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和田泌尿男科医院
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发布时间: 2025-05-30 02:55:28北京青年报社官方账号
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It’s all in support of Terell Jensen, an 18-year-old who is now paralyzed in his hands and legs after a sledding accident.The last time he could walk and fully use his hands was Nov. 24, when his family was out near Strawberry Reservoir looking for their Christmas tree. “I was being pulled behind an ATV and I just got flung and went into the little ditch,” Terell said. Hitting his back on a rock, the accident left him paralyzed. “Mentally, it’s really tough sometimes, and you really have to push yourself to stay positive,” he said. Kari Jensen, Terell's mother, said it was a miracle they had cellphone service when the accident happened and that the helicopter was able to pick her son up. 698

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as their home burned down.Sunday night, Valerie and Alex Bujack were sleeping when their 14-year-old son Carter burst into their room, alerting them to the growing fire inside their home."I think Carter saved our family last night," Valerie Bujack said. "He woke up, knew something was wrong, smelled something, ran downstairs and got my daughter — his little sister — and they both came running upstairs because at that point smoke had started coming into the house."Kansas City, Missouri, firefighters responded to a call around 10:50 p.m. for what would become a two-alarm fire.While Bujack and her two children escaped out the back door, her husband, Alex, went back upstairs to get the family dog, only to throw him down the stairs before crawling his way out of the fully engulfed home. By then, both cars were exploding."They were just screaming. I mean you can hear my daughter on the Ring doorbell. I mean, she was just screaming, 'Get out, get out,'" Valerie Bujack said. 983

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It’s a nonprofit that began during the pandemic taking struggling restaurants and pairing them with meal orders donated to first responders. Off Their Plate currently operates in nine cities across the U.S. from New York City to San Francisco. “We purchase meals at a meal from our restaurant partners,” Tiwari said. “Half of the cost of each meal goes directly to wages.” That, in turn, allows restaurants, like Emilie’s, to hire back furloughed workers. “We normally have 67,” said Tien. “And then when this first happened, we dropped down to around 15, but now we're back up to 26.” The orders coming in through Off Their Plate also allowed Emilie’s to keep providing health insurance to all its workers, even those they still haven’t been able to hire back. It’s all possible because of donations from corporations and individuals, who’ve given more than million to the cause and restored more than four thousand restaurant worker shifts. “I’m excited about giving people some source of income through this pandemic,” said Tiwari. Yet, Off Their Plate, believes that, ideally, their nonprofit won’t be around forever. “The hope is that the restaurant industry and the health care workers industry really get back to normal, where we're not needed,” Tiwari said. It’s a normalcy Chef Kevin Tien is aiming for – to get every employee back. “Even if it takes one at a time and it takes a little bit longer,” Chief Tien, “but we want to be back.”Off Their Plate is affiliated with the nonprofit “World Central Kitchen.” It’s run by famed restaurant owner and Chef Jose Andres, known for providing free meals to people after the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, Hurricane Maria in Puerto Rico and now at his restaurants around the U.S. during the pandemic. 1758

  

as well as cars on the property.The abstinence of alcohol is a core belief of Muslims, and pouring alcohol on an Islamic place of worship is considered an anti-Islamic slur.According to Islamic Center of Tucson board member Maria Molina, people standing on the balcony of an apartment building next door were responsible."Alcohol-related incidents are a chronic problem for the Center," Molina wrote in an email. "ICT has suffered from vandalism, has been the target of glass bottles being thrown from neighboring apartment buildings, and congregation members have had their windshields smashed by projectiles thrown from the same apartment balconies.Molina also claims children at the center have been subjected to "racist remarks and obscenities" shouted at them by drunk pedestrians."The center is not only a place for peaceful prayer; it is the regular venue for children's classes, activities, and community events. These are frequently held both in and outdoors," Molina said.The Islamic Center is located less than a mile from the campus of the University of Arizona, and Molina fears that the start of classes at the college could lead to more threats against its members. "With the start of the new school year at the University of Arizona, we are extremely concerned that lack of attention to this situation will result in an escalation of activity. The situation needs to be rectified before someone is hurt."The center has faced regular vandalism since 1467

  

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