Winter finally decided to make a cameo in Las Vegas. Before you start mourning your spring dresses and gladiator sandals, take a look at the outfits we’ve compiled. Each lets you maintain your stylish look while staying comfortable, not cold. All you need is a little layering, a few accessories and a lot of imagination. Here’s how to do it.
It was perhaps the biggest non-story of the year. Yet because it involved a child and was made for TV — very visual — the media fell for it like one of Ashton Kutcher’s marks.
The Tobacco Plus Expo and the Retail Tobacco Dealers convention (the latter held at the Sands Expo and Convention Center) drew 27,000 attendees with a $41 million economic impact over the past six years, according to the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors authority.
Nevada bankruptcy filings in November were the fewest recorded in the state since February and a sharp decrease from the number filed in October.
I know it’s late, and the economy is still in the “room for improvement” mode, but I figured I’d take my chances with the jolly fella in the red suit.
In a surprise move, the chief executive officer of the state’s largest credit union has returned to the job less than a week after his resignation was disclosed.
A measure of holiday cheer came early to the Las Vegas man who got sued for reporting his suspicions about substandard maintenance of fire-detection systems at certain local hotels, an assisted living facility in Las Vegas and a Henderson shopping mall.
We’ve written this one so often that it doesn’t even make the front page of the Review-Journal anymore.
A special committee of Station Casinos board directors recommended Tuesday that the company refuse demands by some creditors to recharacterize a master lease used to help fund the buyout tied to four casinos to a creditor status. Any attempts by creditors to do so will be unsuccessful and costly to the company, according to a filing in the bankruptcy court in Reno.
Against a continually weak global backdrop, international flights emerged as a relative bright spot at McCarran International Airport in 2009.
WASHINGTON — Although a number of senators were granted special favors in the health care bill approved by the Senate today, there are no earmarks in the 2,074-page measure for Nevada, according to a spokesman for Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev.
“Frankly, this entire bill is about Nevada as the state has the second highest rate of uninsured in the nation,” said Jon Summers.
Also, from The Associated Press: Senate OK’s health care reform bill in victory for Obama
Sen. Reid’s full health reform statement
Sen. Ensign’s full health reform statement
