Archival Component
Oral history interview with Lucile Bunker conducted by herself on March 10, 1977 for the Ralph Roske Oral History Project on Early Las Vegas. Bunker recalls her early experiences and various jobs in Las Vegas, Nevada. She also describes her experiences as the wife of former Senator Berkeley Bunker and living in Washington, D.C.. Bunker then discusses her missionary work, the early above-ground atomic testing, and the building of Hoover Dam.
Archival Collection
Oral history interview with Eddie Buxton conducted by Bernard D. Vardiman on March 30, 1976 for the Ralph Roske Oral History Project on Early Las Vegas. Buxton describes the significance of some of his ancestors, including Ernest May, who was the first law enforcement officer in Las Vegas, Nevada killed in the line of duty in 1933. Buxton also recalls the development of both Las Vegas and North Las Vegas, going to school in the city, and his father’s work on Hoover Dam.
Archival Collection
Oral history interview with Ralph Daly conducted by Charles Malkowshi on Febuary 25, 1977 for the Ralph Roske Oral History Project on Early Las Vegas. Ralph Daly (born in Texas in 1903) discusses his experience of moving to Las Vegas, Nevada during its early growth. Daly talks specifically about Block 16 and the Arizona Club and the extent of gambling and prostitution that took place there in the early 1900s. Daly also talks about moving to Las Vegas to make his living on gambling, how the construction of Hoover (Boulder) Dam attracted many migrant workers, and how, after World War II, Las Vegas attracted tourists and became more of a gambling town as more casinos were built.
Archival Collection
Archival Component
Archival Component
Oral history interview with Frank Waterman conducted by Claytee D. White and Stefani Evans on March 5, 2025 for the UNLV Remembers: an Oral History of the 6 December 2023 Shootings project. In this interview, Waterman discusses his past career in the United States Navy and Army National Guard, before becoming a printing apprentice at a large job-printing warehouse. In 2008, Waterman took a job at the Wynn-Encore print shop in Las Vegas, Nevada. In 2014, he began working at UNLV's Reprographics print shop, and in 2015, he opened Rebel Copy in the Student Union. He recalls on December 6, he was working at the shop with three student workers. When they heard the alarms, they closed (but did not lock) the front doors and he led his students out by the back door, exiting the Student Union by Pida Plaza. They heard shouting from police officers, but they didn't understand the words. They were between Beam Hall (BEH) and the Student Union, intending to head toward Wright Hall. They instead went between BEH and Student Union to the bus stop, where Waterman called his wife. He ended up at Vons, where he let people charge their phones from his car, and he took four people home. He remembers the smell of burnt rubber from so many emergency vehicles slamming on their brakes on Maryland Parkway. He also recalls phone calls from the Department of State office that oversees Las Vegas telling him their first priority was their safety, to mail the passport applications from their print shop when he could. Digital audio available; no transcript available.
Archival Component
Archival Component
Archival Component
Archival Component
