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山西肛裂的症状
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发布时间: 2025-05-30 13:15:10北京青年报社官方账号
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  山西肛裂的症状   

PONTIAC, Mich. (WXYZ) — An Oakland County, Michigan, judge ruled Monday to keep a high school sophomore in detention after violating probation by failing to complete online school work. The Oakland County Children’s Village TAG program provides several forms of therapy, counseling and educational support, but defense attorneys argue it is not an appropriate legal action.Judge Mary Ellen Brennan says she had to consider the actions that placed Grace on probation to begin with. Last fall, arguments between the teen and her mother turned violent. The judge says the mother was the victim and the daughter the aggressor.“How many times does she get to jump her mom before she’s a threat? How many times?” Judge Brennan said.“That is not the question in front of the court,” Defense Attorney Saima Khalil responded.“That’s the question I’m asking you. How many times?” said Judge Brennan.Fifteen-year-old Grace's story has gained national attention. She was placed in juvenile detention in June after violating probation by failing to complete online school assignments in May. The judge says the teen's mother repeatedly called a case worker for help.During court proceedings Monday, the defense pointed out that a lot of students struggled with virtual classwork, but the judge says Grace's mom was the one who made repeated calls to the case worker saying her daughter refused to get out of bed, wouldn't do her school work and needed help.Khalil and fellow defense attorney Jon Beirnet went head-to-head with Judge Brennan, who continued to bring up the original violation for Grace, which included physical altercations with her mother last fall."The probation violation had nothing to do with a violent act. There is no tampering of a GPS tether," a defense lawyer stated.That probation violation put the high school sophomore in juvenile detention during a pandemic.Grace attends Birmingham Groves High School, where she receives support for ADHD. Grace's school closed in March like everything else when Gov. Gretchen Whitmer issued a stay-home order.When classwork was made available online, Grace's attorney says it wasn't required. There was no academic or classroom consequence. Judge Brennan said Grace's mother had repeatedly called the case worker for help.Outside the courtroom, demonstrators demanded Grace's release."We must dismantle the school to prison pipeline," said Tylene Henry with Michigan Liberation Action Fund.The action fund is asking for support, not punishment.In the courtroom, Grace spoke before the judge."Each day I try to be a better person than I was the last," the teen said. "And I’ve been doing that since even before I was in this situation. And I’m getting behind in my actual schooling while here. The schooling here is beneath my level of education."Judge Brennan insisted Grace should continue in the detention program, which offers therapy while her mother takes parenting classes."The goal is you and mom safe healthy and happy in the home, we disagree about what that looks like," The judge said. "To get to that goal... you think you’re ready, I think you’re not. I think you’re exactly where you’re supposed to be; you're blooming there."There was another motion filed by the defense attorneys. They are expecting a written decision at some point. Grace's next court hearing is in September.This article was written by Jennifer Ann Wilson for WXYZ. 3411

  山西肛裂的症状   

President Donald Trump claimed Tuesday that New Zealand was experiencing a coronavirus “spike” following a handful of cases being discovered on the island nation after going three months without a reported case.“There were holding up names of countries and now they're saying, 'Whoops,' like even New Zealand, you see what's going on in New Zealand,” Trump said on Tuesday. “’They beat it, they beat it' it was like front page 'they beat it,' because they wanted to show me something. The problem is big surge in New Zealand so you know, it's terrible. We don't want that.”But New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern snapped back at Trump.“I don't think there's any comparison between New Zealand's current cluster and the tens of thousands of cases that are being seen daily in the United States,” Ardern said early Wednesday in New Zealand. “Obviously, every country is experiencing its own fight with COVID-19. It is a tricky virus, but not one where I would compare New Zealand's current status to the United States."According to the New Zealand Ministry of Health, the island nation has recorded 90 coronavirus cases in the last week, generally confirmed to the Auckland region. On Tuesday, New Zealand reported 13 new cases. Meanwhile the US is averaging more than 40,000 cases per day.New Zealand has a much smaller population than the US with 5 million residents. Per 1 million people, New Zealand has 2.5 cases. The US has 121 cases per 1 million residents.After generally lifting most social distancing measures throughout the nation, the country has gone back to a heightened state of alert, especially in the Auckland region, which is at a Level 3 alert. The government has also set the nation’s parliamentary election back four weeks to October 17.Unlike in the US where the date of the election is set by statute, New Zealand’s governor-general sets the date of the election, given it is within a three-year timeframe from the previous election. 1969

