In The News: College of Liberal Arts

KLAS-TV: 8 News Now

As Nevada voters head to the polls, one key ballot question has stirred contrasting opinions: Question 1, which proposes removing the Board of Regents from the state constitution, granting the legislature more oversight.

KSNV-TV: News 3

In the swing state of Nevada, the U.S. Senate race and most House races were too early to call early Wednesday.

KSNV-TV: News 3

Michael Green, history professor at UNLV, explains Nevada's voting history.

Today

Does thinking about the holidays make you extra wistful right now? Christmas videos and photos of collective childhood memories from the '80s, '90s and early aughts are going viral on TikTok — and there's a reason it's happening right now.

KSNV-TV: News 3

With polls opening up in just a few hours, there's lots of information to keep in mind as you head to cast your ballot for the 2024 general election.

The News Lens

U.S. policy toward Taiwan is mainly affected by how the United States evaluates the following four levels: China's ambitions and capabilities toward Taiwan, China's political and economic development, Taiwan's attitude toward China, and its evaluation of Taiwan's political economy.

ABC Internacional

As every four years, Democrats and Republicans have remembered the Hispanic vote this fall. It is surprising how two realities coexist in this electorate: on the one hand, it is a voting pool in which both parties can fish and with the potential to determine the outcome of the election.

Le Point

There are 600 of them, in a room covered in posters celebrating their union’s victories. The Culinary Union casino workers are preparing to go door-to-door for Kamala Harris. The Strip, Nevada’s economic heartland, with its Eiffel Tower, pyramid, Venetian palace, water jets and slot machines that spin night and day, is less than ten minutes away. Another galaxy.

Gala France

Blue suit, white shirt, red tie... Since his youth, Donald Trump, who is a candidate in the American presidential election and whose results will potentially be broadcast this Tuesday, November 5, has always dressed in his traditional attire. An outfit that has almost become his trademark. "He seems to have worn the same red tie since the 1970s. It seems to have gotten longer," Deirdre Clemente, a history professor at the University of Nevada in Las Vegas, told Sky News. "It's his way of projecting power, confidence and stability," she said.

il Giornale

An outfit for every occasion: this is becoming the motto that sees the two candidates for the White House also focus on their look to win over new voters. In the run-up to the vote, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have adapted their clothing to the image they want to convey as leaders. Both generally opt for classic clothing: the vice president in a sober suit with heels, the tycoon in his classic dark Brioni suits with red tie. Every time they depart from these "uniforms", as the Wall Street Journal also points out, they are sending strategic messages to voters, in an attempt to reach even the last American who is still undecide

Associated Press

In a presidential swing state where elections are typically intense contests, Nevada’s U.S. Senate race has been unusually sleepy.

Las Vegas Review Journal

Hundreds of millions of dollars poured into the U.S. federal races this election cycle ensures that voters know who’s at the top of the ticket and why they are choosing them. Beyond that top race on the ballot, however, things get murkier.