Tattoo artists from all over the country donated their time and skills to cover survivors’ physical, mental or emotional wounds through tattooing.
Briana Erickson
The Vegas Strong Resiliency Center, which opened after the mass shooting, moved into a new space in January. But since the pandemic, everything has shifted online.
A Democrat and a member if the Independent American Party are challenging Assemblyman Glen Leavitt’s bid for re-election in Nevada Assembly District 23.
Two first-time candidates — Democrat Venicia Considine and Republican Heather Ann Florian — are running for the open Assembly District 18 seat.
A Republican gunning for a seat in state Assembly District 15 says he will “do everything to repeal” a 2019 bill sponsored by the incumbent he’s running against.
Two women — a second-generation American and a newly naturalized citizen — are the candidates hoping to fill the vacant seat in Assembly District 16.
Libertarian Natasha Bousley is challenging three-term incumbent Assemblyman Edgar Flores in Nevada Assembly District 28.
District Court Judge Jacqueline Bluth, appointed last year by Gov. Steve Sisolak, is seeking election for the first time in Department 6.
World War II veteran Vincent Shank, wearing a shirt reading “It took me 104 years to look this good,” was treated to a socially distanced drive-thru parade Saturday in Las Vegas.
Retired Army Green Beret Lt. Col. James “Bo” Gritz, portrayed in an episode of the miniseries “Waco,” now lives a relatively quiet life in Southern Nevada.
The parade, long billed as the “largest Veterans Day parade west of the Mississippi River,” has been canceled because it could not comply with state public gathering limits.