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JUNE 2013
Click the cover to read the complete digital edition
Features
Departments
All things to all people
Art
Community
Dining
Editor's Note
Education
End Note
Take 5
the guide
upcoming events
June 20, 11a. From the most popular legend of the 1001 Arabian Nights, watch as Aladdin thwarts the evil sorcerer, discovers the magical lamp,...
June 21, 6p. A fun night featuring live local bands Wild Card and the Joey Vitale Trio followed by DJ Ultra. Magicians, fortune tellers and...
June 21, 7:30p. Featuring the best local poetry talent and an open-mic forum for both new and established poets. West Las Vegas Arts Center...
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Can Las Vegas afford the thirsty sport of golf?
by Andrew Kiraly | posted April 25, 2011
Positive: Golf is a relaxing, low-impact pastime. Negative: It requires Miracle Whip pimp clothes -- and a lot of water to keep those greens green. Positive: Hey, at least it's not our precious drinking water (which someone bathed in last night). Snip from an upcoming book on water over at Fast Company: So while all the golf courses in the desert are hardly an example of "sustainability," in the big picture, in water use terms, a golf course that uses 1 million gallons a day of purified sewage instead of 2 million gallons a day of drinking water represents a huge leap. For all the water ostentatiousness of Las Vegas' Strip, with the Fountains at the Bellagio, the replica of New York harbor at New York New York, the canals where you can ride a gondola (indoors or out) at the Venetian, the progress on water use in Las Vegas has been dramatic, and largely unnnoticed. Yes, it seems silly to have a city in the middle of a desert. But cities aren't centrally planned decisions: Las Vegas exists, frankly, because we like it there. Ten percent of Americans visit every year, and the population has tripled since 1990.
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