Boulder, Denver, Fort Collins, Las Vegas, and Colorado Springs, and Colorado relocation

Housing Helpers provides relocation, apartments, houses, homes, properties, real estate services, roommate services, hotels, corporate relocation, and rental services for Boulder, Denver, Fort Collins, Las Vegas, Colorado, and Colorado Springs. We will help you find an apartment, house, home, property, real estate, roommate, hotel, corporate housing, or rental anywhere in Boulder, Denver, Fort Collins, Las Vegas, Colorado, and Colorado Springs.

Roommate Services by Housing Helpers. Roommate Services for Boulder, Denver, Fort Collins, Las Vegas, Colorado Springs, and Colorado. Roommate Services: Boulder, Denver, Fort Collins, Las Vegas, Colorado Springs, and Colorado.


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Great Links
The Roommate Service A Nationwide roommate service serving students and professionals. Very easy to use and inexpensive too!
Roommate Express Established in 1986, this Nationwide service has become the largest roommate referral service by successfully matching over 90,000 clients.
Roommate Bulletin Board A great site with a pulldown menu listing of all United States, Canada,and the UK. If you are looking for a place or a roommate, try this site. It's free too!
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Roommate Find A fun site serving all of the United States. Has a very good compatibility quiz with that catchy tune from The Odd Couple playing in the background. Whether your looking in busy New York City or a quiet suburb in Minnesota, this is the place to look.
Area House Mates This Houston Texas Roommate Service has been successfully placing professional people with local homeowners, and in apartments for the past ten years. If you are new to the area, this is the place to call.
The Roommate Connection Newly designed site for those living in the Boston Metro Area. Easy to navigate and chuck full of really useful information for everyone living the roommate experience.
Home-Mate Specialists This Detroit, Michigan roommate referral service has been matching people to share living quarters for over 20 years. Offering supreme customer service, they meet the clients personally, and screen for compatibility and reliability.
Roommate Referrals A very helpful website for those living in the Minneapolis-St.Paul area. This site uses Matchline Voicemail.
RoomFind . Com Find the perfect roommate through this Worldwide site that offers free Email notification, detailed member profiles, photos, maps, personal messaging center and more.
Military Roommates Assists the men and women of our armed forces and the civilians who support them in finding shared housing in the USA and Overseas.
Roommate Locator A unique Worldwide site advertising locations from Afghanistan to Zimbabwe, with a pulldown location menu. Check it out!
Roommate Resource A spare room is a terrible thing to waste is this Charleston South Carolina websites motto. How true, How true! Look up this site for more info.
New York Habitat Roommate shares in New York City and Paris, France. You can see written descriptions and photographs of available apartments.
Here To Anywhere A full service site for finding a roommate. Also features house/apartment exchanging between Worldwide locations. A must see!
Roommate Finders of Florida Over 21 years of experience, this is South Florida's oldest and largest roommate service, with all applicants personally hand-matched and screened with chararacter references.
Roommate Access If you live in Boston, Los Angeles, Orange County, Chicago, or New York City, this is the site to visit. Be sure to check out their unique Resource page. Very sophisticated site.
Rainbow Roommates This website will help you find an affordable, congenial and convenient place to live in New York City.
Jewish Web A very large site with multiple listings from apartments to restaurants to news to activities and chat rooms serving the Jewish Community. Some areas for roommates include New York, California, Massachusetts, Illinois, Israel and Montreal Canada. A fun site to browse.
The Whiz A marvelous site chuck full of roommate information, including interviews, chat rooms, bulletins and other interesting material. Be sure to check their archive files for more info!.

 

 

Boulder
2865 Baseline Road
Boulder, CO 80303
303-545-6000 phone
303-545-9405 fax

Colorado Springs
5314 Montebello Lane
Colorado Springs, CO 80909
719-590-4040 phone
719-522-1557 fax

Denver
303 16th Street, Suite 180
Denver, CO 80202
303-629-7368 phone
303-629-9214 fax

Fort Collins
1212 South College
Fort Collins, CO 80524
970-224-1411 phone
970-224-1195 fax

Las Vegas
5785 West Tropicana #2
Las Vegas, NV 89103
702-456-RENT phone
702-873-2700 fax

Facts about Colorado

"Beulah red" is the name of the red marble that gives the Colorado State Capitol its distinctive splendor. Cutting, polishing, and installing the marble in the Capitol took six years, from 1894 to 1900. All of the "Beulah red" marble in the world went into the Capitol. It cannot be replaced, at any price.


