You have to be a different breed of human being to allow a pit bull around a child or let the dog wander the neighborhood without a leash.
News Columns
The more I watched baby boomers Lee and Toni Brasted and Larry Thrift and his wife, Maria Clita, practice the fox trot at an Arthur Murray Dance Studio in west Las Vegas, the more I remembered dancing with my mother in our basement recreation room every night for two weeks.
Here are three things to watch for on day 99 of the 2017 Legislative Session.
There’s a handy term floating around Carson City: Veto-bait.
A team of three hologram workers has popped up at McCarran International Airport to help direct passengers toward tram connections headed out of the D-Gate satellite concourse.
That 11-year-old Zareh Shamirza is alive on this Mother’s Day doesn’t seem incredible when you meet him. It’s only when you’re told the boy named after an Armenian king was born 24 weeks early at 1 pound, 11 ounces that you realize this child wouldn’t have had a chance at life for most of the 20th century. The technology wasn’t there to make it possible.
Everyone is susceptible to crime, but a safety event slated for May 24 serves to remind the public that criminals often consider senior citizens easier targets.
ESAs, paid sick leave and purchasing Medicaid are on today’s agenda in the Nevada Legislature.
There’s nothing unprecedented about a Nevada attorney general intervening on behalf of the Gaming Control Board in litigation between private parties, even when one of the parties is a licensee.
Records secrecy, voter registration and property-tax hike highlight day 95 of the Nevada Legislature.
Minimum wage, prevailing wage and assisted suicide highlight day 94 of the Nevada Legislature.
If no one’s failing, you have no accountability. That’s what lawmakers need to remember as they consider AB320.
3 things to watch on Legislative Session Day 93: reform rollbacks, gun-free libraries and pot tax.
No matter what town I’m in, I always find a hat store that still has artisans who know how to shape hats with steam. People like Michael Hull and Jill Cook out at the Boot Barn at the corner of Las Vegas Boulevard South and West Warm Springs Road.
The stories told by SB201 supporters were horrifying: electrodes on sensitive body parts and ice baths intended to change someone’s sexual orientation. What’s happening behind the scenes at the Legislature, however, shows that those stories are just smoke screens for banning speech that liberals find intolerable.