Nevada
Nevada’s first Holocaust Memorial Plaza to open Sunday
LAS VEGAS (KLAS) — The primary Holocaust memorial plaza in Nevada is about to open to the general public Sunday.
The positioning took about six months to come back collectively, and organizers say they hope it can transfer to the touch survivors and the Southern Nevada neighborhood.
Esther Finder is the president and founding father of Generations of the Shoah – Nevada and believes the brand new memorial plaza might convey closure to the households of among the victims.
“I feel this can be an essential place for these of us within the survivor neighborhood who don’t know the place our family members have been buried or ashes might lie,” she tells 8 Information Now.
Finder is a holocaust survivor descendant and says the brand new web site is an space the place many can come to mirror.
“My dad and mom have been killed right here. They have been executed, homicide. They have been put at the back of a sealed truck and the exhaust of the truck was pumped within the truck and so they drove round till the individuals have been useless. That’s how my grandparents have been killed,” she added.
Jay Poster with King David’s Memorial Chapel and Cemetery close to Robindale and Japanese says the positioning is symbolic from a crumbling brick wall with metal darts to the six plaques figuring out the extermination camps the place so many have been killed.
“Contained in the plaza alongside the Star of David partitions is the complete historical past,” Poster stated.
He provides that it’s a grim reflection of what’s taking place in Ukraine.
“All it’s worthwhile to do is have a look at what’s taking place on the planet immediately and you’ll see the destruction that battle does to villages and cities, he tells 8 Information Now.
Rabbi Sanford Akselrad says the memorial may also embrace a symbolic contact of soil from six extermination camps.
“That soil goes to be buried right here beneath the plaques of the termination camps and as college kids come right here to study they’re going to be standing on that very same mud the place at one-time Jews went to their deaths. Now Jews come to study,” he added.
A streaming possibility can be out there for these fascinated by watching the official opening of the Holocaust memorial on Sunday from their houses.
The general public can also be invited to attend the official opening in particular person.
The Holocaust Memorial Plaza can be out there to each residents and vacationers to go to throughout the hours of 8 a.m. to five p.m. each day. For extra info, guests can name 7020-464-8570.
The memorial is situated on the grounds of the King David Memorial Chapel and Cemetery at 2697 East Elodrado Lane close to Japanese Avenue and Heat Springs Highway.
Nevada
Upcoming legislative session bill would limit corporations buying single family homes in Nevada
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (FOX5) – For many families, the American Dream of home ownership now seems out of reach. There’s a push to change that and bring housing costs down in Nevada by limiting corporate buyers from pricing out families and individual buyers.
“You wouldn’t even know it, but this street, this whole entire street, is owned by a corporate investor. They built the houses and then they rent them out,” explained State Senator Dina Neil, who represents District Four including the North Las Vegas neighborhood where she met FOX5 for an interview.
“In this environment, the corporate owner is the only one reaping the benefit of the asset, not the family itself. Our Nevada citizens are actually being locked out,” Neal contended. Neal wants single family homes to be affordable for Nevada families.
“Fifteen percent of the market is owned by corporate investors and so this is going to change the narrative,” Neal argued. Her bill for the upcoming legislative session next month would require an investor to register with the Secretary of State, file as their deed as an investor, and limit them to buying 100 single family homes in Nevada per year.
“The reason why I’m able to legally do this is because the legislature has police powers when we’re in a crisis…We’ve been in a housing crisis for over four or five years,” Neal reported.
A CCSD teacher of ten years who wants to remain anonymous recently reached out to FOX5 about being unable to afford a home in the Las Vegas area.
“I think the average teacher that has either just started teaching or has around ten years of experience are right around the $60,000 salary mark and there’s just no homes in our budget,” the teacher stated. About half her income goes to rent. Still, she is cutting costs wherever she can to save up to hopefully one day afford a down payment.
“As a professional, you go to school and you get this degree to really help your community and we’re in this position where we can’t even live the lifestyle we want in this profession and it’s just becoming just very sad,” she confessed.
Neal brought a similar bill last legislative session but says it was vetoed by the governor. That is not deterring her from trying again.
Earlier this year, Nevada Senator Jacky Rosen also proposed legislation to go after corporate investors who she says are price gouging Nevadans and inflating costs in the housing market legislation called the HOME Act. It was referred to the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs.
Copyright 2025 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Inmate stabbed to death in Nevada State Prison
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (FOX5) – The Nevada Department of Corrections has confirmed an inmate is dead due to a stabbing incident at High Desert State Prison.
According to NDOC on Jan. 15, 43-year-old Michael Dorotiak died at University Medical Center in Las Vegas.
Dorotiak was serving a sentence of 28 to 72 months at the maximum security prison for coercion.
Officials report an autopsy was requested and the family of Dorotiak have been notified.
Dorotiak was transferred from Clark County on Sept. 27, 2024.
The incident is under investigation.
This is a developing story.
Copyright 2025 KVVU. All rights reserved.
Nevada
Deep Beneath California’s Sierra Nevada, Earth’s Lithosphere May Be Peeling Away – Eos
Source: Geophysical Research Letters
The processes that form continental crust from the denser basaltic rocks of the upper mantle may make the lower lithosphere denser than the underlying mantle. One theory holds that the lower lithosphere splits away and sinks into the mantle in a process called foundering. Conclusive evidence of foundering, however, has been hard to come by.
Peering deep under California’s Sierra Nevada, Schulte-Pelkum and Kilb discovered new evidence of lithospheric foundering in progress. The team imaged the lower crust and uppermost mantle beneath the Sierra Nevada with receiver function analysis, which uses seismic waves that change as they cross structures beneath the surface.
They also studied earthquake data from the Advanced National Seismic System Comprehensive Earthquake Catalog, or ComCat. They found a band of seismicity in the central Sierra, in which small earthquakes (ranging from magnitude 1.9 to 3.2) occur at the unusual depths of 40 kilometers and greater.
Differences in receiver functions along the mountain range revealed a distinct layer in the mantle, which grows gradually less distinct farther north. This aligns with the existing hypothesis that a section of the lithosphere beneath the southern Sierra sank (foundered) millions of years ago.
A slab of colder continental lithosphere also has the capacity to crack, rather than to stretch and flow like hot material typically found at such depths. This likely also explains the presence of such deep earthquakes in the central Sierra, according to the authors.
The researchers found no evidence of this layer in the northern Sierra, indicating foundering has yet to progress to that region.
This work aligns with previous studies that found a gradient Moho, rather than a sharply defined crust-mantle boundary, under the Sierra. It also matches previous suggestions that a cold mantle anomaly under the Great Valley region to the west may be dense lithosphere lost to the foundering process. Foundering has been ongoing in the Sierra for at least 3 million years according to this hypothesis, and the researchers say it may be progressing northward. This region provides evidence of a process of differentiation that occurs throughout Earth’s crust, they argue. (Geophysical Research Letters, https://doi.org/10.1029/2024GL111290, 2024)
—Nathaniel Scharping (@nathanielscharp), Science Writer
Citation: Scharping, N. (2025), Deep beneath California’s Sierra Nevada, Earth’s lithosphere may be peeling away, Eos, 106, https://doi.org/10.1029/2025EO250020. Published on 17 January 2025.
Text © 2025. AGU. CC BY-NC-ND 3.0
Except where otherwise noted, images are subject to copyright. Any reuse without express permission from the copyright owner is prohibited.
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