Colorado is the only state in history, to turn down the Olympics. In 1976 the Winter Olympics were planned to be held in Denver. 62% of all state Voters choose at almost the last minute not to host the Olympics, because of the cost, pollution and population boom it would have on the State Of Colorado, and the City of Denver.


The United States Air Force Academy is located in Colorado Springs.


The world's largest flat-top mountain is in Grand Mesa.


In Fruita, the town folk celebrate 'Mike the Headless Chicken Day'. Seems that a farmer named L.A. Olsen cut off Mike's head on September 10, 1945 in anticipation of a chicken dinner - and Mike lived for another 4 years without a head.


The LoDo region of Denver stands for Lower Downtown.


Denver, lays claim to the invention of the cheeseburger. The trademark for the name Cheeseburger was awarded in 1935 to Louis Ballast.


The highest paved road in North America is the Road to Mt. Evans off of I-70 from Idaho Springs. The Road climbs up to 14,258 Ft. above sea level.


Colorado means "colored red" and is known as the "Centennial State."


The Durango & Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad continues to provide year round train service operating a historical train with rolling stock indigenous to the line. The line was constructed primarily to haul mine ores, both gold and silver, from the San Juan Mountains.


The United States federal government owns more than 1/3 of the land in Colorado.


Colorado contains 75% of the land area of the U.S. with an altitude over 10,000 feet.


Colorado has 222 state wildlife areas.


Colfax Avenue in Denver is the longest continuous street in America.


The 13th step of the state capital building in Denver is exactly 1 mile high above sea level.


The Dwight Eisenhower Memorial Tunnel between Clear Creek & Summit counties is the highest auto tunnel in the world. Bored at an elevation of 11,000 feet under the Continental Divide it is 8,960 feet long and the average daily traffic exceeds 26,000 vehicles.


Leadville is the highest incorporated city in the United States at 10,430 feet elevation. Because there was lots of "silver" named towns at the time, the founding fathers suggested Leadville.


Katherine Lee Bates wrote "America the Beautiful" after being inspired by the view from Pikes Peak.


Hundreds of thousands of valentines are re-mailed each year from Loveland.


Fountain, has the distinction of being the United States' millennium city because it best symbolizes the overall composition of America. Fountain is the most accurate representation of the American "melting pot." Fountain was chosen after a Queens College sociologist crunched Census Bureau statistics in an effort to find the one city in the country that best represented the population make-up of the United States.


Pueblo is the only city in America with four living recipients of the Medal of Honor.


The tallest building in Colorado is the Republic Plaza at 57 stories high, in Denver.


Every year Denver host the worlds largest Rodeo, the Western Stock show.


Denver has the largest city park system in the nation with 205 parks in City limits and 20,000 Acres of parks in the nearby mountains.


Dove Creek is the "Pinto Bean" capital of the world.


The tallest sand dune in America is in Great Sand Dunes National Monument outside of Alamosa. This bizarre 46,000-acre landscape of 700-foot sand peaks was the creation of ocean waters and wind more than one million years ago.


The World's First Rodeo was held on July 4th, 1869 in Deer Trail.


Lieutenant Zebulon Montgomery Pike explored the southwest portion of the Louisiana Territory in 1806 and though he never climbed the peak that bears his name, he did publish a report that attracted a lot of interest to the area.


The slogan of "Pikes Peak or Bust," painted across many of the prairie schooners, was born at a time as fortune hunters headed west. Although only a handful of those who flocked to the region ever found gold.


At 14,110 feet above sea level over 400,000 people ascend Pikes Peak each year.


The aptly named town of Twin Lakes lays adjacent two natural lakes at the foot of Colorado's highest Fourteener, Mt. Elbert.


The Colorado Rockies are part of the North American Cordillera, which stretches 3,000 miles from Alaska, through western Canada and the United States, into northern Mexico. The centerpieces of this dramatic uplift are the peaks over 14,000 feet, or "Fourteeners", as they are affectionately referred to by climbers. There are 52 Fourteeners in Colorado.


Rocky Ford has been dubbed the "melon capital of the world."


