A Monday high of 111 made it the hottest day of the year so far in Las Vegas.
Marvin Clemons
Marvin joined Reviewjournal.com in March 2019 after a 7.5-year stint on the assignment desk at KSNV News 3. He started his newspaper career (via school of hard knocks) several decades ago in Utah after service in the U.S. Air Force, and eventually spent 25 years in the Chicago newspaper market before the industry downsizing in 2011 made him and wife Julie move West. They have six children and 12 grandchildren still enjoying Midwest winters/summers.
Monday may be the hottest day of the summer — so far — in Las Vegas.
A California man was able to find more than 107,000 reasons to celebrate his birthday at a Las Vegas Strip casino on Saturday night.
The Las Vegas heat will continue while the wind will diminish on Sunday, according to the National Weather Service.
Above-average temperatures and more gusty winds are expected through the weekend and into next week, says the National Weather Service.
A slot machine has paid off big in Laughlin.
The Las Vegas heat will keep rising through the weekend and into next week, according to the National Weather Service.
Increasing heat with breezes are forecast for the Las Vegas Valley.
The Fourth of July is expected to be warm and windy in the Las Vegas region, according to the National Weather Service.
Gusty winds could increase fire dangers and hamper fireworks displays in Las Vegas.
The Fourth of July holiday weekend will be warm and windy in Las Vegas.
The usual holiday traffic issue is related to California-bound travelers leaving Las Vegas at the end of the weekend. This July 4 weekend it is a bit reversed.
“What has been a slow motion train wreck for 20 years is accelerating, and the moment of reckoning is near,” the head of the Southern Nevada Water Authority told Congress.
Warm and windy conditions will prevail through much of the holiday weekend in Las Vegas, says the National Weather Service.
Receding Lake Mead keeps revealing remains of the past. The latest is a World War II-era landing craft that once was 185 feet below the surface and a popular dive spot.