UNLV President Keith Whitfield Sunday denied reports that he was considering releasing details about the university’s assets invested in firms with ties to Israel and divesting from them.
Education
Education officials are probing the use of federal pandemic relief dollars to send staffers to beach destinations after a Review-Journal investigation.
District Court Judge Richard Boulware administered the oath of office Tuesday at the Las Vegas City Council Chambers to Dane Watson, Lisa Satory, Adam Johnson and Ramona Esparza-Stoffregan.
Aramis Bacallao, a teacher at Becker Middle School, faces a misdemeanor charge of disturbing the peace after being removed by police from a school board meeting.
UNLV’s medical school is working to bring more physicians to Las Vegas to help fill the shortage or health care professionals and to help train more.
Former Leavitt Middle School students have been given more options for earning the half-credit they need to graduate from high school.
The Nevada State Board of Education plans to meet Dec. 15 for an information-only discussion about the possibility of requiring later high school start times.
The Clark County School District is rolling out an instant alert system at nine schools this summer in response to concerns over a spike in violence on campuses.
Clark County School District Superintendent Jesus Jara remains at work two weeks after the School Board rescinded his contract termination, but hasn’t announced future plans.
A ceremony Tuesday in the school’s library marked the deactivation of the school’s Air Force JROTC unit and began the transition to operating under the newly created Space Force.
The Clark County School Board voted 5-1 early Thursday morning to allow Superintendent Jesus Jara to draft and implement such a policy policy and negotiate with unions.
Changes are coming to Clark County teachers’ health insurance plan in an effort to keep the trust solvent.
The Review-Journal visited Coral Academy of Science Las Vegas’ Centennial Hills campus in northwest Las Vegas on Tuesday for a glimpse into how the school is operating during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The app-based program known as TIES allows employees to screen themselves for symptoms, participate in contact tracing and schedule free COVID-19 tests.
Nevada’s two public universities experienced spikes in reports of sexual, domestic and dating violence incidents from 2017 to 2018, according to a report to be presented this week to the Board of Regents.