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Gordon Bettles wearing his Masons fez: photographic print

Date
1950 to 1959
Description

From the Nye County, Nevada Photograph Collection (PH-00221) -- Series III. Beatty, Nevada -- Subseries III.A. Brockman Family. In the early 1950s, Gordon Bettles and his wife, Billie, moved into the abandoned T&T Ranch in the Amargosa Farm Area, Nye County, Nev. Bettles was the first occupant of the Farm Area since the closure of the T&T Railroad years before.

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Tourists using overpass on the Las Vegas Strip, Las Vegas, Nevada: digital photograph

Date
2017-02-28
Description
Providing security and access to both automobile and pedestrian traffic is handled differently along Las Vegas Boulevard and has changed over the years on the Strip. First installed in the 1990s, the pedestrian overpass has become commonplace along the Las Vegas Strip. Here, a tourist rides an escalator near Caesar's Palace hotel and casino as cars await the light at Flamingo Road.

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Pedestrian traffic on Las Vegas Boulevard, Las Vegas, Nevada: digital photograph

Date
2017-04-12
Description
Tourists walk in the area near the Mirage Hotel and Casino as others cross Las Vegas Boulevard above traffic. Pedestrian overpasses have become a popular way of keeping tourists safe and traffic flowing on the Strip, but their expense and footprint make them difficult for all locations. Moving pedestrians along the Strip safely has become a major effort over the years.

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Pedestrian traffic on Las Vegas Boulevard, Las Vegas, Nevada: digital photograph

Date
2017-04-12
Description
Tourists walk in the area near the Mirage Hotel and Casino as others cross Las Vegas Boulevard above traffic. Pedestrian overpasses have become a popular way of keeping tourists safe and traffic flowing on the Strip, but their expense and footprint make them difficult for all locations. Moving pedestrians along the Strip safely has become a major effort over the years.

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Photograph of garden room at the House of Straus, Las Vegas (Nev.), July 14, 2016

Date
2016-07-14
Description

For decades Joyce Elise Straus opened her home, the "House of Straus," to area youth seeking art experiences. That effort included the opening of the School of Creative Thinking in 1976. Her varied artwork is widely collected in the Southern Nevada community. Straus was married for 56 years to Dr. Neil B. Straus. Her son David Straus and his wife Heidi continue the tradition.

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A far view of the Tally Ho buildings and golf course: photographic film

Date
1960 (year approximate) to 1986 (year approximate)
Description
Identified as a view of the Tally Ho buildings and golf course, but it is unclear if this is the correct location. For another view see Source ID 0220_0010, Digital ID pho026244. Toy manufacturer Edwin S. Lowe originally opened the 450-room Tally Ho hotel on the property in 1963. The Tally Ho was the only major hotel in Nevada to not include a casino. Milton Prell purchased the hotel in January 1966 and began an extensive $3 million renovation of the property before reopening it as the Aladdin on April 1, 1966. A 19-story hotel tower was added in 1972. After various ownership changes, the Aladdin was closed in 1997 and demolished the following year to make room for a new resort that would also be named Aladdin. The new Aladdin resort opened in August 2000, but suffered financial difficulties and was eventually purchased in 2003 by a partnership of Planet Hollywood and Starwood Hotels & Resorts Worldwide, which renamed it as Planet Hollywood in 2007. The property is located at 3667 South Las Vegas Boulevard, Las Vegas, Nevada 89109.

