Nevada
Taryn Jenkins walks Nevada off against Boise State 3-2
RENO, Nev. (Nevada Athletics) – Taryn Jenkins called game in the eighth inning of a tie ballgame with a solo shot over the left field wall, evening the series with the Broncos.
The Broncos put up the first runs of the game in the top of the second with a two RBI double.
The Pack added the two tying runs in the fifth with an RBI single from Bridgette Gilliano scoring Chelie Senini who reached on a fielder’s choice. Gabby Herrera followed with an RBI single to center field scoring Matlyn Leetch who came in to pinch run for Haley Painter who reached on a single up the middle. This put Herrera as the Nevada single-season RBI leader with 62.
The Broncos and Pack were scoreless for two innings sending the game into extras. Taryn Jenkins came up to the plate in the eighth, sending it over to left field wall walking it off for the Pack, 3-2.
Blake Craft got the start for the Pack going all eight innings. Craft struck out seven, walked two, allowing two runs on six hits.
Notables:
- Gabby Herrera breaks the Nevada single-season RBI record with her 62nd RBI of the season.
- Taryn Jenkins’s walk-off homer is her 13th home run of the season, tying for the fourth most in a Nevada single season. The home run was Jenkins’s first career walk-off and Nevada’s third walk-off homer of the season when tied or trailing
- Herrera’s 67th hit of the season is the seventh most ever in a Nevada single season.
- Chelie Senini ties La’Tosha Williams (Delaware State) and Shamalene Wilson (Florida State) with 161 career stolen bases, the 20th most in NCAA DI history.
- Senini ties Danielle Patrick with 212 career games played, ninth most in Wolf Pack history. Senini’s 210 games started ties her with Britton Murdock for the eighth most in Nevada history.
- Blake Craft passes McKenna Isenberg for the fourth most games started by a pitcher in Nevada history.
- Senini passes her run total from last season with her 51st run of the season, the second most in a single Nevada season.
- Haley Painter ties Megan Sweet’s 2016 total of 119 total bases for the fourth most in Nevada single season.
- Craft’s 13th win of the season notches her a spot on the top-10 list for most wins in a single Nevada season. Craft’s 13 wins are the most since Julia Jensen’s 13 wins in 2018.
- Nevada ties the 2004 Wolf Pack squad, hitting 87 doubles this season, the fifth-highest total in Nevada history.
- Bailie Clark extends her on-base streak to ten games. Senini and Bailie Clark extend their hitting streaks to seven and four games, respectively.
Up Next:
The Pack return for their final home game of the season in the series finale against Boise State, Sunday, April 20 with first pitch set for 12 P.M.
Copyright 2024 KOLO. All rights reserved.
Nevada
LETTER: Nevada and the Colorado River negotiations
In your recent editorial on the Colorado River talks, the Review-Journal is right that Nevada deserves fairness in these negotiations. Nevada uses the least water, leads in conservation and re-uses about 85 percent of what it draws.
So why is Nevada being positioned to give more? The Review-Journal makes the case against it, but stops short of addressing how years of prior negotiations have already set a precedent for Nevada to surrender portions of its legal entitlement. Southern Nevada Water Authority General Manager John Entsminger has advanced a plan that reportedly includes surrendering up to 50,000 acre-feet, nearly 17 percent of Nevada’s allocation, while upper basin states face no comparable requirement to improve recycling or reduce structural losses.
There is already plenty of “unfairness” to go around, particularly in how Southern Nevada residents have been expected to shoulder the burden (both financially and environmentally) in the name of “conservation.”
For years, water use reductions tied to Lake Mead levels have been driven in part by hydropower thresholds, while the public narrative has centered on the lake’s visible “bathtub ring” to justify restrictions. It is also worth noting that California benefits significantly from higher reservoir levels. Under the compact, water use within the system, not energy production, is the priority.
Now we are told the state will “fight like hell.” The question is: Why not fight for every drop of Nevada’s legal entitlement?
The editorial also does not address a critical fact: Colorado diverts a significant portion of its Colorado River water across the Continental Divide, sending much of it out of the system entirely. Nevada, meanwhile, returns most of what it uses.
