Las Vegas used to be monotheistic, embracing the Church of Elvis. But Michael Jackson is the new deity in town.
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The signs outside certain business establishments on the seediest Vegas streets make no secret of the customers to whom they cater: Gentlemen’s Club, they deceptively declare.
For an all too brief time, the Moulin Rouge was an integrated oasis in a segregated Las Vegas. As much an ideal as a hotel, Las Vegas’ first interracial resort was so novel that it made the cover of Life magazine, granting it the imprimatur of mainstream pop culture cool.
Feet moving at a glacial pace, Scot Rammer shuffles from the front door to his recording studio: a desk in his living room. There is no hurry. But even if there were, he couldn’t. Rammer’s right side is partially paralyzed, the aftereffects of a stroke he suffered in 2008.
The sound of the end-of-day school bell symbolizes freedom from classes for most students.
So, if I said to you, “I’ve opened a bank account in your name. The account contains a balance of $5 million. To access the money, you’ll need the PIN number, which only I know. And I’m not going to tell you.”
In Nevada’s arid southern tip, few places exist where one can hear the murmur of a running stream.
Matthew Gray Gubler of the CBS drama “Criminal Minds” served as host during a fashion show and dinner benefiting the American Lung Association on May 10 at the Las Vegas Country Club.
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The 6-foot-5, 210-pound pitcher walks to the mound while clearing his head, preparing to play his favorite position of the sport he loves the most.