  山西肛裂的症状   

President Donald Trump decried the Supreme Court's decision to block his plan to end DACA on Thursday, calling the ruling "horrible & politically charged."Trump added that recent decisions by the Supreme Court are "shotgun blasts into the face of people that are proud to call themselves Republicans or Conservatives."Conservatives currently hold a 5-4 majority on the Supreme Court."Do you get the impression that the Supreme Court doesn't like me?" Trump tweeted minutes later.On Wednesday, the Supreme Court ruled against Trump's plan to end Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals or DACA. President Barack Obama established the program in 2012 when lawmakers could not reach a compromise on immigration reform.The program allows more than 500,000 undocumented immigrants to continue working in the United States.In September 2017, Trump announced he planned to end the program after a six-month delay. Several lawsuits were filed against the action, keeping the program running.The decision came days after the Court ruled that employees could not be fired or disciplined for their sexual orientation under the 1964 Civil Rights Act. 1149

  

POWAY, Calif. (KGTV) -- A family in Poway escaped after their home burst into flames in Poway Sunday morning. The fire started at a home on the 17000 block of St. Andrews Drive around 3 a.m. According to firefighters, crews were able to extinguish the flames in most of the attic, but the home was a total loss. A man inside the home at the time of the fire says he and his adult son woke up to the smoke alarms going off. "I never thought that things would happen this quickly in a fire that I was involved with in the house. I though well, I'll have time to get stuff out. It going to be in one part of the house. But this thing was like, you couldn't go in any part of the house after we were aware of it for a minute or two,” said homeowner Greg Heer. Heer said they were able to get their two dogs out of the home, but the flames were too intense to return and rescue several kittens.A board and care home next door had to be evacuated as crews battled the flame. Firefighters say it’s still unclear what caused the fire. 1035

  

PORTLAND, Ore. -- Carrying approximately a million books within its walls, Powell’s is a place where readers can get lost for hours both in the store, and in the pages of words thoughtfully arranged by thousands of authors. Emily Powell is a third-generation owner of the iconic independent bookstore.“I think the reason we’re so big and so noteworthy 50 years into our history is really the mix of new and used inventory on the shelf together," Powell said. "Very few folks do that in any industry. Certainly, it was unusual in the book industry at the time, and it’s still somewhat unusual still to this day.”Book lovers travel from all over to explore the so-called "City of Books," thrifting for old books with new ideas.“This is one of my favorite books,” Powell said.It could be a rare book, a timely book, or a book you’ve never heard of before.“It really resonates whether you’re a book lover or just someone with an interest in anything. You just have to find your corner of the store and dive deep into that section.”Powell’s is the world’s largest independent bookstore. The owners recently decided to pull their books from Amazon’s virtual shelves. Some say the world’s largest online marketplace has become a threat to local bookstore culture.“They extract a commission but they also ask for certain customer-service treatment and ways of behaving that are not how we would ordinarily run our business,” Powell said.Powell says business with Amazon became more and more costly, and with the pandemic, she says they needed to find a way forward that is sustainable for Powell’s and the community.“We need to be a part of an ecosystem that’s healthy and vital, and so we have to be part of building that ecosystem and hence the choice to cut off our Amazon business,” Powell said.Powell’s isn’t the only independent retailer struggling to compete with a company offering anything and everything at a cheap price with quick and free shipping. Powell’s has been turning to its e-commerce site during the pandemic as online sales have become essential, but not every local bookstore can afford to have its own book-sale website.“Bookshop is an online bookstore that supports local mom-and-pop, brick-and-mortar independent bookstores,” Bookshop founder Andy Hunter said.Andy Hunter started Bookshop in January. It’s a free way for bookstores to create an online shop to sell to its customers.“They can just go to our website, scroll down to the footer, there will be a ‘become an affiliate’ link and then they can onboard and they can create a shop in under an hour," Hunter said. "Really maybe half an hour. It’s as easy as setting up a Facebook page.”We reached out to Amazon for comment on this book-selling trend, but have yet to hear back. Hunter says Bookshop has already captured nearly 2% of Amazon’s market share for books. He’s hoping that percentage will continue to rise.“If we lose independent bookstores, the importance of books in our culture will be diminished,” Hunter said.Powell says spending money at a local bookstore instead of Amazon keeps the dollars in the community. She says choosing to stop sales through Amazon was a difficult decision, but a necessary one."We’ve contemplated it for years because we know that staying with Amazon was not the best choice for our business, but it’s very hard to give up sales that you really need to keep surviving one way or another,” Powell said.Her hope for Powell’s Books is that they can connect people to the value of reading while continuing to evolve with the changes of the future.“We’re so accustomed in our modern age to the idea that the computer is the best way to find anything, but in fact, it’s very difficult to replicate the in-person experience of a bookstore,” Powell said.She says certain books will always stay relevant. 3820

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