In The News: Special Collections and Archives

Las Vegas Black Image

An old African proverb states that “When an elder dies, a library burns to the ground.”

Las Vegas Sun

Just days before her death last month, Elizabeth von Till Warren received, perhaps, the gift of a lifetime at her 87th birthday celebration.

Daily Mail

The evolution of Las Vegas has been nothing short of spectacular.

KLAS-TV: 8 News Now

Mike Smith has drawn presidents for 35 years.

Las Vegas Sun

Mike Smith answered his newsroom phone expecting to talk with a reader. That’s commonplace when his editorial cartoons are published in the Las Vegas Sun, as callers either reach out with a compliment or criticism.

KSNV-TV: News 3

In the early 1900s, Las Vegas looks nearly unrecognizable from what it looks like today: a town of just over 2,000 people, a few shops, a post office.

Washington Post

On Oct. 9, 1986, at the height of anti-gay hysteria during the AIDS crisis, a biracial gay couple from Reno, Nev., made a remarkable announcement: They were going to create what some called “a gay homeland” in the Nevada desert.

Nevada Today

As Northern Nevada cities grow, a loss of affordable housing is not the only impact the region faces. The area is losing its neon signs.

KSNV-TV: News 3

A new chapter. A new beginning.

Yahoo!

A Las Vegas university is making people smile after staging a photo shoot with a figure well-known to students and alumni at one of its empty libraries on campus.

Las Vegas Review Journal

While the UNLV campus is closed because of coronavirus concerns, nobody is using the Lied Library — save for one dutiful skeleton.

Las Vegas Review Journal

It’s been weeks since the pandemic quieted the world’s playground, snuffing out the symphony of boozy conversation, blaring car horns and slot-machine chimes that once filled the Las Vegas Strip.