Downtown Las Vegas hosted a Veterans day parade on Fourth street running from Gass and Stewart Avenue. (Nathan Asselin/Las Vegas Review-Journal)
Check out the scores and top performances from Tuesday’s high school basketball and flag football action.
Desert Pines’ boys basketball team claimed a home victory against Clark. Here are photos from the game.
Take a look at some editorial cartoons from across the U.S. and world.
Battery energy storage system plan poses a threat to northwest Las Vegas.
Gov. Joe Lombardo doesn’t want the federal government to label Nevada a sanctuary state but apparently not enough to veto a sanctuary-schools bill.
Democrats see an opening on “affordability.”
Things Americans desperately need are stuck in the regulatory mud.
Warming is a real problem, but it is not the end of the world.
The Henderson Police Department says it “is on the scene of a homicide investigation” on Tuesday night.
All hotels along the South Rim inside Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona are closing due to severe water restrictions.
The Minnesota Somali community is accused of stealing more than $1 billion through bogus nonprofits. They’ve made themselves easy targets for Trump.
Police previously said “a verbal altercation occurred.” The defendants, who pleaded guilty to murder, apologized in court.
The Capitol Christmas tree lighting ceremony welcomed Nevada’s first tree to the national tradition, alongside the state’s congressional delegation.
Dan Mullen admits to being a little calmer from his previous coaching stops as college football has become a world of NIL dollars and the transfer portal.
The Raiders poured considerable time into the development of Caleb Rogers, who made his NFL debut Sunday against the Chargers and graded out as the team’s best offensive lineman.
Leslie Stovall, who has been licensed in Nevada since 1985, was previously ordered to pay attorneys over $330,000 in legal fees.
Federal prosecutors said the man attempted to go through security using a woman’s boarding pass and tried to stab police officers with their own pen in November.
A Mexican company that owns two popular grocery chains with stores in Las Vegas will pay the Environmental Protection Agency a penalty for the illegal sale of disinfectants.
