Longtime Clydesdale handler Doug Bousselot talks about the joys of traveling with the famous Budweiser horses. (Ron Kantowski/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Check out the scores and top performances from Tuesday’s high school baseball, softball and boys volleyball action.
Here’s today’s local and national sports schedule, including television and radio listings.
Both the front-runner presidential candidates should step aside and give us some choices who are younger and have fresh ideas to get us out of the $35 trillion debt.
There simply are fewer Republican evangelicals these days.
Take a look at some editorial cartoons from across the U.S. and world.
Violence and obstruction is not freedom of speech.
It may be hard to believe, but a decade ago the Clark County School District wasn’t the most troubled government in Southern Nevada.
Basic’s baseball team scored five runs in the second inning to take control of the Class 5A Mountain League on Tuesday against Faith Lutheran.
The Senate passed legislation Tuesday that would force TikTok’s China-based parent company to sell the social media platform under the threat of a ban.
Elected officials are concerned about the impact the plan could have on Nevada elections, which rely heavily on mail service.
An executive with more than three decades of experience in Las Vegas, is leaving his position.
Kyle Mitrione’s attorney says the former stunt diver is working hard but “he’ll forever be in a wheelchair.”
Every year, school children guess when the desert tortoise will emerge from his burrow, marking the beginning of spring.
The Raiders made a huge swing to secure their franchise quarterback in the Review-Journal’s final mock draft before the first round begins Thursday.
A media executive testifies that he helped a presidential candidate by providing favorable coverage and killing negative stories. Sound familiar?
The NV Energy tortoise mascot Wattson emerged from his burrow at the company’s headquarters.
The Golden Knights and Dallas Stars are creating one of the best rivalries in the Western Conference after meeting in the playoffs for the third time in five years.
The approach that many public schools took during much of the pandemic — remote instruction — was the wrong one, and children are paying for it.