Father in chicago burning gay flag at parish

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In front of a day care center on one of the city’s main streets, 21 wooden chairs sit empty.Įveryone in the predominantly Latino city of roughly 16,000 people seems to know someone whose life has been turned upside down by losing a family member or close friend in the attack at Robb Elementary School, which was one of the deadliest of its kind. And light blue ribbons adorn the giant oaks that shade the city’s central square, where mourners come to lay flowers around a fountain and write messages on wooden crosses that bear the victims’ names. Many are wearing maroon, the color for Uvalde’s school district.

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UVALDE, Texas (AP) - Days after a local man burst into an elementary school and killed 19 children and two teachers before officers managed to kill him, the signs of grief, solidarity and local pride are everywhere in Uvalde.

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