Lights technical director Jose Luis Sanchez Sola and coach Isidro Sanchez talk about the team’s first loss of the season. (Ben Gotz/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
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Sapporo In Las Vegas Brings Sushi To Your Table With A Conveyor Belt And Robots. (Janna Karel Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Vegas Nation host Bryan Salmond, Raiders beat writer Michael Gehlken and Review-Journal reporter Gilbert Manzano go over the Raiders draft picks for the second day of the NFL drafts.
Raiders head coach Jon Gruden discusses the teams second day draft picks.
The New York Giants took Chaparral grad Will Hernandez in the 2nd second round of the NFL Draft He was a two-time All-American at Texas-El Paso Hernandez will try to protect Giants quarterback Eli Manning He also will try to create holes for running back Saquon Barkley Green Valley grad Tyrell Crosby is expected to be drafted Saturday
Raiders trade again and draft DT P.J. Hall and OT Brandon Parker. The team moved back again Friday, this time exchanging the No. 41 overall pick for the No. 57 selection. It then selected former Sam Houston State defensive tackle P.J. Hall. The Raiders parted with No. 75, trading up 10 spots to select former North Carolina A&T offensive tackle Brandon Parker.
Lise-Lotte Lublin, who says she was drugged in 1989 by Bill Cosby, talks about why she spoke out and later testified against him. Cosby was found guilty in drugging and sexually assaulting Andrea Constand in a court in Pennsylvania this past Thursday, four years after Lublin came out as a victim.
Developers are putting up subdivisions, apartments, retail centers and other projects across Las Vegas. But the local construction industry is still nowhere near as big as it was during the bubble years of the mid-2000s. 63,900 people work in construction in Southern Nevada. Employment has nearly doubled since early 2012 but is still far below the peak of 112,000 in mid-2006. It’s hard for me to imagine such a surge of population that you would need to build housing, retail, schools and other things on the scale that was happening in 2005. — Ken Simonson, chief economist, Associated General Contractors of America