Are you going to make it illegal to go outside the United States for advanced care? How will you punish a doctor who is found treating only a certain clientele?
Nevada authorities should be ashamed of themselves for allowing the fight here.
Las Vegas Municipal Court’s Youth Offender Court — a program focused on family treatment, substance abuse classes, community service and life skills — gives young offenders a chance for a new start.
Improvements in radiation and chemotherapy are helping patients diagnosed with brain tumors survive longer. A Las Vegas paramedic is living proof.
New laws passed by the Nevada Legislature are providing a fuller picture of applicants but are slowing the hiring of those who pass muster, the Clark County School District’s top HR official says.
North Las Vegas firefighters will get a new aerial ladder truck under a $1.3 million spending plan the City Council approved Wednesday night.
If you own more than $10 billion in bonds, you should know what a bond is. That’s why Public Employees’ Retirement System of Nevada board members heard a presentation Thursday on bonds before their regular meeting.
Once again, President Donald Trump has left supporters wondering why the otherwise media-savvy president can’t stop stepping on his own message.
Las Vegas-based fighters Kyra Batara and Joey Ruquet will both compete on the card.
Nearly a month after a Las Vegas man was “brutally stabbed inside his apartment,” no arrests have been made, the Metropolitan Police Department said Thursday.
A spending bill for the Department of Energy that does not include $120 million to revive the Yucca Mountain nuclear waste project in Nevada was approved Thursday by the Senate Appropriations Committee.
Las Vegas is losing one of its few coding schools. The Iron Yard, a 4-year-old company, produced software developers and other much needed tech talent for the local economy.
The Clark County School District must pay $200,000 each to the mothers of two boys who were bullied at Greenspun Junior High School, a judge ruled Thursday.
A designated taxicab queuing area was left with little water, no shade and placed in a location that was difficult to find for attendees of the Electric Daisy Carnival held last month at the Las Vegas Motor Speedway, according to the Nevada Taxicab Authority.
Michael Meerovich didn’t find any trace of Fredo Corleone this week, but he and his family discovered something much better — Lake Tahoe, a great place to go on vacation.
UNLV’s football program has made recruiting in Arizona a priority and experienced success in plucking players from that state.
When information security experts gather in Las Vegas this weekend for Black Hat USA, the industry’s largest annual conference, they will have a lot of things to worry about. Job security won’t be on the list.
Here is the #NVprepsfb list of Southern Nevada’s top five wide receiver/pass catchers.
The North Las Vegas City Council on Wednesday agreed to pay for several water and sewer projects by applying for a pair of loans totaling $21.86 million from the state Department of Environmental Protection.
We all know, thanks to William Shakespeare, that all the world’s a stage. But not all of Shakespeare’s worlds are created equal.
The Golden State Warriors are bringing the personal seat license to the NBA, and the fans interested in purchasing them will be asked for a 30-year commitment.
A new 55-and-over community in Summerlin is poised to sprout homes, after previous plans for the site crashed with the economy.
Director Kirsten Brandt re-creates the frenzied pacing and dizzy business typical of silver-screen screwball comedies of the ’30s.
Happily – and hardly surprisingly – the delightful regional premiere of “Shakespeare in Love” at the Utah Shakespeare Festival proves equally at home on stage.
A bipartisan bill to encourage girls under age 10 to explore careers in computer science was filed Thursday by a Nevada congresswoman who — as a young woman — became a programmer during a period when the industry was male-dominated.
USF’s current version of the oft-told makes us forget the impending tragedy until it engulfs the title characters — and, by extension, those of us in the audience.
There’s no such thing as the Great American Musical. Yet “Guys and Dolls” is undoubtedly on the short list of contenders.
UNLV hired Texas-Arlington coach Kristie Fox on Thursday as its softball coach. She replaces Lisa Dodd, who resigned in June after five seasons as coach.
There’s too much buckle, not enough swash in this regional premiere to make it a truly transporting theatrical voyage.
William Shakespeare’s the inspiration for the 56th annual Utah Shakespeare Festival in Cedar City. But he’s also the star.
