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德安哪里有算命先生
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发布时间: 2025-05-24 19:47:46北京青年报社官方账号
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  德安哪里有算命先生   

WASHINGTON, D.C. — At the official National Columbus Day Celebration in Washington, D.C. on Monday, the pomp and circumstance was in full swing.This year, though, the city itself wasn’t part of the party. A few days before, the D.C. city council voted to change Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples' Day. The city joined more than 100 cities and a half-dozen states around the country that have chosen to honor Native Americans instead of the Italian explorer whose arrival brought conflict with indigenous people.“Columbus has a complicated history, but there is not one figure in history that does not have a complex history,” said Anita Bevacqua McBride, vice chairwoman of cultural affairs for the National Italian American Foundation.She said they don’t want to see Columbus Day disappear. Rather, they argue, there’s enough room on the calendar for both days.“I think in an era of inclusion and greater understanding of the diversity of our history, I think that’s fair,” Bevacqua McBride said. “But it doesn’t in our mind, give license, to erase what he did in terms of exploration of the new world.”Two miles away, at the National Congress of American Indians, Kevin Allis is happy to point out some of the mementos in his office.“I’m very proud of this vest. This is my grandfather’s vest and my great-grandmother made it for him,” he said, pointing to a 100-year-old vest with intricate beading, hanging framed in his office. “That’s a very sentimental piece to my family and I.”Allis said the change from Columbus Day to Indigenous Peoples' Day has been a long time coming.“We’re not trying to rewrite history,” Allis said. “We’re just trying to make people take the time to look at what real history is and understand we play an important role in that.”Competing roles in history that are still being debated over a holiday in the present. 1866

  德安哪里有算命先生   

WASHINGTON, D.C. – Rep. Ayanna Pressley announced in a new video that she has gone bald due to alopecia. The freshman Massachusetts Democrat was known for her long hair twists. Her hair styles had become an inspiration to young supporters. In the video on the African American-focused website The Root, Pressley publicly revealed her bald head for the first time. Pressley said she felt compelled to go public to free herself of the shame of her condition and provide true transparency to all the people empowered by her hair style. Pressley said she first noticed her hair falling out back in the fall. 615

  德安哪里有算命先生   

United States senators have a knack for talking a lot, sometimes speaking for hours on end. For instance, Sen. Strom Thurmond once led a 24-hour filibuster in opposition of passage of the 1957 Civil Rights Act. But for the impeachment trial of President Donald Trump, senators are being told to be quiet. On Wednesday, Senate leaders Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., and Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., issued an official memo concerning decorum during the trial. The decorum guidelines tell senators to not engage in conversation with neighboring senators during the trial. Senators also are being prohibited from using electronic devices, like cellphones, on the Senate floor. Senators were also told that the only reading material allowed will be those relevant to the trial. Other bullet points in the memo state that senators should refer to Chief Justice John Roberts as "Mr. Chief Justice." Also, senators were told to stand quietly when Roberts enters and exits the chamber. The trial is expected to go six days a week, with Sundays being the only day off for senators during the trial. 1089

  

Victor, Colorado is a historic town known for the Gold Rush where the town thrived in the late 1800s. However, the town is starting to move into a new golden era dedicated to preserving the city’s history. “Victor has a tendency to enchant people as soon as they enter the town,” said Becky Frank, who works for the city. “You can tell it has this feeling of ‘what is this place?’” Victor appears to be a place frozen in time, but those who live there like it that way. “Victor is kind of stuck,” said Karen Morrison, who owns the Victor Trading Post with her husband. “But it tends to captivate your imagination of what was here, and makes you wonder what could be here.”The small town is full of authentic history. Ghosts of the town are still here –-the headframes of gold mines hang above Victor reminding it of its roots. “It’s the site of the largest gold strike in Colorado, and it’s still mining to this day,” said Adam Zimmerli, the owner of the Monarch Hotel. “Victor was the historic mining community,” Frank said. “The gold camp was here, where all the miners lived at the turn of the century when gold was discovered here.The town at its peak during the gold rush had more than 18,000 people living in Victor. When mining stopped, people left. But when it resumed in 1990, things weren’t as vibrant as back in the day. “Our current population in Victor is about 400-year-round residents,” Frank said. While thousands of people left, all the buildings stayed. “We’re kind of stuck in the 1900s,” Morrison said. “That’s when our building was built after the fire.”Morrison owns Victor Trading Post where her and her husband are most famous for handmaking brooms. “We’ve lived here for 29 years,” Morrison said. “The shakers came up with this broom making in the 1790s. We can make brooms the same way because they were good.” Tradition, like Morrison’s, can be found on every corner in Victor. “We have lived here for 19 years,” said Gertrude Wuellner, the owner of Gold Camp Bakery. “My husband is German as well, and we came up to Victor on a visit and decided if we ever got those visas, we would move up here. It was the mining history and the area that made us move up here.” Victor is trying to progress its town by keeping things the same. The historic buildings are now occupied with current businesses to help keep things more authentic in the community. The 125-year-old town has put in million in improvements in the town and preservation of historic buildings. “A building that is occupied is maintained better,” Frank said. “It’s got a life to it that the empty building don’t have. And we have played some creative strategies to make that happen.” Zimmerli is one example of that creative strategy. “The building I owned was originally a saloon, brothel and casino when it was built in 1899,” Zimmerli said. “It was advertised as the finest gentlemen’s club west of the Mississippi. Now, it’s a hotel I owned, and we are continuing to expand into the building for more rooms.” Victor is now trying to stay on this path of preservation. For those who live here, it’s not about new development but preservation to remain stuck in time. “There was never enough money to modernize it in the sixties and seventies,” Morrison said. Now, people appreciate the history and the heritage, and the old buildings. We get a lot of people coming up here because of the history, and that Victor hasn’t changed a whole lot.” 3458

  

WASHINGTON, DC - JULY 23: Jon Stewart (C) hugs 911 first responder John Feal (R) as Sen. Charles Schumer (D-NY) (L) stands nearby after the U.S. Senate voted to renew permanent authorization of September 11th Victim Compensation Fund, on Capitol Hill July 23, 2019 in Washington, DC. (Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images) 332

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