The Yampa River below the northwest town of Craig holds northern pike in the 20-pound range, while the Roaring Fork and Frying Pan rivers are prime spots for trout fishing.


Colorado has the highest mean altitude of all the states.


Mesa Verde features an elaborate four-story city carved in the cliffs by the Ancestral Pueblo people between 600 and 1300 A.D. The mystery surrounding this ancient cultural landmark is the sudden disappearance of the thousands of inhabitants who created the more than 4,000 identified structures.


Colorado has more microbreweries per capita than any other state.


The Kit Carson County Carousel in Burlington dates back to 1905, making it the oldest wooden merry-go-round in the United States. It is the only wooden carousel in America still with its original paint.


The Durango and Silverton Narrow Gauge Railroad has been in continuous operation since 1881 and has appeared in more than a dozen movies including How the West Was Won (1963) and Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969).


The highest suspension bridge in the world is over the Royal Gorge near Canon City. The Royal Gorge Bridge spans the Arkansas River at a height of 1,053 feet.


The world's largest natural hot springs pool located in Glenwood Springs. The two-block long pool is across the street from the historic Hotel Colorado, a favorite stop of former president Teddy Roosevelt.


Built in 1867 by Seth Lake, the Astor House in Golden was the first stone hotel built west of the Mississippi River.


Colorado's southwest corner borders Arizona, New Mexico and Utah the only place in America where the corners of four states meet.


There are nearly 20 rivers whose headwaters begin in Colorado, with the Continental Divide directing each river's course.


The Colorado Rockies play at the 50,000 seat Coors Field, located in downtown Denver.


In 1859, John Gregory discovered "The Gregory Lode" in a gulch near Central City. Within two weeks, the gold rush was on and within two months the population grew to 10,000 people in search of their fortune. It came to be known as "The Richest Square Mile on Earth".


Colorado's first and oldest military post, Fort Garland was established in 1858 and commanded by the legendary frontiersman Kit Carson.


Abundant nesting and migrating birds and other native animals provide a "world-class" watchable wildlife experience. Bald eagles and other raptors, sandhill cranes, shore birds and water birds can be seen seasonally at San Luis Lakes near Alamosa.


Florissant Fossil Beds National Monument near Cripple Creek is a lesson in history set in the one-time shadow of the Guffey Volcano. The volcano erupted millions of years ago, creating fossils and leaving the valley filled with petrified trees.


John Henry "Doc" Holliday's brief and tumultuous existence led him to Glenwood Springs where he succumbed to tuberculosis and died at the Hotel Glenwood on November 8, 1887.

Facts about Boulder, Colorado

The Boulder Valley was first the home of Indians, primarily the Southern Arapahoe tribe who maintained a village near Haystack Mountain. Utes, Cheyennes, Comanches, and Sioux were occasional visitors to the area. Gold seekers established the first non-native settlement in Boulder County on October 17, 1858 at Red Rocks near the entrance to Boulder Canyon. Less than a year later, on February 10, 1859, the Boulder City Town Company was organized by A.A. Brookfield, the first president, and 56 shareholders.Four thousand forty-four lots were laid out at a purchase price of $1,000 each, a price that was later lowered in order to attract more residents.

In 1860, that portion of Colorado east of the Continental Divide was divided into Nebraska Territory north of the 40th parallel (Baseline Road) and Kansas Territory south of this line. In February 28, 1861, the Territory of Colorado was created by the U.S. Congress, Boulder City grew slowly. It developed as a supply base for miners going into the mountains in search of gold and silver. Boulder City residents provided these miners with equipment, agricultural products, housing and transport services, and gambling and drinking establishments. Competition among Boulder County settlements for new residents and businesses was intense. As a mining supply town, Boulder residents were more settled than in the mining camps. Economic stability was a necessity and residents encouraged the establishment of railroad service, hospital and school buildings, and a stable town government. Boulder's first schoolhouse was built in 1860 at the southwest corner of Walnut and 15th Street, the first in the territory.

Also in 1860 a group of Boulder residents began lobbying to have the University located in Boulder. By 1874 Boulder had won the designation, secured a donated 44.9 acre site and raised $15,000 to match a similar grant by the state legislature. Construction of Old Main signaled the opening of the University, with classrooms, auditorium, office and the President's living quarters all located there. Transportation was improved in 1873 with railroad service coming to Boulder. Gradually tracks were laid to provide service to Golden and Denver and to the mining camps to the west. In 1890 the railroad depot was constructed on Water Street (now Canyon Boulevard) and 14th Street.

