DURING A ROUNDUP OF WILD BURROS IN BLUE DIAMOND ON WEDNESDAY, Bureau of Land Management officials described the animals as “characters” prone to getting into trouble when they become overly dependent on human contact and handouts.
A speeding car plowed into people waiting Thursday morning at a bus stop on Spring Mountain near Decatur Boulevard, killing four and injuring eight others.
After watching part of the sanctions hearing of Las Vegas Sands Corp. attorneys this past week in District Court, I reached one undeniable conclusion:
The House last week approved a $1.05 trillion spending bill to keep the federal government running through March 27.
Everyone knows UNLV is a commuter college. Of the 27,000 students enrolled there, only 1,100 live on campus.
Which means most of the other 26,000 drive to school.
In any other circumstance, the array of items blanketing the table would be harmless, picked up in a family trip to the grocery store. A canister of Pringles, a bottle of water, Visine eye drops, a can of Dr Pepper, Tootsie Rolls, a pacifier, children’s chewable vitamins, WD-40. Even a rock.
There’s no way around it: The sound filling the sanctuary of Congregation Ner Tamid resembles the pained bleating of a herd of water buffalo after a lunch of profoundly questionable burritos.
