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Transcript of interview with Barbara Agonia by Suzanne Becker, September 17, 2007, September 25, 2010, & October 2, 2007

Date
2007-09-17
2007-09-25
2007-10-02
Description

When Barbara Agonia arrived in Las Vegas in 1969 to pursue a Master's Degree in English, the University of Nevada Las Vegas was barely ten years old and the population of Las Vegas was just approaching 160,000 residents. At the time, she was 35 years-old and it was a decision and move that would forever change her life and higher education in Clark County. Barbara Agonia was born in St. Louis, Missouri, in 1934 to Robert Lewis Klinefelter and Suzanne Carter Klinefelter. At the time of Barbara's birth, her father worked for Brown Shoe Company in St. Louis. The family moved to Bunker Hill, Illinois when Barbara was still an infant. This was Mr. Klinefelter's hometown where a portion of the extended family still resided. In the late 1930s, Mr. Klinefelter got a job in a brass mill near Alton, Illinois, and he commuted there daily. When the United States entered World War II, Mr. Klinefelter tried to enlist in the army, but was rejected because he had two small children and because he worked in an essential industry. He decided to work in a non-essential industry and took a job at Montgomery Ward in Oak Park, Illinois. Barbara was in the third grade that year. Still unable to enlist, Mr. Klinefelter moved the family to Wabash, Indiana, and began working for General Tire in 1943. They moved to Logansport, Indiana in 1947. Agonia recounts that education has always been a significant part of her life, with the importance of a good education stressed in her life from early childhood forward. After graduating from high school in Logansport, Indiana, she attended Hanover College in southern Indiana, enrolling in 1952. Her educational experience at Hanover included a year studying abroad at the University of Exeter in Devonshire, England—an experience which Agonia credits as further cementing her commitment to education and her love of literature and language. She graduated from Hanover in 1957 with a double major in English and speech/ theater. Agonia spent her first years out of college teaching high school English, speech, and theater in west central Illinois and the next eight in northern Illinois. A little over ten years into her career, at the age of 35, she decided to pursue a Master's degree in English. Her sister, Martha, who at the time lived in Las Vegas, suggested checking into programs offered at the city's newly formed university. In 1969, Barbara moved to Las Vegas and enrolled in the English Department at UNLV. As Agonia was completing her degree in 1971, the community college system in Nevada was emerging and seeking faculty for the up and coming institution. Curious to know more about the new system, Agonia scheduled a meeting with the person in charge of hiring. Two hours later, she walked out with a contract in her hand, one of eight new faculty members at Clark County Community College, now known as College of Southern Nevada. In her early years with the college, Agonia did a great deal of public speaking on behalf on the newly formed system, promoting the new institution and reaching out to potential students. At the same time, she taught full course loads in composition and literature, and eventually became chair of the English department. Her new position and public speaking work on behalf of the college not only provided her contact with the local Las Vegas community, it ultimately became the catalyst in spurring her passion for community involvement, particularly working on behalf of women within the community. • • Vll As the 1980s approached, Agonia became actively involved in rape crisis education, at the urging of Florence McClure. Then, in 1980, Agonia was again in on the ground floor of community programming, when she and Beverly Funk, at the urging of Judith Eaton, the president of Clark County Community College, established a Women's Center on campus. The Center was initially set up to help women in a variety of life circumstances, including women who were wanting to return to school or who were new to the process of school altogether. The center eventually became the Re-Entry Center offering skill development, tutoring programs, and other forms of assistance for anyone interested in returning to school. In addition to her involvement in and commitment to public education, Agonia has also been involved in the Soroptimist International organization for business and professional women who work to improve the lives of women and girls in local and international communities. In the Las Vegas area, Soroptimist International of Greater Las Vegas worked to establish the Rape Crisis Center and the Center for Domestic Violence, which later became SafeNest. Agonia has been working with the organization since 1982. Through Soroptimist International, she also became involved in Friends of the Nevada Wilderness, an organization devoted to designation and long-term protection of Nevada's wilderness areas. As the representative for Soroptimist International, she traveled to Washington to lobby and testify in front of the senate for the establishment of Great Basin National Park. Agonia's work in the Las Vegas community over the past forty years has been significant. She counts Florence McClure, Geneva Douglas, and Jean Ford amongst her greatest influences. As she notes in her oral history, "I learned how to be radical from those women." She happily embraces the label of radical. This attitude surfaces throughout Agonia's experiences and recollections, and underscores her work and dedication to the interplay of local education and women's issues within Nevada.

Text

Photograph of Dr. Juanita Greer White, location unknown, circa 1970s-1980s

Date
1970 to 1989
Description
Dr. Juanita Greer White, college professor and University of Nevada Regent, circa 1970s-1980s.

Image

Photograph of Rex Lease and Eleanor Hunt, Las Vegas, April 1931

Date
1931-04
Description
Film stars Rex Lease and Eleanor Hunt on the day they were married in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Image

Photograph of an unidentified man giving an unidentified woman archery lessons at the Sands Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, circa 1950s

Date
1950 to 1959
Description
A man giving an unidentified woman archery lessons at the Sands Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Image

Photograph of an unidentified man giving an unidentified woman archery lessons at the Sands Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, circa 1950s

Date
1950 to 1959
Description
A man giving an unidentified woman archery lessons at the Sands Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Image

Desert Inn Country Club family album, Las Vegas (Nev.), November 07, 1981

Date
1981-11-07
Description

Album celebrating the 25th anniversary of the Desert Inn Country Club in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Mixed Content

Film negative of Minnie Kennedy and Guy Edward Hudson, Las Vegas, August 23-30, 1931

Date
1931-08-23
1931-08-24
1931-08-25
1931-08-26
1931-08-27
1931-08-28
1931-08-29
1931-08-30
Description
Minnie "Ma" Kennedy and Guy Edward "Whataman" Hudson at the Boulder Club in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Image

Photograph of the Sultan, Sultana, and Queen Mother of Kedah, Malaya at the Sands Hotel and Casino, Las Vegas, April 24-26, 1963

Date
1963-04-24
1963-04-25
1936-04-25
Description
The Sultan, Sultana, and Queen Mother of Kedah, Malaya at the Sands Hotel and Casino in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Image

Photograph of people on porches, Caliente (Nev.), 1907

Date
1907
Description
Unidentified women and children stand on the porches of homes in Caliente, Nevada. Mountains are visible behind the homes.

Image

Photograph of Bobby Baker, Toni Clark, and Wilbur Clark, circa 1950s

Date
1950 to 1959
Description
From left to right, Bobby Baker, Toni and Wilbur Clark probably in Las Vegas, Nevada.

Image