City government was formalized in November, 1871 when the town of Boulder was incorporated. Designation of Boulder as the county seat occurred in 1867 and led to the construction of the first courthouse at its present site in 1883. It burned to the ground in 1932 and was replaced by the current courthouse in 1934. Amenities and health services were developed, even in periods of little growth. The first Post Office was established in 1860; the telegraph became available in 1874; a hospital was built in 1873; a water system was installed in 1874; and the first bank was built in 1874. The initial residential area was located in what is now downtown and in some parts of Goss/Grove, Whittier and Mapleton Hill neighborhoods. As commercial expansion took over downtown housing, these neighborhoods surrounding downtown remained primarily residential areas. At the turn of the century growth of the University led to the development of parts of University Hill. One mark of elegance for residents were flagstone sidewalks, first installed during the 1880's.

The first private school in Boulder, Mount St. Gertrude Academy, was opened in 1892. Boulder, by then accessible to visitors by railroad, was known as a community with a prosperous economy, a comprehensive educational system, and well maintained residential neighborhoods. It was no wonder that the railroad recommended Boulder as a site for a Chautauqua in 1897. Boulder residents passed a bond issue to buy the land, and the now familiar Chautauqua auditorium was built. By 1905 the economy was faltering and Boulder counted heavily on tourism to boost its fortunes; however, Boulder had no first class hotel to attract summer visitors and group meetings. By 1906 a subscription drive had raised money to begin construction.The first event at the new hotel was a reception for Boulderites, held on December 30, 1908, and the Hotel Boulderado opened to the public for business on January 1, 1909.

Tourism continued to dominate the Boulder economy for the next forty years. Each summer shopkeepers, transport firms, and lodging managers eagerly awaited the influx of Chautauqua residents, primarily from Texas, and other visitors. By World War II, when tourism declined, the University unknowingly provided another opportunity for growth. With the location of the U.S. Navy's Japanese language school at CU, young men and women from around the country became acquainted with the City and liked it. Following World War II, many of these trainees returned as students, professional and businesspeople, joining veterans attending the University on the G.I. bill.

Boulder's population had not increased significantly since the 1920's. The 1920 census showed 11,006 residents while the 1940 census count was 12,958. After the first influx of new residents in the late 1940's the count soared to 20,000 in 1950. New residents meant both new opportunities and new challenges. Although jobs were needed, townspeople wanted to preserve the beautiful natural setting and amenities developed over the years. By 1950 Boulder leaders were actively recruiting new "clean" industry and improved transportation, securing a new highway, the Boulder-Denver Turnpike, and the National Bureau of Standards in 1952. Other research and development industries soon followed. The housing shortage and need for additional business and public buildings attracted young and talented architects. New subdivisions were planned, including the Highland Park-Martin Acres neighborhood located on the historic Martin Farm, and the North Boulder developments from Balsam north, originally part of the Tyler Farm. New neighborhoods brought the City's first two shopping centers, North Broadway and Basemar.

With the completed turnpike to downtown Denver, Boulder continued to expand. From 1950-1972 the population grew from 20,000 to 72,000. With the purchase of thousands of acres of open space beginning in 1967, the adoption of the Boulder Valley Comprehensive Plan in 1970, passage of the building height restriction ordinance in 1972, and the residential growth management ordinance in 1977, Boulder began a period of infill and re-use of its past architectural development which continues to present. The Historic Preservation Code was passed in September, 1974. The ordinance is instrumental in preserving significant portions of our past while encouraging the rehabilitation of historic buildings. Source: Landmarks Preservation Advisory Board

Facts about Denver

DENVER: THE ROCKY MOUNTAIN METROPOLIS HISTORY Denver, the capital of Colorado, was established by a party of prospectors on November 22, 1858, after a gold discovery at the confluence of Cherry Creek and the South Platte River. Town founders named the dusty crossroads for James W. Denver, Governor of Kansas Territory, of which eastern Colorado was then a part. Other gold discoveries sparked a mass migration of some 100,000 in 1859-60, leading the federal government to establish Colorado Territory in 1861.


