In The News: Lee Business School
Right now in Nevada, the top three Republican presidential candidates are fanning out across the state, rallying voters ahead of Tuesday night’s caucuses.
It's the quintessential election question: “Are you better off now than you were four years ago?"
At the onset of the millennium, house flippers—people who purchased imperfect homes, renovated them, and resold them at a profit mere months later—ran rampant in U.S. housing markets.
UNLV received a $250,000 grant to bolster its business-development efforts over the next three years.
The kitchen is bustling with dozens of white-aproned chefs preparing salad appetizers. At the front of house, managers tinker with place settings to ensure they are complete with red folded napkins, wine glasses and three sets of utensils.
A bright spot in Nevada’s economy, the tourism industry, has grown over the past few years and is a driving force behind Nevada’s comeback. In fact, the industry has grown to the point that Elko outgrew its convention center and Las Vegas plans to expand its facility.
To secure systems employers must weigh the hazards posed by employees against the danger of revolt
A UNLV student is the CEO of a fitness mobile app called "Battle Pig" that allows kids to play video games and burn calories.
The U.S. economy experienced a landmark moment this month when the nation began exporting crude oil for the first time in four decades.
UNLV has closed the deal on 42 acres of empty land along Tropicana Avenue and Koval Lane that could be used to build a long-awaited stadium on campus.
UNLV student Kyle Kimsey recently won the regional qualifying round of the Global Student Entrepreneur Awards for his startup business Adler Dynamics.
Since 2012, Marisela Olvera has folded the towels, tucked in the sheets, and vacuumed the floors of 62-story, gold-plated Trump International Hotel just off the Las Vegas Strip. But unlike the tens of thousands of hospitality workers just like her across the city, her boss is running for president.