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ent001702-002

Description
This item has not been digitized in its entirety. The original item is available for research and handling at the UNLV University Libraries. Additional digitization is available upon request. Please contact Special Collections to request additional digitization or with any questions regarding access at special.collections@unlv.edu. VOLUME 25/NUMBER 04 AUGUST 24 to SEPTEMBER 06, 2001 THREE DOLLARS Fluff LeCoaue THE PERSONIFICATION OF ELEGANCE By Bill Sewers The streets of Spokane, Washington, glistened in the reflected light of the strfeetlamps as a small group of young dancers made its way to the theater through the pouring rain. Upon arrival the preparations began for the performances to follow, among them the stripping of the soaked cardboard soles from their only pair of shoes. The cardboard was carefully laid on heaters to dry and then, with equal diligence, painstakingly glued back onto the shoes before curtain time. Tlte ritual was repeated every rainy night; for those were the years just following World War II and rubber soles, as well as many other staples of American life, were unavailable. Among the dancers was a young lady ~ by themame of Ffolliott Chorlton, a Butte, Montana, native who had been raised in Seattle and had attracted attention at the age of four as she danced, as children will, to the music of a Salvation Army band on a street comer. In its joyous innocence, this was to prove prophetic of the life to follow* Today, we know young Ffolliott as Fluff LeCoque, Company Manager and Associate Producer of ?╟úDonn Arden?╟╓s Jubilee!?╟Ñ how celebrating its 20th Anniversary at Bally?╟╓s Las Vegas. Times and fortunes have changed drastically since those early days when, on another occasion, she lived on a small bag of peanuts for a week. ?╟úI had one peanut in the morning, one for lunch and one for dinner,?╟Ñ she said of the experience. Fluff attended the University of Washington on a scholarship and majored in drama and dance and, as she explains with a grin, ?╟úI was convinced Hollywood needed me as an actress ... but they didn?╟╓t.?╟Ñ So dance it was. While appearing at the ' Last Frontier in Las Vegas in 1947, she met her first husband, bandleader Chuck Gould. Later, while working at the Thun^erbird, she - got a call from Jerome Medrano, owner of the 300-year-old Cirque Medrano in Paris, who asked her to dance in his new ?╟úHollywood Rhythm Extravaganza?╟Ñ in the French capital. There she worked on a hemp floor that was ?╟úthick enough for the horses and ^elephants but murder to dance on.?╟Ñ Fluffs return to America in 1953 marked the beginning of her work with the late Donn Arden in both Cincinnati and at Wilbur Clarke?╟╓s Desert Inn in Las Vegas, where she taught crooner Andy Williams a tap routine for his act and also worked with a fleet of Hollywood .stars, including Dagmar, Jerry Lewis and Carmen Miranda. Then it was off to the famous Frank Sennes?╟╓ Moulin Rouge nightclub in Hollywood for a string of featured dancer, captain and assistant choreographer positions in exotic French-style shows entitled ?╟úVoici Paris,?╟Ñ ?╟úCa, C?╟╓est Paris,?╟Ñ ?╟úParis Toujours,?╟Ñ ?╟úC?╟╓est La Vie?╟Ñ (which had an admission price of $6.85, including dinner), and 1958?╟╓s ?╟úPariscope.?╟Ñ It was in ?╟úVoid Paris?╟Ñ that Fluff met Jezebel, a pigeon that was trained to perch on her shoulder.. ?╟úJezebel would often lay an "sat there,^"says Fluff, ?╟úand it ?╟≤would break all over everywhere. The wardrobe lady used to hate me ?╟Ñ By the time the Moulin Rouge?╟╓s ?╟úWonderful World?╟Ñ and its cast of 100 performers opened in 1959, Fluff was Donn?╟╓s production assistant and her continued association with the master showman, in both Paris and Las Vegas, was cemented. It was in Donn Arden?╟╓s ?╟úHello America!?╟Ñ at the Desert Inn in 1964 that Fluff gave her last performance as featured dancer and company 9aptain. Her final role? Ironically, as Mrs. Kent in a huge production number entitled ?╟úA Disaster at Sea: The Sinking of the Titanic.?╟Ñ Following her marriage to Archie LeCoque, lead trombonist with the Russ Black orchestra at the Flamingo, Fluff became company manager for several editions of Donn?╟╓s ?╟úPzazz,?╟Ñ also at the Desert Inn, and the Arden super-spectacular ?╟úHallelujah Hollywood?╟Ñ at the MGM, now Bally?╟╓sLas Vegas. I Continued on page 3... What?╟╓s Inside AUDITIONS. .......... Breck-A-Brac..... ...... Aloha.................... Did You Know?...... Boniour............ To the Points...... Scene In LA........ . Pages 5-12,16 . Page 2 .Page4 . Page 5 .Page 13 .Page 10 Page 13 2375 E. TROPICANA AVE., SUITE 6 LAS VEGAS, NEVADA 89119 -o

Don Ashbaugh Papers on Nevada Ghost Towns

Identifier
MS-00130
Abstract

The Don Ashbaugh Papers (1950-1960) document Las Vegas history, Nevada history, and ghost towns. The collection is comprised of the working manuscript of Don Ashbaugh's book, Nevada's Turbulent Yesterday: A Study in Ghost Towns. The collection also contains typescript drafts, newspaper clippings, and a geographical index of Nevada ghost towns.

Archival Collection

Mei Yang oral history interview: transcript

Date
2021-11-10
Archival Collection
Description

Oral history interview with Mei Yang conducted by Jourdin Wilson on November 10, 2021 for Reflections: The Las Vegas Asian American and Pacific Islander Oral History Project. University of Nevada, Las Vegas (UNLV) professor and graduate coordinator Mei Yang talks about her family and childhood in Shanxi Province, southwestern China. She shares her educational background pursuing her bachelor's and master's degrees in China before immigrating to the United States to earn her PhD in Computer Science from the University of Texas, Dallas. Mei Yang talks about her move to Las Vegas, Nevada, her work and professorship at UNLV, and her thoughts on pursuing a STEM (science technology engineering math) career as a woman. She shares how she raises her daughters in the United States away from her husband overseas, the Chinese community within Las Vegas, and traditions she celebrates.

Text

Photograph of construction at the Goldfield Consolidated Mining Company, Goldfield, Nevada, circa 1907-1908

Date
1907 to 1908
Description
The Goldfield Consolidated Mining Company under construction in Goldfield, Nevada. Several men stand by round metal structures. The mining company was formed in 1907 and the mill was constructed late in the year and began processing ore in early 1908. The company was formed by George Nixon and George Wingfield. The mill continued running until 1918 when the company ceased operation.

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