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肾结石去医院怎么处理重庆
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钱江晚报

发布时间: 2025-05-23 22:03:24北京青年报社官方账号
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  肾结石去医院怎么处理重庆   

There's about to be a new Barbie doll on the shelves, with flowers on her dress and a skull painted on her face.It's the Dia de los Muertos Barbie, or Day of the Dead Barbie. The collectible doll, which will be released on Thursday, celebrates the annual Mexican festival, in which people honor their departed loved ones.The doll "honors the traditions, symbols and rituals often seen throughout this time," said Mattel, the toy company that owns the Barbie brand.Barbie's long black dress is embroidered with hearts and butterflies, with colorful ruffled sleeves. Her face is painted with a skull -- a popular practice during the festival, when revelers dress up in colorful costumes and hold parades. On top of the doll's head rests a crown with monarch butterflies and marigolds.Monarch butterflies typically migrate in Mexico for the winter and arrive around the same time as the festival, and they have come to symbolize the souls of loved ones coming back to visit. Marigolds are often used to decorate homes during the holiday.This year, Dia de los Muertos will take place on November 1 and 2. On top of parties and parades, families often set up ofrendas, or altars, featuring photographs of late relatives as well as their favorite food and drinks. People also leave representations of human skeletons and skulls, and other offerings, along roads and in graveyards.The holiday was also placed on UNESCO's Intangible Cultural Heritage of Humanity list in 2008, and has been seeing increased visibility in popular culture and media in the United States. The holiday inspired the 2017 Pixar film "Coco," which was hailed as "the movie Latinos have been waiting for" and went on to win two Academy Awards.Now, as the holiday approaches, there are signs of celebration in the US, with sugar skulls going on sale and makeup artists booked. 1858

  肾结石去医院怎么处理重庆   

The Smithsonian Institution is working to document history as it happens. It's asking ordinary people and organizations to set things aside that will help tell the story of COVID-19.“America will not be the same after this event,” said Alexandra Lord, Chair and Curator of the Medicine and Science Division at the National Museum of American History. Lord says a task force is looking for items that will show the full impact of the coronavirus. They've been in touch with the U.S. Public Health Service to hold onto medical supplies, like ventilators, test kits and masks.Objects from corporations and small businesses can help show the massive economic impact.Curators are even looking into how to document working, learning and spending time together through Zoom calls.“We have access to all sorts of technology that enables us to talk to family and friends, and that's really different from past pandemics,” said Lord. “We really want to mark that in some way.”Right now, curators are just flagging the objects they're interested in. They'll start physically collecting once their offices reopen, but there's no cutoff to stop.“In fact, it's more than probable that 40, 50 years from now, curators at the Smithsonian may find objects in someone's attic that were related to COVID-19 and we may feel at the time, this is a really fabulous object we really want to bring it in to the museum,” said Lord. Some objects will be included in a previously planned exhibit called "In Sickness and in Health." That's scheduled to open in 2021.If you'd like to suggest something for curators to consider, send an email with pictures and description to 1658

  肾结石去医院怎么处理重庆   

The pictures are horrific, and the stories behind the devastating crashes are heartbreaking.In one accident, 17-year-old Annaleah and 13-year-old Mary died in the backseat of their car, after a truck hit them and pushed the car underneath a tractor-trailer. Their mother, Marianne Karth, is haunted by it. “It's a very devastating crash. It's like the most devasting you can have,” Karth says. Lois Durso also lost her 26-old-daughter, Roya, in one of these same types of crashes.“Her hair was on the tires of the trailer, so we know it crushed her,” Durso recalls. Eric Hein experienced a similar tragedy. His 16-year-old son, Riley, died on his way to marching band practice after getting trapped underneath a tractor-trailer truck.“He went underneath the trailer,” Hein recalls. “His car got dragged for half a mile until it was engulfed in flames, and the fire killed him.” Tragedy brought all three parents together. Now, perseverance pushes them forward as they take steps to prevent these types of crashes. Karth and Durso organized a crash test in Washington, D.C. just weeks after members of Congress reintroduced the Stop Underrides Act, which would update and strengthen safety laws, including requiring tractor trailers to have guards on the sides to help prevent cars from ending up underneath them.“Seeing is believing, and for them to witness with their own eyes and own ears and to have it be something they see,” Karth says of their crash test. “Crash into the side of the trailer with a side guard and without to see the life and death difference.” Past legislation has stalled, but the parents hope this dramatic demonstration will be enough to get Congress to take action. Tests have shown when installed properly, guards can make a difference and keep cars from sliding underneath trailers. “It's not the crash that kills, it's the underride,” explains Durso. “If you can prevent the underride, there's a chance the vehicle occupants will survive.” Groups representing the trucking industry have concerns about the cost and say the guards add extra weight and can impact how tractor trailers can maneuver. However, parents say those concerns will not slow down their effort and they remain driven to save lives. “I lost my son. I don't want somebody else to go through this tragedy. These are preventable deaths,” says Hein. 2357

  

The United States has escalated its trade war with China, hiking tariffs on 0 billion worth of Chinese exports hours after trade talks held in Washington 169

  

This year's edition of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School yearbook features some very good boys and girls.Among the photos of students and staff are the furry, smiling faces of the 14 therapy dogs that have kept MSD students and staff company since the day they returned to school following last year's mass shooting.Their presence has brought joy and comfort when the MSD community needed it most, so it only seemed right to honor them with a special yearbook page and some expert canine portraiture."The kids love having the dogs on campus, and honestly, do so we," yearbook adviser Sarah Lerner told CNN.Lerner said the dogs are like celebrities around school, and the idea to include their pictures came after another resident dog, who belongs to the school's media specialist, got her picture taken on school picture day."The editors and I started talking, and we decided we wanted to have all the dogs in the book," Lerner said. So on make-up picture day, the photography area was crowded with eager, well-behaved dogs ready to say cheese for the camera.The result, well, speaks for itself. Who wouldn't crack a smile looking at those photogenic faces?"(The students) love it," Lerner said. "They think it's the greatest thing ever."But the dogs' presence on campus isn't just for smiles and laughs, and Lerner stressed that they're never a distraction to students."They are trained therapy dogs," Lerner said. "They're never unattended, they're always on a leash and they're so good-natured and well-mannered. They bring a sense of comfort and calm and relaxation. It's wonderful."Lerner said the dogs are brought to the school by volunteer handlers from various canine organizations. With a student body eager for moments of healing and goodness, it's no wonder the dogs quickly became like family.And yes, all of the students want them to sign their yearbooks. 1887

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