This year’s celebration of Black History Month is as varied as Southern Nevada’s African American community.
John Przybys
Michael Green, an associate professor of history at UNLV, recently added to the body of Abraham Lincoln literature with “Lincoln and Native Americans,” which examines Lincoln’s actions regarding Native Americans.
Monsignor Gregory Gordon is appointed by Pope Francis as Las Vegas auxiliary bishop.
A tennis court is, of course, a feature of a Las Vegas home being sold by Andre Agassi.
The pandemic has prompted a new approach to 12-step meetings.
From the time nuclear weapons testing began in the Nevada desert in 1951, protesters have been around to contest it.
Longtime Southern Nevada disability advocate Linda Smith has created a nonprofit foundation to recognize and support caregivers.
Las Vegan Andrew Carmean will bring his driving talent to this weekend’s downtown demolition derby.
T-Mobile Arena and MGM Resorts have unveiled an effort to make the arena sensory inclusive.
Many celebrities who visit the Las Vegas Market are best known by serious home decor enthusiasts. But some are recognizable even to those who take, maybe, a more utilitarian view of furniture, bedding and the accoutrements of home design.
Sure, they’re lanterns rising into the nighttime sky. But for RiSE Festival participants, each lantern is a blank canvas that carries into the heavens messages, in the form of drawings or words, that express joy, pain, regret, gratitude, sorrow, hopeor any other emotion they need to feel, and share, in that moment.
When a beloved sports figure retires, it’s often said that person will never again have to pay for a drink in a local bar.
Over three days, 60 students get to know Steven Trepost intimately — his head, heart, lungs and blood.
The Las Vegas Book Festival has announced that Pulitzer Prize winner Colson Whitehead, poet and novelist Luis Rodriguez and author Sara Shepard and will headline this year’s event.
Volunteers are helping the broad array of Oct. 1 memorial items take a permanent place in the Clark County Museum.