Applicants sought for casinos in upstate N.Y.

ALBANY, N.Y. — Applicants for the four upstate New York casino licenses must provide resolutions of support from local lawmakers and be able to pay licensing fees that will run as high as $70 million, state gambling regulators said Monday.

Four Clark County high schools could drop down to Division I-A

As many as four Clark County schools could be competing for state titles in a different division of the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association next year. The NIAA”;s Board of Control approved moving up to four schools from Division I to Division I-A for the start of the 2014-15 school year.

BOYS GOLF: Davis, Mustangs top Aggies

Ben Davis shot 3-under-par 33 at Silverstone on Monday to lead Shadow Ridge’s boys golf team to a 206-220 victory over Arbor View.

Unlike 76ers, Sullivan on winning streak

You’ve heard of that movie about backup singers called “20 Feet From Stardom?” Well, Molly Sullivan has spent the basketball season 20 feet (or thereabouts) from futility.

New Michael Jackson album to be released posthumously

A new posthumous album of previously unreleased Michael Jackson music comes out May 13. “Xscape” will be released by the late singer’s estate and Epic Records.

Nevada Health Link sees brisk business for insurance

Nevadans flocked to the state’s online health insurance exchange ahead of a midnight Monday enrollment deadline to at least begin the signup process. At midday, exchange officials said as many as 5,700 individual users were accessing the website at one time.

1 wounded in south Las Vegas shooting

A shooting at a south Las Vegas home on Monday has put one person in the hospital and another in custody, according to Las Vegas police.

 
GM blamed for not acting fast enough in recall hearing

The head of the nation’s auto safety watchdog is blaming General Motors for a failure to act sooner to warn consumers of a defect in small cars that is linked to 13 deaths.

Henderson considers grant to study feasibility of new crime lab

The Henderson City Council on Tuesday will consider approval of a $70,000 community-funded grant to evaluate the needs, programming, feasibility and cost of constructing and equipping a new crime lab for the police department.

 
North Las Vegas police investigating ‘gruesome’ homicide scene

North Las Vegas police checking on a mother and daughter reported missing discovered a “gruesome” homicide scene inside a northeast valley home on Monday that has investigators questioning how many bodies are involved.

Northern Nevada inmate, 79, dies after illness

An inmate at the Northern Nevada Correctional Center died Saturday from a long-term medical illness, according to the Nevada Department of Corrections.

Wallace testifies injury at Bellagio has hurt his act

Wallace could not perform stand-up comedy for at least six months after his left Achilles tendon ruptured as he stumbled over loose electrical wires on stage during a private corporate event. He testified Monday during his trial that he still can’t walk the Strip to promote his show.

Rush of applications come at health care deadline

A flood of last-minute applicants rushed to sign up for health insurance on Monday, deadline day for President Barack Obama’s health care law, with more than 100,000 people at a time using the fragile system. After early stumbles, the website is up and running again.

Nevada’s same-sex marriage ban still could end up in high court

A court challenge to Nevada’s ban on same-sex marriage is no longer at the top of the queue in efforts nationally to legalize gay unions after a hearing date initially set by the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals for April 9 was postponed but the Nevada case is still in the mix as more courts around the country continue to weigh in on the controversial issue, a lawyer for Lambda Legal said last week.

Four Clark County high schools could drop down to Division I-A

As many as four Clark County schools could be competing for state titles in a different division of the Nevada Interscholastic Activities Association next year. The NIAA’s Board of Control approved moving up to four schools from Division I to Division I-A for the start of the 2014-15 school year.

1 2 3