Search the Special Collections and Archives Portal

Search Results

Display    Results Per Page
Displaying results 61 - 70 of 761

Shipers, R. L., and C. P. Harlan, 1989, Background Information for the Development of a Low-Level Waste Performance Assessment Methodology, Volume 2: Assessment of Relative Significance of Migration and Exposure Pathways, NUREG/CR-5453, SAND89-2509, Sandia National Laboratories, Albuquerque, New Mexico, 1989

Level of Description
File
Archival Collection
Environmental Radiation Protection Standards for Yucca Mountain, Nevada
To request this item in person:
Collection Number: MS-00603
Collection Name: Environmental Radiation Protection Standards for Yucca Mountain, Nevada
Box/Folder: Box 27

Archival Component

Audio recording clip of interview with Alma Whitney by Claytee D. White, March 3, 1996

Date
1996-03-03
Description

Alma talks about the 2-3 day long car ride from Tallulah, LA to Las Vegas in 1952.

Sound

Audio clip from interview with Jean S. Childs, December 2, 2013

Date
2013-12-02
Description

Part of an interview with Jean S. Childs, December 2, 2013. In this clip, Jean Childs describes an experience she had helping someone at the Concentrated Employment Program.

Sound

Carrie McCoy oral history interview

Identifier
OH-03281
Abstract

Oral history interview with Carrie McCoy conducted by Claytee D. White in Fordyce, Arkansas, approximately 1995 for the African Americans in Las Vegas: a Collaborative Oral History Project. In this interview, McCoy explains how she and her husband left Fordyce for Las Vegas, Nevada in 1942, seeking better economic prospects. After several years, McCoy returned to Fordyce to raise their four children and work as a housekeeper for several white families. After her oldest children were grown she returned to Las Vegas in 1961, first finding work at a small motel and then spending nine years working in housekeeping at the Flamingo Hilton Hotel. Finally, she returned to Fordyce in 1972. She ends the interview talking about comparative race relations between Fordyce and Las Vegas, differences in work practices, union activities, and church involvement.

Archival Collection

Arkansas--Fordyce

Subject

Cathren J. Holder oral history interviews

Identifier
OH-03299
Abstract

Oral history interviews with Cathren J. Holder conducted by Claytee D. White on June 4 and 15, 1996 for the African Americans in Las Vegas: a Collaborative Oral History Project. In this interview, Holder talks about her childhood and education in Fordyce, Arkansas, her move to Las Vegas, Nevada in 1952, and her first experience of living in a two room shack with her older brother and his family. She then discusses her work, marriage, places she shopped, and changes in the Westside since her arrival.

Archival Collection

Audio recording clip of interview with Lucille Bryant by Claytee D. White, December 13, 1995

Date
1995-12-13
Description

Part of an interview with Lucille Bryant conducted by Claytee D. White on December 13, 1995. In the clip, Bryant compares economic opportunities in Tallulah and Las Vegas in the 1950s.

Sound

Audio recording clip of interview with Judge Lee Gates by Claytee D. White, December 5, 1996

Date
1996-12-05
Description

Part of an interview with Judge Lee Gates by Claytee D. White on December 5, 1996. Gates explores his mother's motivations for moving to Las Vegas in the 1950s.

Sound

Pat Feaster oral history interview

Identifier
OH-03306
Abstract

Oral history interview with Pat Feaster conducted by Claytee D. White on July 1, 1996 for the African Americans in Las Vegas: a Collaborative Oral History Project. In this interview, Feaster relates how her mother made the decision to leave Fordyce, Arkansas for better economic opportunity and moved to Las Vegas, Nevada in 1942. She describes travelling across the country, living in a one-room structure in the Westside of Las Vegas, and attending the Westside School. She discusses her mother's employment at the Red Rooster Restaurant and then at the Algiers Hotel. She talks at length about her own educational journey after leaving school at fifteen, then returning for her GED and later, a college degree after the birth of her fifth child. She discusses how the decision to improve her education helped her develop a twenty-six year career at the Clark County Health District. She also discusses the Fordyce Club and many important personalities in Las Vegas' Black community.

Archival Collection