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发布时间: 2025-05-23 18:36:30北京青年报社官方账号
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SAN FRANCISCO — Federal and state officials in California were preparing Monday to receive thousands of people from a cruise ship that was idling off the coast of San Francisco with at least 21 people aboard infected with the coronavirus. The ship docked around midday Monday as officials prepared to begin to slowly disembark passengers and crew. The process could take several days. Fences were being installed at an 11-acre site at the Port of Oakland, as authorities readied flights and buses to whisk the more than 2,000 passengers aboard the Grand Princess to military bases or their home countries for a 14-day quarantine. There are more than 3,500 passengers on the ship, who hail from 54 countries. Questions have surrounded the cruise ship since reports surfaced last week that one person had died of COVID-19 aboard the ship. After the cases of the virus were concerned, the ship has attempted to quarantine passengers in their rooms and asked the passengers to practice "social distancing" by standing about six feet away from each other.Princess Cruises also operated the Diamond Princess, a ship that was moored for weeks in February off the coast of Japan after passengers tested positive for the coronavirus. Ultimately, about 700 passengers tested positive for the virus and seven people died.The quarantine practices used on the Diamond Princess have been questioned since passengers disembarked.The U.S. death toll from the virus reached at least 21 and the number of cases worldwide soared above 110,000. 1538

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TAMPA, Florida — A Tampa firefighter is back to work after being electrocuted and then brought back to life in December. Wesley Stevens enjoys wood working as a hobby. He got into a process called fractal burning, which is a technique that electrically burns unique branch like designs into wood. Stevens says he built a machine with his father and had done the process a few times before, but this time something went wrong. A 2,000 volt electric shock was sent through his body. "I was pulseless in the driveway and the friend that was with me she began CPR after calling 911,” he said. Hillsborough County Sheriffs Deputy Ernie Foster was on another call down the street and was able to get to his house within one minute. Because of his quick response, he was able to start CPR on Stevens right away. That most likely saved his life. They say the typical response time is around three to four minutes. According to paramedics, Stevens' heart stopped beating for 17 minutes. He was technically dead. "Dead is no pulse, not breathing and he was there. Without intervention, he was not going to survive whatsoever,” said Lt. Ryan Anusbigian, with Hillsborough County Fire Rescue. The CPR kept the blood flowing, which also kept his brain going. "It is a very long time and I would say it’s extremely unusual because most cardiac arrests are not witnessed, it was the CPR that really did him good,” said Lt. Anusbigian. "If you imagine holding your breath for four minutes versus holding your breath for 60 seconds, and that was really the difference there." Stevens woke up in the hospital two days later. Just a few days after that, he and his wife welcomed their baby boy Morgan into the world. "That was a big reason I was fighting to come back,” said Stevens. Nearly 10-weeks-old now, Morgan is happy and healthy — and so is his father. He says fractal burning is a process he will never do again. "It’s just not worth it, especially with Morgan here now I just don’t need it,” he said. Stevens is now back to work full time. As a thank you for saving his life, Stevens designed special firefighter wooden flags for the crew that responded. 2157

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RICHMOND, Va. – Virginia has become the first southern state to ban conversion therapy for LGBTQ minors. Gov. Ralph Northam announced Tuesday that he has signed 173

  

Saving kittens all in a days work for Phx officers.These two kittens had been soaked with gasoline and thrown out of a plastic bag. Officers Bagnall and Friday rescued them from the area of 35th Ave. & Dunlap. The kittens are now safe and receiving care at the Humane Society. pic.twitter.com/7wp0ZYEIuO— Phoenix Police Department (@phoenixpolice) November 24, 2019 381

  

Special counsel Robert Mueller's search warrants in his investigation of Michael Cohen will be made public with redactions on Wednesday, a federal judge ordered Tuesday.The five warrants in total encompass the searches the special counsel conducted between July and November 2017 of Cohen's emails and other content related to his email accounts, the order said.Chief Judge Beryl Howell issued the order in response to a lawsuit by CNN and other media outlets seeking the release of the court records.There will be some redactions to these documents when the Justice Department makes them public, similar to the redactions made to Cohen search warrants in New York federal court. The redactions will keep secret ongoing investigation details and the identities of people who haven't been charged.Four of the five special counsel's office warrants were referenced in the previously unsealed Cohen documents in New York.Howell told the Justice Department it would need to update her by late August at the latest regarding whether the redacted parts of the warrants should stay under seal. 1098

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