Handicapper Kelly Stewart and The Linq Hotel sports book director John Lukasik join the Review-Journal’s Todd Dewey to preview Week 7 of the NFL season.
Handicapper Kelly Stewart and The Linq Hotel sports book director John Lukasik join the Review-Journal’s Todd Dewey to preview Week 8 of the college football season.
Boulder City’s boys tennis team and The Meadows’ girls tennis team defended their Class 3A state championships on Friday at Truckee High School.
Ahead of fighting Derrick Lewis on Nov. 3 in New York City’s famed Madison Square Garden, Daniel Cormier reflected on the path that led his opponent to a heavyweight title shot.
Las Vegas businessman Michael Shustek is seeking to raise as much as $100 million for his latest real estate investment trust through an initial public offering of stock and plans to list the shares on the NASDAQ exchange.
With a string of casinos along the Colorado River some 100 miles southeast of Las Vegas, Laughlin is popular with retirees who drive in and offers low-priced rooms, buffets and plenty of sunshine and open desert.
County Commissioner Steve Sisolak was at the Nobu Hotel in Caesars Palace on Friday to present chef Nobu Matsuhisa and Robert De Niro with a proclamation declaring it Nobu Day on the Las Vegas Strip and throughout Clark County.
Barry Smith, the longtime newsman and press advocate, retired from the press association this month after more than a decade as the Nevada Press Association’s executive director.
Michigan lost by a touchdown at Notre Dame to open the season, and everyone assumed the Wolverines’ College Football Playoff hopes were done. But Michigan now looks like the class of the Big Ten.
The Indianapolis Zoo says a lion has died in a fight with another lion.
Southern Nevada’s public colleges and universities are on their way toward consolidated police services, after the board of regents approved a memorandum of understanding outlining the process Friday morning.
The flyover would allow northbound drivers leaving the airport to bypass the intersection’s traffic signal and exit either northbound onto Swenson or westbound onto Tropicana.
Nevadans eager to continue the policies that have put the nation’s economy back on strong footing should vote for Heller.
U.S. home sales fell for the sixth straight month in September, a sign that housing has increasingly become a weak spot for the economy.
The arrest of a progressive activist this week in Las Vegas, an earlier arrest at another campaign event, and other recent incidents involving the left made it appear this was open season on Republicans.
Applications are being accepted for Access Las Vegas, a new program designed to give senior-level executives who are new to Southern Nevada access to the information they need to know about the community to be an effective leader. Access Las Vegas is a program of the Leadership Foundation of Greater Las Vegas, an affiliate of the Las Vegas Metro Chamber.
Nevada’s electorate will choose a next governor and weigh in on races that could determine control of Congress, and if voters turn out in a traditional manner, about half of the ballots cast will be done before Election Day.
Coach Gerard Gallant doesn’t believe the team’s 3-4 start has been much different from last season’s blistering 6-1 opening stretch.
Handicapper Paul Stone went 3-1-1 ATS in Week 7 to run his season record to 22-12-1 ATS (64.7 percent).
Reverence, a 300-acre village in Summerlin, developed exclusively by Pulte Homes, has experienced brisk sales since it opened last year, with more than 300 homes sold. Today, Reverence features six collections of homes in a variety of architectural styles and price points with home sites available for all home designs and several quick move-in homes.
Pardee Homes’ newly opened Corterra neighborhood is off Horizon Ridge Parkway, just east of South Valle Verde Drive in a well-established area of Henderson.
There is no community in Southern Nevada with more parks than Summerlin — nearly 250 of all sizes and types. In fact, every Summerlin village is centered around a large community park, while each of the community’s neighborhoods is required to have its own smaller parks, reflective of a planning requirement that dedicates approximately one-third of Summerlin’s total acreage to open space, parks, trails and golf courses.
The Regency at Summerlin community will host a festive Oktoberfest-themed event Saturday, Oct. 20, from 2 to 5 p.m., with live music, beer tastings and German food pairings, as well as tours of its nine model homes. The age-qualified, luxury resort-style community comprises three home collections, the Pinnacle, Palisades and Summit, with surrounded scenic views and spectacular amenities. All homes feature single-story designs with gourmet kitchens, open great rooms and a indoor/outdoor living experience.
It’s that time of year again, and anyone who knows me, knows I love Halloween. Here are some tips for your homeowners association for a safe night of fun.
From Henderson to Summerlin to the scenic Las Vegas foothills, Woodside Homes is introducing many homeownership opportunities this fall and early 2019 to help meet one of the biggest demands for housing in the United States.
The Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors announced the results of its annual election of officers and board members, with local Realtors Janet Carpenter serving as 2019 president and Tom Blanchard serving as 2019 president-elect.
McCarran International’s beefed-up baggage claim, food offerings and security check coordination helped the Las Vegas airport take top honors in J.D. Powers & Associates’ 2018 airport satisfaction study.
Trilogy in Summerlin has announced new details for its Resort Club, which is planned to open in 2019. The age-qualified community will hold its Lifestyle Preview Event Saturday on Oct. 20 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
From Anthem Country Club to Red Rock Country Club, neighbors across the valley are outdoing each other in an attempt to present the coolest, most fun Halloween “spook-tacular” party. Some of these productions resemble a Hollywood movie set, and the giveaways are not your basic penny candy.
After a sluggish summer, Southern Nevada home prices bounced back in September to hit $300,000 for the first time in more than 11 years, according to a report released this month by the Greater Las Vegas Association of Realtors.
