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发布时间: 2025-05-30 16:58:49北京青年报社官方账号
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  集安哪有算命的   

Two Democratic congresswomen on Tuesday introduced a bill that would block federal funding for the 2026 men's World Cup until the US Women's National Team earns "fair and equitable wages compared to the US men's team."The legislation, co-sponsored by Reps. Doris Matsui of California and Rosa DeLauro of Connecticut, comes amid the team's longstanding battle for equal pay.Months before the tournament, members of the Women's National team filed a lawsuit against the US Soccer Federation, claiming they deserve to be paid what the American men are paid for their international performances. In one hypothetical case cited in the lawsuit, if the women's and men's teams both won 20 straight games in a season, the women would make 38% what the men do.Matsui and DeLauro say the federal government shouldn't make any financial contribution for the 2026 tournament, which will be spread through venues across the US, Canada and Mexico, until the playing field is level for female athletes."Until the USSF provides real reforms ensuring equitable pay for our male and female athletes, the U.S. government has no business contributing potentially billions of dollars in support for the 2026 World Cup," Matsui said in a statement.DeLauro said federal funding for the men's tournament in 2026 would be "encouraging the pay gap to continue.""Congress needs to ensure women in the same job are getting the same pay," DeLauro said in a statement.Two weeks ago, Democratic Sen. Joe Manchin introduced a Senate version of the bill, which would similarly block federal funding until US Soccer agrees to "provide equitable pay."Still, it's unclear just how much money would actually be withheld if the bills succeed in Congress. 1728

  集安哪有算命的   

United Airlines has suspended one of its flights and other airlines are re-routing planes to avoid the Gulf of Oman after Iran 139

  集安哪有算命的   

WARNER, Oklahoma — A small town football team is doing big things, pioneering the investment in high-tech helmets for the entire district.“It’s not just a select few, they are valuing every kid in this school,” Josh McElyea, a Warner High School parent said.It’s no secret football is a contact sport. In some cases, the harder the hit, the bigger the play. As the game of football gets more competitive, it has created a growing concern: head injuries that can lead to long-term complications.“Across the state of Oklahoma there is a decline in kids that are playing football,” Sam Fairchild, Warner Public Schools Athletic Director, said. “In this day and time, we face a lot of parents that have the fear of allowing their kids to play for fear of major injury or even death.”But in the small Muskogee County town of Warner, school officials are squashing the stigma of concussions and football with cutting edge technology.“This community realizes we got to do what big people do, even when we are small,” McElyea said. “That's what you do. You got to plan for that even while you are small."The district is taking the steps to enhance player safety for every football player in the district, grades 6 through 12.Inside each maroon and gold Eagles helmet is Riddell's latest innovation in head impact monitoring technology. An "InSite" training tool inside each helmet builds a player's impact profiles. That means for each hit, a piece of data is recorded in real time, which identifies what part of the player's head was hit and how hard. Players stats will then be stored and compared in a national database with players all over the country. Coaches can then learn from the data and teach players to improve technique.“That feedback that we get from this helmet will help me as a coach to make sure that not only am I teaching proper technique, but my players are performing with that proper technique,” Chuck Capps, Warner High School Head Football Coach, said.Not only that, but the censors will also detect a high impact hit while on the field, which then sends a red flag to the coaches immediately. Coaches and medical personnel monitoring the data can then decide to pull the player from the game and determine if they should see a doctor.“We want to remove that… to be a part of that leading edge, to be a part of removing that fear, that word, concussion from the sport itself,” Capps said.The technology is giving parents peace of mind. And as the season approaches, the Warner Eagles are ready to show out, tackles and all.The school district is one of the first in Oklahoma to invest in helmets for all grade levels. It cost the district around ,000 for the program, which is something school officials saved up for over the years. This isn’t the district’s first step in player safety. School officials purchased Riddell SpeedFlex helmets for players back in 2015 before buying the InSite technology this year. 2950

  

WESLEY CHAPEL, Fla. — Three women have been arrested after they led police on a pursuit through Pasco County and it all started after someone reported seeing the women naked at a Pasco County rest area off of I-75 on Wednesday. On Wednesday, April 10, 2019, at approximately 11:15 a.m., an FHP trooper was dispatched to the suspicious persons call at the northbound I-75 rest area just south of State Road 54. When the trooper arrived on scene, she found three black females completely naked. The women told the trooper they had showered and were "air drying."Troopers say the girls told them they had been at a relatives house in Lutz and got into an arugment. They had no where else to shower, so they bought soap and water and bathed themselves on the grass outside the rest stop building. The girls got dressed before speaking to troopers.As the trooper was attempting to gather their information, the three women ran and got into a white 2009 Nissan Sentra and traveled southbound into the northbound rest area entrance before turning back around and heading northbound before traveling north on I-75 toward State Road 52. The trooper initiated a pursuit, but the pursuit was canceled due to the pursuit not fitting FHP criteria, according to FHP. RECOMMENDED: 1277

  

When finding food is you daily goal, there’s a simple saying to live by: use everything, waste nothing.That is We Don’t Waste’s game plan for ending food waste. Five days a week, the Denver-based non-profit group stocks up on food that will be thrown out, often times for pretty superficial reasons. “If it has dirt on it, if it has a little bruising: landfill,” says Arlan Prebld, executive director and founder of We Don’t Waste. Preblud started the non-profit a few years ago by recovering food rejected by restaurants and grocery stores and distributing it from the trunk of his car. Fast-forward to today, his team collects enough food to fill a massive distribution center in north Denver.“Last year, we put out 31 million servings,” Preblud says. “The collateral benefit of all that is all that food you see and that we deliver on a regular daily basis would end up in the landfill.” And a lot of food ends up in landfills across the country. According to the United States Department of Agriculture, 133 billion pounds and 1 billion worth of food were wasted in 2010. Preblud adds that impact goes well beyond the economy and into the environment. “When you put food into a landfill, it generates CO2 equivalence," he says. "Methane gas destroying the atmosphere."In addition to emitting greenhouse gases, wasted food also wastes the resources it took to produce, package, sell and transport it. So, in theory, by picking up what would be food by the pallet-full and trucking it to those in need, We Don’t Waste is filling many needs. “It’s great that we have partners that care about these people as much as we do, because, as you know, must people don’t,” says Doyle Robinson of Sox Place, a drop-in center for homeless youth in Denver. We Don’t Waste delivers food to Sox Place a few times a week. Doyle, however, says much the gesture provides much more than meals. “It’s great to find people that care and they do this because they care,” he says. “There’s no money in this." 2003

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