Resorts World Has Until Next Week to Respond to Multi-Count Complaint Resorts World Las Vegas, a hotel on Las Vegas Boulevard, has until Dec. 9 to respond to a complaint the Nevada Gaming Control Board released. 12/3/2024 - 5:22 am | View Link
Resorts World Las Vegas Reports Worst Financial Quarter in 2 Years The 2024 Q3 results from Genting Berhad, the Malaysian gaming company behind Resorts World, have revealed Resorts World Las Vegas experienced its worst financial quarter in two years. In its Q3 filing ... 12/3/2024 - 4:54 am | View Link
Resorts World reports worst financial quarter in two years Hotel occupancy and the average daily room rate fell in the summer months, according to the Las Vegas Strip hotel-casino’s parent company. 12/2/2024 - 11:07 am | View Link
Resorts World Las Vegas faces challenging Q3 amid revenue, occupancy declines Resorts World Las Vegas (RWLV), Genting Berhad 's US flagship casino property, reported its weakest quarterly performance in two years during the third quarter of 2024. Revenue dropped to $177 million ... 12/2/2024 - 1:29 am | View Link
Workers at a Las Vegas casino are on strike. Here’s what to know The work stoppage at Virgin Hotels Las Vegas marks the first open-ended strike in more than two decades for the Culinary Workers Union, the largest labor union in Nevada. 11/27/2024 - 10:00 pm | View Link
One of the greatest pleasures of the Peak TV era was that an excellent series could come from almost anywhere. Lifetime could greenlight the smart, satirical thriller You (which would become a hit for Netflix after failing to attract an audience on cable). The lyrical coming-of-age saga David Makes Man could find a home on OWN.
Even before President-elect Donald Trump said he would pursue mass deportations, rattling industries that rely on immigrant workers, the U. S. had a labor problem. Baby Boomers are retiring and there just aren’t enough people to take their place. This has big implications for the country’s economy, and could potentially drive up inflation as a labor shortage allows workers to demand higher wages.
When Kari Leibowitz moved to the Arctic in 2014, she braced herself for the impact of long, dark, freezing winters. The temperature in Tromsø, Norway, plunges to subarctic levels on the coldest nights, and it snows almost daily for eight months of the year. Surely the wind would slap her face, and unshoveled snow would sneak down her boots, wetting her socks.
On April 24, 2018, I emerged from a daring 12-day expedition in the wilderness of the Grand Canyon with a concussion, two shiners, and two twisted ankles. In a call to my dear friend Enid, I humbly told her, “After pulling this off, I think I could run a small country,” to which she replied: “Why not a big one?”
Four years earlier, new to living in the United States, I had decided to explore something majestic in my new country.
mdash; South Korean President Yoon Suk Yeol declared an “emergency martial law,” Tuesday accusing the country’s opposition of controlling the parliament, sympathizing with North Korea and paralyzing the government with anti-state activities.
Yoon made the announcement in a televised briefing Tuesday, vowing to “eradicate pro-North Korean forces and protect the constitutional democratic order.”
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It wasn’t immediately clear how Yoon’s step would affect the country’s governance and democracy.
One of Donald Trump’s splashiest personnel choices was the selection of Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy to lead what he has termed the “Department of Government Efficiency” — which seems likely to be some sort of outside commission to reduce federal bureaucracy and regulations.
Trump’s emphasis on government efficiency is ripped from the playbook of an early 20th century president — but probably not the one Trump would hope to emulate.