Before the great Colorado gold rush, the Rocky Mountains offered little to attract settlers, except "hairy bank notes," the beaver pelts prized by fur trappers, traders and fashionably hatted gentlemen in Eastern America and Europe. The gold rush changed that, as the rudely dispossessed Cheyenne and Arapaho soon discovered. The Mile High City's aggressive leadership, spearheaded by William N. Byers, founding editor of the Rocky Mountain News, and Territorial Governor John Evans, insisted that the Indians must go. After dispossessing the natives, Denverites built a network of railroads that made their town the banking, minting, supply and processing center not only for Colorado, but for neighboring states.

Between 1870 when the first railroads arrived and 1890, Denver grew from 4,759 to 106,713. In a single generation, it became the second most populous city in the West, second only to San Francisco. Although founded as the main supply town for Rocky Mountain mining camps, Denver also emerged as a hub for high plains agriculture. Denver's breweries, bakeries, meat packing and other food-processing plants made it the regional agricultural center, as well as a manufacturing hub for farm and ranch equipment, barbed wire, windmills, seed, feed and harnesses.

The depression of 1893 and repeal of the Sherman Silver Purchase Act abruptly ended Denver's first boom. Civic leaders began promoting economic diversity-growing wheat and sugar beets, manufacturing, tourism and service industries. The Denver Livestock Exchange and National Western Stock Show confirmed the city's role as the "cow town" of the Rockies. Denver began growing again after 1900, but at a slower rate. Stockyards, brickyards, canneries, flour mills, leather and rubber goods nourished the city. Of many Denver-area breweries, only Coors has survived, becoming the nation's third largest sudsmaker. Regional or national headquarters of many oil and gas firms in the Mile High City fueled much of Denver's post-World War II growth and an eruption of 40- and 50-story high-rise buildings downtown, during the 1970s.

Denver's economic base has come to include skiing and tourism, electronics, computers, aviation and the nation's largest telecommunications center. As the regional center of a vast mountain and plain hinterland, Denver boasts more federal employees than any city besides Washington, D. C. Since the 1940s, the large federal center, augmented by state and local government jobs, has somewhat stabilized the city's boom-and-bust cycle. Sited on high plains at the eastern base of the Rocky Mountains, Denver has a sunny, cool, dry climate, averaging 13 inches of precipitation a year. The sun shines 300 days a year, and the usually benign climate and nearby Rocky Mountain playground have made tourism one of the Mile High City's economic mainstays. Warm chinook winds warm the winters between snowstorms. Visually, Denver is notable for it predominance of single-family housing and its brick buildings. Good brick clay underlies much of the area, while local lumber is soft, scarce and inferior. Even in the poorest residential neighborhoods, single-family, detached housing prevails, reflecting the Western interest in "elbow room" and a spacious, relatively flat, high plains site, where sprawling growth is unimpeded by any large body of water or geographic obstacle.

Denver's 1970s energy boom spurred a proliferation of suburban subdivisions, shopping malls and a second office core in the suburban Denver Tech Center. Denver's traditional dependence on non-renewable natural resources returned to haunt the city during the 1980s oil bust. When the price of crude oil dropped from $39 to $9 a barrel, Denver sank into a depression, losing population and experiencing the highest office vacancy rate in the nation. Notable institutions include the Denver Museum of Natural History, the Denver Public Library, the Colorado History Museum, the Denver Art Museum and the Denver Center for the Performing Arts, as well as the U. S. Mint and major league baseball, basketball, football, hockey and soccer teams. Gun violence and crime, as well as smog, and traffic congestion are among the principal problems. As one of the most isolated major cities in the United States, Denver always has been obsessed with transportation systems. Fear of being bypassed began early when railroads and later, airlines, originally avoided Denver because of the 14,000-foot-high Rocky Mountain barrier just west of town. To secure Denver's place on national transportation maps, the city opened a new $5 billion airport in 1995. The 55-square-mile Denver International Airport is the nation's largest in terms of area and capacity for growth, prompting boosters to call it the world's largest.

