop on the Strip.

Image

Postcard of Lenore Aquirre holding Alicia Rivero, 1920-1929

Date

1920 to 1929

Description

Leonore Aquirre holding Alicia Rivero. Lenore owned a hotel, Elko Rooms, located on First Street. On photo sleeve: "Lenore Aquirre - she was very popular. Had money. Didn't leave will."

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Transcript of interview with Mary Shaw by Barbara Tabach, September 2, 2011

Date

2011-09-02

Description

For the first 19 years of her life, Mary Martell Shaw called Central America home. Then thanks to misrouted luggage, she met the love of her life Rollin H. Shaw, a civil engineer, at a time in when his atomic energy career was taking off. In October 1943, they married in Costa Rica and for the next two decades traversed the country: Hawaii to California to Panama—wherever a project required Ronnie's engineering skills. Mary supported her husband every step of the way, with every new location. As a traditional homemaker of the era, she became adept at raising their four kids while packing boxes, enrolling them in school and setting up a warm home wherever they landed. The move to Las Vegas in September 1964, however, left her a bit challenged: there was a shortage of adequate housing, a concern for where to send her two daughters and two sons to school, and the feeling that they wouldn't be here long. Years later, Mary and Ronnie would retire to the city where their roots ran deepest, Las Vegas. With great wit, Mary recalls the long absences demanded by Ronnie's work with the Atomic Energy Commission. She also tells stories of the great fun they and their fellow Nevada Test Site employees had at parties, of her learning to paint with watercolors, and the pride she has of all her children's successes based on their education in Las Vegas.

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Interview with Ann G. Dye, November 1, 2004

Date

2004-11-01

Description

Narrator affiliation: Program Manager, ReeCO in support of Department of Defense, Los Alamos National Laboratory & Sandia Programs

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Film negative of Dunes Hotel and Casino guests, July 29, 1955

Date

1955-07-30

Description

Black and white negative of a military man named Barton with three women at the Dunes Hotel and Casino swimming pool, dated July 29, 1955.

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Sister Rosemary Lynch and others near an American Flag: photographic print

Date

1986

Description

Sister Rosemary Lynch stands with a group of men and women while someone is puttting up/taking down an American flag at the World Peace Conference in Copenhagen, Denmark 1986.

Image

Eva Adams, image 002

Date

1961 to 1966

Description

Article published in Souvenir Program called "Salute to Nevada's Outstanding Women of the Century." Article is entitled "Honorable Eva B. Adams - Second Woman in History as U.S. Mint Director."

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Sook-ja Kim, February 12, 1996 and April 6, 1996: transcript

Date

1996-02-12
1996-04-06

Description

The Kim Sisters, composed of three sisters, Sook-ja, Ai-ja, and Mia, came from Korea to Las Vegas in February 1959. Their first contract in America was to perform at the Thunderbird Hotel for four weeks as part of the China Doll Revue, the main showroom program. This engagement led to a successful career. Their popularity reached was at its height at the end of the 1960s when they performed throughout the United States and Europe. Sook-ja Kim is the oldest of the sisters. After his sister Ai-ja died in 1987, Sook-ja teamed up with her two brothers and continued to perform until 1989. Now semi-retired from show business, with occasional performances in Korea, she is working as a real estate agent. In this interview, she talked about her childhood, her career, and the family she has built since coming to America. Sook-ja was born in 1941 in Seoul, Korea as the third child of seven in a musical family. Her father was a conductor and her mother, a popular singer. After the Korean War, her mother arranged to send the Kim Sisters to America. When they came to Las Vegas, there were virtually no Koreans in the area. They depended on each other to take care of themselves. Some of the difficulties they had to adjust to in American were language, food, and cultural differences. Over the span of almost forty years in America, Sook-ja became acculturated without discarding her ethnic identity of family priorities. Her life-long guiding principle has been to adopt certain American values while continuing to keep her cherished Korean ethnic values. Through their performances, the Kim Sister informed the audience about Koreans and their culture. As the oldest of the group, Sook-ja was entrusted the care of her sisters, and later her brothers, the Kim brothers. Once she settled in Las Vegas, she brought more than forty members of her extended family to the city, contributing to the growth of the Las Vegas Korean community.

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