In The News: Department of History

Las Vegas Review Journal

In the years after labor leader Cesar Chavez joined a historic Las Vegas picket line shortly before he died, he became the namesake of an east valley park and a ceremonial road. Not only was he the subject of annual celebrations thrown in his honor, the Nevada Legislature in 2009 passed a law requiring the governor to proclaim Cesar Chavez Day every March 31. Supporters of that tradition were left reeling this week by a New York Times investigation that uncovered accusations that Chavez was a sexual predator who abused children and fellow labor icon Dolores Huerta.

KVVU-TV: Fox 5

Several Cesar Chavez Day celebrations in San Francisco, Texas, and Arizona have been canceled following allegations that the late Latino civil and labor rights leader abused young women and minors.

KSNV-TV: News 3

Six years ago on March 17, Nevada鈥檚 casino floors went dark as then-Gov. Steve Sisolak ordered all nonessential businesses to close, a move that delivered an immediate shock to Las Vegas and a tourism-dependent economy that would be battered for weeks.

Conversation

By the late 1770s, people had been commemorating the anniversary of St. Patrick鈥檚 death 鈥 reputedly on March 17, 461 鈥 for over a thousand years. Irish immigrants brought the tradition with them when they moved to North America, and officers in the Continental Army regularly used the holiday to bring glimmers of cheer to their cold and gloomy camps.

Nevada Independent

After resolving a legal case in Nevada and serving years in a Virginia prison, the operative is working for a congressional candidate.

Las Vegas Review Journal

When the Eastside Cannery debuted in summer 2008, hundreds of people waited outside to get in Las Vegas鈥 newest hotel-casino on opening night. Some waited a few hours to explore the $250 million project on Boulder Highway.

KNPR News

The real thing鈥擩ohn Lennon, Paul McCartney, George Harrison, and Ringo Starr鈥攁rrived at McCarran airport on August 20, 1964, at about 1 a.m. A car took them to the Sahara, where they stayed in a suite鈥攍iterally. 性视界传媒 two thousand fans had come to greet them. Local officials didn鈥檛 want them going to casinos because they feared that their underage fans would follow them and get into trouble. The only outsiders to get in were a reporter and photographer from the Las Vegas Sun. One of them showed Ringo how to make the television set work.

Reno Gazette-Journal

Few structures shaped the modern American West like Hoover Dam. Rising from Black Canyon in the 1930s, the massive concrete arch structure, finished in the Art Deco style of the era, tamed the Colorado River, created Lake Mead and helped power a growing Southwest. But at the time, its importance to Southern Nevada was less about water and more about survival.

KSNV-TV: News 3

Heightened tensions tied to the conflict in the Middle East, along with a recent shooting in Austin that left at least two people dead last weekend, have prompted renewed warnings from former FBI officials about the risk of terrorism and the importance of reporting suspicious behavior.

The Athletic

The social meaning of clothes can and does change. According to Deirdre Clemente, a fashion and culture historian, the emergence of the suit as the standard for men in the 18th and 19th centuries was itself a rebellion against the ornate, flashy and colorful clothing associated with aristocracy. Yet by the 20th century, it had become the default for powerful leaders, worn by presidents, CEOs and even coaches.

KSNV-TV: News 3

性视界传媒 history department chair Michael Green said Stephanie Street 鈥渂ridges the older part of Henderson, the part that was associated with the 40s and 50s when that was developing, and all of the things that have gone on since.鈥 He added, 鈥淚ts growth reflects Henderson鈥檚 growth.鈥

KNPR News

How to describe Sammy Davis, Jr., in just a few words? Maybe the best way came from the mother of the historian who writes this program. His parents got married in Las Vegas in 1964. They stayed at the Sahara, where Tony Bennett was in the showroom, but they went down the street to see Sammy at the Sands. He asked his mother if they saw another show. She replied, 鈥淥nce you鈥檝e seen Sammy Davis, Jr., you don鈥檛 need to see another show.鈥