Las Vegas Sun

May 13, 2024

Today's print edition

College protests recall ’70s arrests at Stanford
I was almost arrested. OK, that’s a stretch, I confess. I was in the room, inside the Old Union at Stanford University on the afternoon of May 9, 1977.
When criminal sentences end, so should the punishment
Melissa Brown hit bottom in her youth. Desperate for drug money, she shoplifted in 1998 and stole a pocketbook from a grocery cart in 2001. Then, she got sober, served her time in prison, and turned her life around ...
Fears about ‘Ozempic babies’ show lack in women’s health care
The historic failure of medical research to acknowledge that women’s bodies differ from men’s has a new catchphrase: Ozempic babies. According to recent reports, all of them anecdotal and many of them on TikTok, off-label use of diabetes drugs including ...
Photo: Ryan Doherty, founder of Corner Bar Management, po
New reservations-only bar in downtown Las Vegas focused on making customers feel appreciated
Ryan Doherty remembers the first time he heard the word “sleek.” It was one of the words his dad used to describe their family’s pet Doberman pinscher, in addition to “dangerous” and “sweet” ...
EPA not beholden to mining profits
The May 6 guest column, “U.S. power grid being sabotaged by EPA,” written by Rich Nolan, president and CEO of the National Mining Association, suggested the Environmental Protection Agency is sabotaging power grids by not intentionally burning more fossil fuel to generate electricity. Most notably, his coal.
Ease permitting for clean power
In his May 6 guest column, “U.S. power grid being sabotaged by EPA,” Rich Nolan expresses some valid concerns about new Environmental Protection Agency power plant regulations.

Frontpage of Las Vegas Sun newspaper on May 13, 2024