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  2. When Did Las Vegas Segregation in Casinos End? - Las Vegas...

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/question/vegas-racial-history

    The official segregation of Las Vegas came to an end on March 25, 1960, the day before local NAACP President Dr. James McMillan promised to “shut down the Strip” by leading a mass protest march along Las Vegas Boulevard. At the last minute, casino owners —motivated by a fear of bad national publicity — sat down with McMillan, other ...

  3. How Much Racial Segregation Existed in Las Vegas's past? | Las...

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/question/vegas-segregation

    A: Las Vegas was so segregated that, even well into the 1960s, it was known as “the Mississippi of the West.”. In a way, Las Vegas was predestined to be segregated, as it had its origins in two rival developments that were literally on the other side of the tracks from each other. What is now the Westside neighborhood and the heart of the ...

  4. Where Were the Vegas Homes of the Rat Pack Located ... - Las...

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/question/rat-pack-homes-vegas

    The story goes that Sinatra threatened to take his bat, ball, and the whole team home, never to return, unless the Strip bosses relented and they did; they made an except for Davis, Jr. That started the integration ball rolling and in 1960, the Mississippi of the West lifted all Jim Crow restrictions, desegregating Las Vegas.

  5. Did MLB Look the Other Way When Del Webb owned casinos and the...

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/question/del-webb-yankees-casinos

    Along the way, he also acquired an interest in the Mint downtown and the Hacienda at the far south end of the Strip. All that time, he co-owned the Yankees. Webb and his partner paid $2.8 million for the team. With it came the Yankee farm teams (a total of 450 players), plus stadiums in New York, Newark, and Kansas City.

  6. Segregated Vegas Part Two | Las Vegas Advisor

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/question/segregated-vegas-part-two

    Part 2 of Segregated Las Vegas. A: The more hysterical manifestations of anti-black sentiment took place on the Las Vegas Strip. Nat King Cole was under orders not to make eye contact with the white women in his audiences and when he tried to enter the casino where he was performing by the front door, he was barred.

  7. Quora is a place to gain and share knowledge. It's a platform to ask questions and connect with people who contribute unique insights and quality answers. This empowers people to learn from each other and to better understand the world.

  8. When and Why Did the Late Late Shows End? - Las Vegas Advisor

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/question/late-late-shows

    A: If you attribute the reason for the disappearance of the late late shows to the corporatization of Las Vegas, you’re not far from wrong. The evolution of entertainment into a profit center for the casinos is also responsible. We asked two experts for their takes on the subject and this is what they said.

  9. Did Jess Marcum Invent Card Counting? - Gambling With An Edge

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/gambling-with-an-edge/did-jess-marcum-invent-card-counting

    Jess Marcum at Rand Corporation. Jess Ira Marcum (originally Marcovitch) was born in Knoxville, Tennessee on December 30, 1919. His father had emigrated from Russia in 1904 at the age of 14 and was an entomologist and professor at the University of Tennessee. His mother, a librarian, had come from Austria in 1902.

  10. Love and kisses from Wall Street – Las Vegas Advisor

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/blog/love-and-kisses-from-wall-street

    Boyd beat Wall Street estimates across all divisions, delivering net revenue of $961 million and cash flow of $337 million. Hotel-room demand was reported to be up in Las Vegas, which came in 4% ahead of expectations (+11% in Downtown), despite softness at The Orleans and Gold Coast. Both of those properties are in the midst of major hotel ...

  11. When Did Howard Hughes Live in Las Vegas and What Did He Own? |...

    www.lasvegasadvisor.com/question/howard-hughes-vegas

    He arrived in November 1966 -- reportedly at midnight, incognito, from an ambulance and through a back door of the Desert Inn, trailing a truckload of Kleenex and a retinue of Mormon advisors. He set up shop on the top floor of the DI, the toniest resort-casino in town at that time. As the legend goes, by mid-December, the DI owners wanted ...