Presidents’ Day (Observed) has already been observed, but the Nevada State Museum in Las Vegas is offering a special glimpse of our first chief executive just in time for the old man’s 281st birthday.
Tax season can be stressful, and each year people scramble to send in their tax returns, right down to the deadline. But for those who do a little preparation and avoid procrastinating, it can be significantly less tense. However, whether you’re a last-minute rusher or an ahead-of-the-game planner, you need to take steps to protect your identity during tax time, or you could be facing the greatest stress of all.
The best home improvements deliver all those smart qualities and speak to your heart at the same time. With spring home improvement season approaching, here are five home improvements that you can do for the love of spring – and the love of your biggest investment.
When a home smells good, it makes a favorable impression on visitors. This is exactly what home sellers want when they put their house on the market.
Maintaining the perfect lawn is easier than you think and with the right tools, you can be both efficient with your yard work and eco-conscious. If it’s lush green turf that you’re after, but you also care about your carbon footprint, there are a few tools and practices that can help you have it both ways.
Small businesses are always trying to find ways to get organized so employees can work more efficiently and save money in the process. With tax time just around the corner and projects opening and closing on a daily basis, taking your business organization standards to a new and improved level might seem like a huge undertaking.
A decade after Larry Eustachy made headlines for drinking beer with college kids, his life is a party again. But he’s sober, his drink of choice is Diet Coke, and his nightlife is highlighted by winning basketball games.
It can be confusing out there on the road, getting bombarded with traffic lights and signs and cones and those dudes with the flags and the smoke pouring out of that old VW bug in front of you and the weaving big rig to your right, which makes you think of that video on YouTube where a rig jacknifed and smashed into things.
U.S. Rep. Joe Heck, R-Nev., said Tuesday he favors universal background checks for people who buy guns — whether from dealers or individuals — as one way to prevent violent or mentally ill people from getting firearms.
Authorities say a 26-year-old man struck by a minivan over the weekend died of his injuries.
Democratic senators said Tuesday they want to offer tax incentives to induce employees to hire the unemployed, lure movie companies to Nevada and repair roads and bridges.
Builder confidence in the market for newly built, single-family homes was virtually unchanged in February with a one-point decline to 46 on the National Association of Home Builders’ Housing Market Index released Tuesday.
No one showed up to seek an extension, and a judge in Las Vegas dissolved a protective order that had been issued for the wife of troubled Assemblyman Steven Brooks on Tuesday.
Two people were arrested in a Strip hotel stabbing Saturday morning.
Clark County commissioners are moving forward with a proposal to abolish the Las Vegas Township constable’s office.
The wife of a veteran helicopter pilot killed in a crash during an aerial seeding operation over fire-scarred eastern Nevada said her husband died doing what he loved best.
Floyd Mayweather Jr. made big news Tuesday, signing a six-fight deal with Showtime that could net the Las Vegas boxing champ more than $200 million.
The man accused of stabbing his girlfriend to death Sunday was a fugitive from California.
The man who died after his vehicle crashed into a concrete wall has been identified by the Clark County coroner’s office as 42-year-old Marin Petrov.
The last time the Wranglers played Bakersfield, a live condor got loose on the ice — twice — during the national anthem in a spectacle that garnered international attention and more than a million views on YouTube in a video entitled “Condor goes wild.”
Forgive state Sen. Tick Segerblom. He means well.
