UNLV’s Tony Sanchez on USC
 
UNLV’s Tony Sanchez on USC

UNLV football coach Tony Sanchez talks about opening against a program like USC. Video by Mark Anderson/Las Vegas Review-Journal

Former UNLV baseball coach Fred Dallimore remembers Manny Guerra
 
Former UNLV baseball coach Fred Dallimore remembers Manny Guerra

Former UNLV baseball coach Fred Dallimore speaks of the impact long time major league scout Manny Guerra had on the Las Vegas baseball community during a memorial celebrating Guerra’s life on Aug 18, 2018. (Ron Kantowski/Review Journal).

A Walk Through Circus Circus
 
A Walk Through Circus Circus

It only takes a short walk through Circus Circus to realize it attracts a demographic like no other casino on the Strip: families with young children. (Todd Prince/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

Robotics takes off at Las Vegas Academy
 
Robotics takes off at Las Vegas Academy

Las Vegas Academy’s robotics team made it all the way to the world competition last year, the first year the team competed. Zackary Perry describes how they programmed their robot to compete. The team is an example of what Tesla wants to have in every school in the state. (Meghin Delaney/Las Vegas Review-Journal)

UNLV’s Tony Sanchez on practice
 
UNLV’s Tony Sanchez on practice

UNLV football coach Tony Sanchez talks about Thursday’s practice. Video by Mark Anderson/Las Vegas Review-Journal

Nevada’s venture capital money doesn’t stay in state
 
Nevada’s venture capital money doesn’t stay in state

Zach Miles, associate vice president for economic development for UNLV, said there’s venture money in Southern Nevada, “but trying to find the right groups to tap into for that money is different.” According to a 2017 report from the Kauffman Foundation, Las Vegas ranked number 34 out of 40 metropolitan areas for growth entrepreneurship, a metric of how much startups grow. With a lack of growing startups in Las Vegas, investment money is being sent outside of state borders. The southwest region of the U.S. received $386 million in funding in the second quarter, with about $25.2 million in Nevada. The San Francisco area alone received about $5.6 billion. (source: CB Insights)

Explosives strapped to Mandalay Bay room door on Oct. 1
 
Explosives strapped to Mandalay Bay room door on Oct. 1

Newly released body camera footage from the Oct. 1 shooting shows the tense moment as two officers crept into a Mandalay Bay hallway to strap explosives to a hotel room door riddled with bullet holes. SWAT officer Levi Hancock placed the charges while K-9 officer David Newton protected him with a ballistic shield held up in front of the door that killer Stephen Paddock had fired through earlier, wounding hotel security guard Jesus Campos. The moment was captured by the body camera strapped to Newton’s shoulder. Newton can be heard breathing as Hancock works. Then they retreat silently back into a nearby stairwell. The whole thing lasts less than a minute.

Dave Dave, whose dad set him on fire in 1983, dies
 
Dave Dave, whose dad set him on fire in 1983, dies

Dave Dave, a respected Las Vegas artist who was badly scarred as a boy when his father tried to burn him to death in Southern California, died at Sunrise Hospital on July 15. He was 42. When he was 6, Dave’s father tried to kill him by setting him on fire. He was given a sleeping pill and his bed at a Buena Park, California, motel was doused with kerosene. “I remembered being in a lot of pain,” Dave told the Review-Journal in 2016. “When stuff happens to you at that young of an age, you tend to block it out, but I remember the pain was excruciating.” Dave, who was born David Rothenberg, became close friends with Michael Jackson, who met him after the attack, which burned more than 90 percent of his body. “I wanted to meet him, and he wanted to meet me, and that just turned into a lifelong relationship that never ended,” Dave said. “It was amazing being friends with Michael Jackson. He was an amazing person.” Dave attended ArtCenter College of Design in Pasadena, California, and collaborated with various artists around Las Vegas, eventually selling his art to private collectors. Despite his challenges, he continued to live, thrive and create. Dave Dave

Arbor View prepares for season opener
 
Arbor View prepares for season opener

Arbor View players discuss their upcoming game against Valley View (California) at Arbor View High School on Wednesday, Aug. 15, 2018. (Damon Seiters/Las Vegas Review-Journal )

Henry Chang, an artist, is bringing two art cars to Burning Man
 
Henry Chang, an artist, is bringing two art cars to Burning Man

Henry Chang, owner of Henry Chang Design, is bringing two art cars to Burning Man. Chang and his crew assembled one of the art cars at Henry Chang’s Design garage in Las Vegas. Bizuayehu Tesfaye/Las Vegas Review-Journal @bizutesfsye

LVMPD Discusses Ross Dress for Less Shooting
 
LVMPD Discusses Ross Dress for Less Shooting

LVMPD Assistant Sheriff Charles Hank discussed the 15th officer-involved shooting of the year at a press conference at Metro headquarters on Tuesday, Aug. 14. The active-shooter incident took place at the Ross Dress for Less store at the 4000 block Blue Diamond Road in the south Las Vegas Valley. (Madelyn Reese/ Las Vegas Review-Journal)

NDOT contract approved to complete Centennial Bowl interchange
 
NDOT contract approved to complete Centennial Bowl interchange

The next three ramps for the Centennial Bowl freeway interchange will be completed through a $61.5 million contract approved by the NDOT board of directors on Monday. Construction could start as soon as December; the project will be completed in Spring 2020

Damage from Aug. 11 storm in Las Vegas
 
Damage from Aug. 11 storm in Las Vegas

A severe thunderstorm hit the Las Vegas Valley on Saturday, August 11, 2018. Valley resident Jessica Murray, 37, talks Sunday about a tree that fell on her brand-new car. (Katelyn Newberg/ Las Vegas Review-Journal)

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