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Saturday, Oct. 1, marks five years since Nevada was shaken by the largest mass shooting in modern American history. Close to 60 died while attending a concert on the Las Vegas Strip on Oct. 1, 2017. Hundreds were injured, and even more suffer from emotional trauma and grief. KUNR’s Lucretia Cunningham sat down with Tennille Pereira, who is the director at the Vegas Strong Resiliency Center in Las Vegas, to learn how the city is healing.
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Here are the local news headlines for the morning of Friday, Oct. 1, 2021.WCSD Superintendent McNeill anounces retirementBy Paul BogerSuperintendent…
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Here are your local news headlines for the morning of Thursday, Mar. 25, 2021.Death Penalty Debate Reemerges In Nevada After Past StallsBy The Associated…
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Here are your local news headlines for the morning of Tuesday, Mar. 2, 2021.Anti-Restriction Counties Prep To Manage Own Virus RulesBy The Associated…
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UPDATE:A measure that would ban bump stocks and allow county governments to pass stricter gun control laws has cleared its first legislative hurdle.An…
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October 1 marks the first anniversary of the mass shooting in Las Vegas, the deadliest in American history. Many Northern Nevadans were there and have…
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The one-year anniversary of the largest mass shooting in modern U.S. history is Monday. 58 people at an open-air concert were killed. Hundreds more were…
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Last November, Nevada voters approved Question 1, an initiative that requires all private firearm sales and transfers to undergo background checks,…
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Nevada's Democratic US Senator, Catherine Cortez Masto, is calling on Congress to take up gun control in the aftermath of the Las Vegas shooting.On a rare…
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One out of five students at the University of Nevada, Reno hails from the Las Vegas area. The recent mass shooting has left many students anxious and sad.…