Nevada has the smallest allocation, the highest efficiency, significant amounts of stored water and the infrastructure to access it. Yet its leadership appears to be negotiating as a mediator rather than defending those advantages. “Fighting like hell” for fairness means demanding accountability, not giving more away or allowing more to be taken.
Nevada
Kitchen of Kindness: A local nonprofit in Northern Nevada aims to feed those in need
INCLINE VILLAGE, Nev. – Kitchen of Kindness is on a mission to give back to the community. The nonprofit is a volunteer-driven program through Chabad Cares Nevada and aims to assist those in need including seniors, hospitalized individuals and families by providing meals, support, and connection.
When asked how the idea for the program first came to fruition, Executive Director of Chabad Cares Nevada, Rabbi Moshe Cunin, said “The inspiration for the idea was from my wife and her family. Unfortunately, her dad died from cancer, but he had been helped for many years by members of their community bringing food to them.”
After receiving kindness and support from others, Cunin’s wife Doba, and Doba’s mother, decided it was time to give back. Thus, Kitchen of Kindness was created last June and has been picking up the pace ever since.
A major avenue to their funding is through selling homemade challah bread and pastries at the Incline Village Farmers Market which is scheduled to open this summer on Thursday, May 21.

“It’s been amazing,” said Cunin. “We just popped up at the Incline Village Farmers Market and we sold out every week. What’s really cool is that some of the bread is being sold, but the money from that bread sold is going to fund the rest of it getting delivered that week to family members of people in the hospital, people in need, or a new mom with a baby.”
Cunin delivers the food himself, along with other program volunteers, and their goal for distribution is to get the fresh food out as quickly as possible.
While serving a wide range of Northern Nevada, including Lake Tahoe, Cunin wants to continue to grow Kitchen of Kindness. Already, the community kitchen offers assistance in family events, team building, birthday parties, and ways to prevent food waste. They even provide hot meals and companionship as part of their senior engagement, and partner with larger nonprofits such as Eddy House Youth Homeless Shelter in Reno.
“Our dream would be to up the scale of the amount of events we do, the amount of volunteers, and the amount of people we can help,” said Cunin who notes that although they are borrowing a local kosher kitchen space through a jewish school and synagogue, his vision is to have a dedicated space to be used full-time.
As Kitchen of Kindness’s mission unfolds, Cunin says the Torah’s teachings of anonymous, selfless charity is a key factor in its importance, where the giver feels no arrogance and the receiver feels no embarrassment.
“There’s so many that want to give and be generous, and may not have a ton of money to give away, but they have time,” said Cunin. “Time itself is such a value and this is such a great opportunity for people that have time and can partner together with us and use their time and turn it into giving.”
Stop by their bake sale booth at Incline Village Farmers Market this summer for an oppertunity to support their cause.
To learn more about Kitchen of Kindness or Chabad Cares Nevada, as well as ways to get involved, visit https://www.chabadcaresnevada.com/kitchen.
Nevada
Nevada Secretary of State announces decrease in active registered voters
Nevada Secretary of State Francisco Aguilar reported a decrease of 99,628 active registered voters during the month of March 2026 as compared to February 2026. The total number of active registered voters in Nevada is 2,040,752, a decrease of (-4.66%).
Officials say the decrease in active registered voters is due in large part to list maintenance activities conducted by the Clark County Election Department. The office sent 117,650 notices to voters and inactivated approximately 104,945 voters who did not respond to the notice.
The report indicates nonpartisan active registered voters decreased by 36,904 (-4.55%). Republican Party active registered voters statewide decreased by 24,261 (-4.08%). Democratic Party active registered voters statewide decreased by 30,179 (-5.08%). Independent American Party active registered voters decreased by 5,145 (-5.68%), and Libertarian Party of Nevada active registered voters decreased by 939 (-6.26%).
Active registered voters from a compilation of “other” minor political parties decreased by 2,200 (-6.44%).
Of the 2,040,752 active registered voters in Nevada:
- 774,669 are Nonpartisan (37.96%)
- 570,951 are Republicans (27.98%)
- 563,733 are Democrats (27.62%)
- 85,369 are members of the Independent American Party (4.18%)
- 14,051 are members of the Libertarian Party of Nevada (0.69%)
- 31,979 are members of other minor political parties (1.57%)
The latest voter registration breakdown can be found under the Elections tab or by clicking here.
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