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Newsweek

While today's celebrities have the advantage of looking good thanks to social media filters and the lighting and effects used by movie studios, it goes without saying that they are an enviably youthful-looking bunch.

K.S.N.V. T.V. News 3

Christmas is just three days away, and it's never too early to think about how to dispose of your tree.

Las Vegas Review Journal

Nearly 90 percent of domestic abuse victims surveyed in Las Vegas said that they would find justice through a trusted court system, according to a recent study.

Bloomberg

A dormant process and a lack of manpower to vet former President Donald Trump’s monster tax return raises new questions about the Internal Revenue Service’s ability to audit presidential tax returns.

Medical News Today

Psychosocial stress is different from other forms of stress, such as physiological stress, because it arises from our interactions with others. This form of stress results from an imbalance between threatening experiences in our daily lives and our ability to handle them emotionally.

Las Vegas Review Journal

Once holiday festivities are over, there are more than 30 local drop-off locations where you can recycle your live Christmas tree for free.

Telemundo Las Vegas

It is expected that in both modalities there will be a record.

Boulder City Review

Boulder City residents can recycle their Christmas trees for free from Monday, Dec. 26, until Jan. 15. Trees can be dropped off 24/7 in the recycling container at Bravo Field near the corner of Eagle Drive and Sixth Street. The Boulder City recycling program is part of an effort to keep trees out of landfills in Southern Nevada and is done in partnership with BC Waste Free and the city of Henderson. Last year 17,822 trees were recycled.

Desert Companion

The Black Mountain Institute, Southern Nevada’s literary anchor, has taken a public relations gut punch. The former director resigned after exposing himself during a Zoom meeting with staff, prompting employees to anonymously pen an open letter that detailed “a fractured workplace rife with pay and labor inequalities.” Not long after that scandal died down, UNLV, where BMI is nestled in the English department, sold The Believer, the respected but financially insolvent literary magazine.

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