Denver is a sprawling city in a state of long distances and mountainous obstacles. To tackle long distances and tough terrain, Coloradans have become auto-dependent. Denver has one of the highest per-capita motor vehicle ownership rates in the country-with an average of one licensed vehicle for every man, woman and child. In the 1990s, Denver built an outer ring of freeways that immediately became over-congested. Even after the Regional Transportation District began building a light-rail system, highway congestion remained the number-one complaint of many Denverites. In 2000, the metro area reached a population of 2.1 million, three-fourths of whom live in the suburban counties-Adams, Arapahoe, Boulder, Denver, Douglas and Jefferson. Roughly 20 percent of the core city population is Spanish-surnamed, 13 percent African-American, two percent Asian and one percent Native American.

Denver has elected Hispanic (Federico Peña, 1983-91) and African-American (Wellington Webb, 1991-2001) mayors in recent years and has enjoyed relatively smooth race relations. The Rocky Mountain metropolis boomed during the 1990s, as the eastern suburb of Aurora became Colorado's third-largest city and the western suburb of Lakewood became the fourth-largest. Even the core City and County of Denver gained population in the 1990s for the first time since the 1970s, climbing once again beyond the 500,000 mark. Thanks to landmark districts preserving venerable business and residential areas, as well as the 1990s opening in the core South Platte River Valley of Coors Baseball Field, Elitch Gardens Amusement Park, Ocean Journey Aquarium, Pepsi Athletic Center and many new housing projects, downtown Denver is booming as well as its suburban fringe, at the dawn of the 21st century.

Las Vegas Online Entertainment Guide
It's A Fact
POPULATION
City of Las Vegas -- 363,171 (4/95)
Clark County -- 1,016,177 (4/95)
Nevada -- 1.5 million (4/95)
Clark County Department of Comprehensive Planning

