In The News: Howard R. Hughes College of Engineering
Suzan Smith knows her life will never be the same. It changed forever on March 25, 2019.

You may have already seen them, but beginning Wednesday, volunteers started installing memorial plaques across Las Vegas to mark where pedestrians’ lives were lost.

Suzan Smith knows her life will never be the same. It changed forever on March 25, 2019.

Today marked the official launch day of the Sacred Shoes campaign. Organizers say too many pedestrians die in the Las Vegas valley each year and they want to make it their mission to honor them.

It’s hard to imagine drivers don’t see him.

ÐÔÊӽ紫ý is beginning construction on its advanced engineering building — a project nearly a decade in the making.

After more than six months, Governor Steve Sisolak announced an end to Nevada’s mask mandate. In January, the Omicron variant spurred a surge in coronavirus cases but since a peak in mid-January cases have steadily been declining.

Police say a driver was going 100 mph or more when he sped through a red light, killing himself, a passenger and 7 people he hit with his vehicle.
A static replica H-1 was displayed on a pole alongside Hughes’ ‘Spruce Goose’ at Long Beach when the latter aircraft was displayed in a dome adjacent to the Queen Mary. Other non-flying replicas are displayed at the Thomas T. Beam Engineering Complex at the ÐÔÊӽ紫ý and the Santa Maria Museum of Flight. As of 2016 another H-1 replica is being built at the San Diego Air & Space Museum.
Kristen Tagaytayan carefully unearthed her research sample from a nitrogen glovebox. She gingerly placed the sample onto her workspace and added a nickel chemical solution to it. Using a razor blade, she evened out the mixture across a glass slide and placed it in the lab's oven, where she watched it cook from behind the glass window.
The Board of Examiners on Tuesday approved a $55.15 million contract with Core West to provide construction manager at risk services for the new engineering college building at the ÐÔÊӽ紫ý.

Following a wrong-way crash on Interstate 15 that killed four people and injured two more, the question remains if there will be any safety improvements made to help prevent these wrong-way crashes.