The entire Las Vegas Valley is invited to celebrate Independence Day at the 17th annual Summerlin Council Patriotic Parade. More than 40,000 people are expected to attend.
Now that you have access to every professional football game on Sunday through your premium satellite television provider, make your house the spot for Sunday afternoon football parties. Provide an engaging experience for friends, neighbors, coworkers and relatives that is rivaled only by sitting in the stadium. Not only is this a great way to share a common passion among fellow football fans, it is also a way to build relationships with guests who would not normally come over for dinner or other entertainment.
If you look at two sets of data often used to track pricing trends for auto insurance in America over time, you would see that the price of insuring a car in the United States dropped by a total of 6.75 percent between 2004 and 2008, and it also rose by a total of 3.4 percent during the same period. But just how could two reputable sources of information report that the average cost both went up and down at the same time?
The webcast features an update on the death of Air Force Capt. Eric Ziegler. Also, meet two Las Vegas 90-year-olds with Fourth of July World War II memories.
The Clark County Prosecutors Association filed a lawsuit late Friday challenging the county’s effort to take away the collective bargaining rights of 43 members and reduce their salaries by six percent.
Twenty-four people were hospitalized over the course of the three-day Electric Daisy Carnival electronic music festival, according to final numbers released Friday.
Brian Brannman, who for three years served as chief operating officer of the University Medical Center, was appointed Friday by Clark County Manager Don Burnette as chief executive officer of the hospital.
They held a public auction for the Crazy Horse Too on Friday, but nobody showed up. So the owner of the property’s first deed of trust bought the shuttered strip club for $3 million — tens of millions of dollars less than the club’s worth during its heyday as a thriving hangout for mobsters, politicians and celebrities.
Maybe Las Vegas is not at the bottom of the housing market after all.
