Las Vegas Sun

November 21, 2009

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Print edition for January 26, 2006

Developer envisions $4 billion sports resort near Las Vegas Strip
NORTH LAS VEGAS. Nev. - Developer Matt A. Rose looks out on a 116-acre plot of desert eight miles off the Las Vegas Strip and sees a 26,000-seat arena, a 5,000-seat aquatic center, an air-conditioned driving range and "sports, sports, sports." His Vegas version of a field of dreams also includes a 150,000-square-foot casino, 5,500 hotel rooms and 10 nightclubs.
Higher utility costs hurt residents
The rising cost of natural gas, electricity and gasoline continues to chew up the paychecks of Las Vegas Valley families.
Letter: Too much hot air over airplane noise
I live in the area that a pilot called the "spaghetti bowl" of flight paths, Rainbow Boulevard and Blue Diamond Road, where the roads (or lack thereof) are much more dangerous and noisy than what flies overhead.
Mack defends 'going-away' party expense
After announcing he would not run for re-election in December 2004, then-Las Vegas Councilman Michael Mack's campaign money machine rolled on -- accepting thousands of dollars in donations and picking up the tab for a $14,000 going-away party.
Flashpoint for Jan. 26, 2006
Has there ever been a government body more oblivious to "market conditions" than the Las Vegas City Council? The same heavy-handed folks who floated a condo conversion moratorium, and now want a special use permit process, also drove Related Cos. away from the 61 acres because Mayor Oscar Goodman wanted condo towers built before he left office. Everything, as Irwin Molasky says, is driven by market conditions. So what happens when governments are swayed less by economic forces and more by wailing apartment dwellers or mayoral ego? Probable lawsuits. Two master developers departed. Suggested council motto: If they say it, ...
"Trustees were not ready for true reform"
He informed me of this decision a short while ago, having come to this decision after hosting five of the seven trustees in New York this past week.test
Trucks with low-level nuke material withing safety levels
Tests of trucks carrying low-level nuclear waste for burial at the Nevada Test Site found no violations of federal radiation exposure levels, state scientists have concluded.
Letter: There must be a better way to protect kids
This is a thought on the hearts and minds of many: How could someone hurt an innocent child?
Appeals court study to begin
With the state's highest court increasingly burdened by a growing caseload, the Legislature has ordered the Nevada Supreme Court to issue a report on whether Nevada needs an intermediate appeals court.
Letter: Spying should be further scrutinized
His letter presumes that domestic spying, which bypasses the U.S. court system, is necessary and vital to fight terrorists (and somehow isn't really "spying"). And, in some way, this is a totally obvious and foregone conclusion, proven again and again.
Martin has his own tough at to follow in '06
Mark Martin would have loved to end his NASCAR Nextel Cup career with the kind of season he had in 2005.
Editorial: Stop stonewalling on Katrina
This week The Washington Post reported that the White House received a computer slide presentation from the Federal Emergency Management Agency on Aug. 27. During this session, FEMA officials stressed that Katrina's coming impact could be even worse than that of a mock Gulf Coast Category 3 hurricane envisioned during a 2004 preparedness session.
Future will be magic
There's magic in Rick Thomas' optimism.
Editorial: Don't settle for status quo
Even though it seemed likely that he would be approved on a 4-3 vote by the Clark County School Board when it met this Friday, Nadelstern dropped out of the race on Wednesday. He didn't believe that, if he won by a split vote, there would be enough of a mandate for him to accomplish the serious changes he would have sought.
Columnist Tom Gorman: On N.Y. candidate's folding while holding a winning hand
Nadelstern is the highly lauded New York educator, something of a visionary, who apparently had cornered enough votes to be named Friday as the next superintendent of the Clark County School District.
Columnist John Katsilometes: Reporting that a longtime LV staple -- 'The Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon' -- is returning to town
It hasn't taken South Coast long to make a significant move on the entertainment front, as the barely month-old resort has landed "The Jerry Lewis MDA Labor Day Telethon," which is set to be broadcast from a Las Vegas stage for the first time in more than a decade.
Aviation pioneer Murphy dies
It was a pleasant Sunday morning when Florence Murphy joined her husband, J. M. "Red" Murphy, and their partner, Bud Barrett, in hosting an air show for the grand opening of their Sky Haven Airfield, today the North Las Vegas Airport.
Columnist Jeff German: Learning that San Francisco businessman Luke Brugnara is ready to buy the Crazy Horse Two topless club from Rick Rizzolo
He's offering few details, but San Francisco real estate man Luke Brugnara confirms he's got a deal to buy the embattled Crazy Horse Too topless club.
Columnist Ron Kantowski: Witnessing a totally unspectacular basketball game, but notes, UNLV fans shouldn't lose hope
You may still refer to it as the Mountain West Conference. But when it comes to men's basketball this season, I prefer Wendell White and the Nine Dwarfs. Or even better, the League of Not So) Extraordinary Gentlemen.
Nursing teachers in short supply
From 6:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. three days a week, UNLV nursing instructor Kevin Gulliver zips between Las Vegas Valley hospitals in a mad rush to teach.

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