Ian Green runs a company called Greenheart that builds eco-friendly projects around the world, including the zip-line attraction that just opened in Bootleg Canyon outside Boulder City.
If Congress won’t ban experimental aircraft flights out of North Las Vegas Airport, people who fear those planes will fall from the sky into their homes might only have one option left: Living with it.
HAWTHORNE ARMY DEPOT — The roadside explosion wasn’t real. Neither was the shrapnel that “shredded” the driver’s chest and leg, nor the blood that flowed from his “wounds.”
It’s 6 p.m. A dozen officers and a sergeant meet in a basement at Las Vegas City Hall.
The book is made of paper torn from cement sacks. Its binding is a twist of common fencing wire.
Luxury hotel developer Steve Wynn is known to move heaven and earth to make things happen. But he couldn’t convert the Vatican.
Lt. Gov. Brian Krolicki launched a pre-emptive strike Monday by announcing he’ll probably be indicted on criminal charges.
RENO — Reno police said they’re making a renewed push to find more women who might be linked to a man arrested in the slaying of a 19-year-old college student and the abduction and rape of another college student.
An audit of the Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority found that over a seven-year period payments to the politically well-connected R&R Partners advertising agency departed from terms of its contract and resulted in overcharges to the authority.
Some politicians like to rest up after an election, take a brief respite before diving into the next two-year election cycle. Not Harry Reid.
Some might recall that I wound up in the fine conservative town of Fort Smith, Ark., shortly before the election to address the local chamber of commerce.
In response to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2005 Kelo ruling — in which the liberal justices formed a 5-4 majority to OK government land seizures on behalf of private parties — local attorney Kermit Waters put together a ballot initiative designed to limit such outrageous abuses of eminent domain in Nevada.
The 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified in January 1964. It spelled out that the right of any citizen to vote shall not be denied or abridged by reason of failing to pay a poll tax.
Almost all elected officials will tell you how important small businesses are in their states. However, the financial crisis largely has been focused on the problems of Wall Street institutions.
And “what in heaven’s name brought you to Casablanca?” Claude Rains as Capt. Louis Renault asked Rick Blaine (Humphrey Bogart) in the 1942 classic movie of the same name.
Next month’s special legislative session can be boiled down to this: Gov. Jim Gibbons and lawmakers will consider putting taxpayers into debt to make sure state employees keep their jobs and the 4 percent pay raises they received just five months ago.
Herbert Hoover and Franklin Roosevelt — the latter continued and amplified the former’s policies in a kind of one-two punch, as revealed in Murray Rothbard’s “The Great Depression” — did all the wrong things from 1930 to 1938.
As of January 2008 there were 2,942 homeowner associations in the state. One million people live within these associations. We were complete strangers until disputes with our respective homeowner association boards brought us together. Both of us had run into differing problems, but soon realized that a strong advocacy group was needed.
Here is a listing of events designed for book lovers. Information is subject to change or cancellation without notice. Additions or changes to this listing must be submitted at least 10 days in advance of Sunday publication to Bookmark, Las Vegas Review-Journal, P.O. Box 70, Las Vegas, NV 89125. For more information, call 383-0306.
They’re coming to Donna Wilburn’s office for counseling, anxious about a declining economy, worried about job losses and concerned about the family’s bills.
“U.S. Decisively Elects First Black President,” read the Nov. 5 Washington Post headline. Decisive as Barack Obama’s election was, however, his blackness is not. The former senator from Illinois is equally white. (His mother is Caucasian, his father African.)
The Amargosa is a fickle river. It rampages during frequent thunderstorms, then retreats underground, otherwise surfacing only to provide a tempting streak of green in the brown, baked desert.
In the real world, parkouring is a young man’s street sport where they run across rooftops, jump across dangerous gaps between rooftops and land in a rolling tumble to absorb the fall. If you’re unfamiliar with this way of life, you should type “parkour” into YouTube and be prepared to be amazed.
Holiday train excursions create memories families hold dear for years to come. Southern Nevada families seeking special holiday experiences find possibilities of traveling with Santa aboard vintage Nevada trains in Boulder City, Ely and Carson City, as well as in Northern Arizona at Williams and Cottonwood. Tickets go fast for the holiday train rides, so act soon.
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