Between 4,000 and 6,000 people move into Clark County monthly.
In the first quarter of 1995, 7.1 million people visited Las
Vegas. In 1994 28.2 million people visited Las Vegas.
More than 8.3 million people visited Clark County in the first
quarter of 1995. In 1994 a total of 33.8 million visitors
were counted in the county.
Las Vegas Convention and Visitors Authority Research
LAS VEGAS McCARRAN INTERNATIONAL AIRPORT
1 mile (1.6 km.) from the Strip
3.5 miles (5.6 km.) from the Convention Center
5 miles (8 km.) from Downtown Las Vegas
McCarran is ranked 8th busiest in the world by the
Airports Council in Washington, D.C.
Serves 61 air carriers including:
21 scheduled 2 helicopter services
8 commuter
30 charter
Averages 851 flights a day.
Direct flights to 58 U.S. cities, 1 European city.
In the first four months of 1995, 9.2 million passengers
passed through McCarran. 26.8 million passengers passed
through in 1994.
1.3 million square-foot (1.04 million square meter)
terminal with 64 gates, covers 2,820 acres, 5,000 cars a day
use parking facilities, tram to some terminals.
Baggage control computer ramp, moving pedestrian walkways.
Class A port-of-entry, bilateral agreement with Canada,
international signage.
WEATHER
Average temperature 66.3 degrees (19 degrees centigrade). Average yearly rainfall 4.13 inches (10.64 centimeters). Average daily humidity 29 percent. 211.5 clear days annually, 82.4 partly cloudy days, 71.3 cloudy days.
TRANSPORTATION
More than 965 cabs service metropolitan Las Vegas. More than 325 limousines are available. 16 bus and/or charter firms operate in the city. Citizens Area Transit (CAT) is a public transportation company that operates 31 routes throughout the Las Vegas metropolitan area, and 1 route in Laughlin.
WEDDING CHAPELS
More than 35 wedding chapels. In the first five months of 1995, there were 44,104 wedding licenses issued including 158 in Laughlin. In 1994, 99,310 wedding licenses were issued in the Las Vegas area, with 79 in Laughlin. $35 license fee; Marriage License Bureau hours are 8 a.m. (0800) to midnight (2400) Monday through Thursday; 8 a.m. (0800) Friday to midnight (2400) Sunday; 24 hours all legal holidays in Nevada. On Valentine's Day weekend in 1994, 2,353 marriage licenses were issued. A license can be purchased in Laughlin 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday at the Justice Court Clerk's office in the Regional Government Center, 101 Civic Way.
MUSEUMS
Boulder City/Hoover Dam Museum, Guinness World of Records Museum, Las Vegas Art Museum, Las Vegas Museum of Natural History, Liberace Museum & Foundation, Lied Discovery Children's Museum, Lost City Museum of Archaeology, Clark County Heritage Museum, Nevada State Museum & Historical Society, Marjorie Barrick Museum of Natural History/UNLV, Debbie Reynolds Hollywood Movie Museum.
LIBRARIES
10 urban branch libraries, 11 rural branch libraries.
HOSPITALS
7 acute care hospitals, 4 hospices, more than 2,000 hospital beds, several licensed nursing homes, private psychiatric hospitals.
ATTRACTIONS
MT. CHARLESTON -- 35 miles (56 km.) from Las Vegas, highest elevation 11,918 feet (3,615 meters), winter skiing, picnicking, hiking, horseback riding, tours available.
BONNIE SPRINGS OLD NEVADA -- An old western town in Red Rock Canyon 16 miles west of Las Vegas with a motel, shops, activities and western shootouts.
DEATH VALLEY -- 135 miles (216 km.) from Las Vegas, 40 minutes by plane, lowest elevation on North American Continent at 280 feet below sea level (84.93 meters), Zabiske Point, 20 Mule Canyon, Scotty's Castle, tours available.
ETHEL M CHOCOLATE FACTORY -- Self-guided tours available for factory and outside botanical garden and cactus display.
KIDD & CO. MARSHMALLOW PLANT -- Self-guided tours available of plant, gift shop.
CRANBERRY WORLD WEST -- A 10,000-square-foot visitors center and gift shop adjacent to Ocean Spray Cranberries Inc. plant in Henderson that shows growth and uses of the cranberry.
GRAND CANYON -- About 300 miles (480 km.) from Las Vegas, 1 1/2 hour flight by plane, tours available.
LAKE MEAD NATIONAL RECREATION AREA -- Closest point 25 miles (40 km.) from Las Vegas, more than 550 miles (880 km.) of shoreline, swimming, water skiing, camping, boating, fishing, six marinas, tours available. Visitors totaled 3.8 million for the first five months of 1995 and 9,913,705 in 1994.
HOOVER DAM -- 34 miles (54.4 km.) from Las Vegas, 726 feet high (220.00 meters) from bedrock, wonder of the modern world, tours of inside and outside of dam available; in July 1994, the 30 millionth visitor toured the dam since it opened. Visitors touring the dam totaled 279,205 in the first five months of 1995 and 712,130 in 1994. Black Canyon River Raft Tours available below dam.
RED ROCK CANYON -- 15 miles (24 km.) west of Las Vegas, 3,000- foot (910 meters) escarpment produced by thrust fault, Bureau of Land Management visitors center, scenic area of rock formations and desert. Visitors totaled approximately 585,600 during the first five months of 1995 and approximately 900,000 in all of 1994.
VALLEY OF FIRE STATE PARK -- 55 miles (88 km.) from Las Vegas, scenic landscapes of hidden canyons and unique rock formations, petroglyphs and remains of ancient Indian civilization, Nevada Park Service visitors center, tours available. Visitors totaled 66,702 in the first five months of 1995 and 244,052 in 1994. There is a $3 entrance fee.
CHURCHES
More than 500 churches and synagogues, more than 40 faiths.
