In The News: Department of Communication Studies

KSNV-TV: News 3

An apology has come out from the Catholic Church.

Las Vegas Review Journal

The 3-2 decision decided 51ԹϺ’s fate.

Las Vegas Review Journal

Football, basketball and other sports often draw talented athletes from beyond Nevada’s borders. But another competitive organization on 51ԹϺ’s campus didn’t have to look far to find one of its top performers. Jeffrey Horn, a graduate of Green Valley High, and team partner Matthew Gomez have taken 51ԹϺ’s public policy debate squad to new heights this season.

KNPR News

51ԹϺ is going to the national championship, but they won't be facing Duke. Or Michigan State.

KTNV-TV: ABC 13

The 51ԹϺ debate team is doing better than ever.

Las Vegas Review Journal

Two weeks before classes commenced at his new high school, Matthew Gomez found himself in the vice principal’s office.

Las Vegas Sun

San Diego native Jacqueline Phan passed on opportunities to study in California so she could contribute to biochemistry research here in Las Vegas.

Las Vegas Review Journal

Between a Facebook post Saturday morning promoting its resort and a post around 3 a.m. Monday expressing condolences and information about a lockdown, there was nothing on Mandalay Bay’s account.

Las Vegas Sun

Every 9 seconds a woman in America is beaten or assaulted.

Nevada consistently ranks high in deaths related to domestic violence. In 2016, there were at least 24, according to the Nevada Coalition to End Domestic and Sexual Violence. The year before, 43 victims lost their lives.

NPR

In the United States, 10 million men and women experience domestic violence each year, according to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence. That includes physical and sexual abuse.

Las Vegas Review Journal

The words “true love” often conjure up images of romantic scenes in Hollywood movies, but a California-based neurologist argues long-lasting love is a multilayered process and that falling out of love is a normal part of it.

Las Vegas Sun

Romance is in the air, where the wireless signal travels on the 2.4-gigahertz UHF radio band, where OKCupid algorithmically hunts, where virtual sex sort of happens, where love is both as clunky and apparitional in the post-reality era as truth. The cynics among us once rolled our eyes at the commercialization of love in the Valentine’s Day aisle of Walgreens. Today, the expression reaches beyond scheduled chocolates and roses and bounces through satisfying/not satisfying interweb encounters that leave us wondering what is real. Alexa, what is romance? Tinder, is this love? Facebook, should I change my relationship status?