SCHOOLS
184 primary and secondary schools, 11th largest district in the U.S. Enrollment for the upcoming school year is expected to be more than 160,000 students.
UNIVERSITY OF NEVADA, LAS VEGAS
Annually more than 20,000 students enroll. The campus is 335- acres (134 hectare); 127 graduate and undergraduate programs offered; more than 600 faculty members; recognized as a "rising star of American higher education."
COMMUNITY COLLEGE OF SOUTHERN NEVADA
Nearly 20,000 students enroll annually including full time, part time and non-credit. Three campuses including an 80-acre (32 hectare) campus in North Las Vegas, a 75-acre (30 hectare) campus in Henderson and an 80-acre (32 hectare) Health Science Center campus in Las Vegas. Has the only public planetarium in Southern Nevada.
RECREATION
30 golf courses including 1 in Laughlin and 2 in Mesquite. More than 85 tennis courts. 8 bowling centers. Swimming pools at all major hotels and motels. 15 acre Wet 'n Wild water park with surfing, swimming, rafting and water slides. Family amusement centers including Scandia, Funtasia and Mountasia feature miniature golf, go-carts, Grand Prix cars, roller skating, batting cages, bumper cars, virtual reality. Ice skating rink at Santa Fe Hotel/Casino.
INDIANS
There are three Indian tribes indigenous to Nevada including the Shoshone; the Washoe, and the Paiute of which there are the Southern Paiutes and the Northern Paiutes. There are 25 reservations in the state encompassing 1,304,837 acres (521,934.8 hectares). Two of the reservations, totaling 75,804 acres (30,321.6 hectares), are in Clark County.
ELECTED OFFICIALS
Gov. Bob Miller, Sen. Harry Reid, D-Nev., Sen. Richard Bryan, D-Nev., Rep. John Ensign, R-Nev., Rep. Barbara Vucanovich, R-Nev.
NEVADA
Name means "snowcapped" in Spanish, it was admitted to the union in 1864, its nickname is the "Battle Born State," it is the seventh largest state in terms of square miles and ranks 38th in population.
CLARK COUNTY
County was created Feb. 5, 1908, its name honors William A. Clark, U.S. senator from Montana who built the San Pedro, Los Angeles and Salt Lake Railroad, the county covers 7,881 square miles (20,490.6 square kilometers) which is comparable to the area of Massachusetts.
LAS VEGAS
Name means "the meadows" in Spanish, founded in 1905, incorporated March 16, 1911, the city covers 84.272 square miles (219.1 square kilometers).
LAS VEGAS CONVENTION CENTER
1.6 million square feet (144,000 square meters) with 1.3 million square feet (117,000 square meters) of exhibit space available, 97 meeting rooms. An additional 100,000 square feet (9,000 square meters) at the Cashman Field facility. In 1994 there were 2,700 conventions in Clark County attended by more than 2.6 million delegates. LVCVA plus private convention space in the resort area totals 3.3 million square feet.
PERFORMING ARTS
Allied Arts Council, Nevada Dance Theatre, Las Vegas Symphony Orchestra, Nevada School of the Arts, Reed Whipple Cultural Center, Las Vegas Little Theater, New West Theatre Company, Rainbow Company (children's theater), Nevada Opera Theatre.
GAMBLING
There are 1,271 gaming licenses in Clark County, 122,800 slot machines and 3,896 live table games including poker and pan.
Gaming Control Board, June 1995
Clark County casinos won $1.863 billion in the first four months of 1995 and $5.43 billion throughout 1994. Statewide, casinos won $2.343 billion in the first four months of 1995 and $7.1 billion in 1994.
Gaming Control Board, June 1995
The number of slot machines statewide total 176,995 and the number of live table games statewide total 5,782.
Gaming Control Board, June 1995
LAUGHLIN
Modern day boomtown 90 miles (145 km.) southeast of Las Vegas on the Colorado River, more than 5.6 million tourists visited Laughlin in 1994 including more than 150,000 from foreign countries; there are 11,779 rooms available in Laughlin and it's sister city Bullhead City, AZ; gaming establishments won $182.6 million in the first four months of 1995, and $534.9 million in all of 1994; there are 12,667 slot machines in operation in Laughlin and 409 table games; there are nine major hotels; the average temperature is 72 degrees (22.22 degrees centigrade), and entertainment includes boating, fishing, sunbathing.
OTHER BORDER RESORTS
MESQUITE -- 77 miles (124 km.) northeast of Las Vegas; 1,171 rooms; three major casino resorts, Si Redd's Oasis, Virgin River Hotel-Casino and Players Island Resort Casino Spa. A smaller property, Stateline Casino, is also located in Mesquite. Activities include golf; tennis; sporting clays; health spa, and western ranch.
STATELINE -- Three major casinos, Whiskey Pete's, Primadonna and Buffalo Bill's. The three resorts are linked by monorail. Buffalo Bill's features the world's steepest, fastest roller coaster. Stateline is the last chance for motorists to gamble in Nevada. A convenience store on Primadonna property in California sells lottery tickets.
JEAN -- Two major casinos, Gold Strike Casino and Nevada Landing, flank Interstate 15 approximately 25 miles south of Las Vegas; rooms $18 a night during the week; 5 cent arcade for children; RV park planned.
GOLD STRIKE INN -- This major casino is just three miles west of Hoover Dam and is the first gaming enterprise travelers encounter after driving to Nevada from Arizona across the dam. Features a 17-story hotel with 378 rooms.

 

 

 

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