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Sylvia Hatchell, the University of North Carolina's celebrated women's basketball coach, made racially offensive remarks to her players, according to 162
Sander Vanocur, known for his tough questioning as a White House reporter, has died at the age of 91, his family confirmed to the 142

Science centers, Smithsonian centers, and art museums are shutting down amid the spread of coronavirus. On Thursday evening, the Smithsonian museums, galleries and National Zoo will all close on Saturday indefinitely. The news comes as a hit to the D.C., which was also slated to host the Cherry Blossom Festival later in the month. The Smithsonian issued the following statement:"The health and safety of Smithsonian visitors, staff and volunteers is a top priority. We are closely monitoring the coronavirus situation and maintain ongoing communication with local health officials and the Centers for Disease Controland Prevention. Due to the rapidly changing nature of the situation, we are not announcing a reopening date at this time and will provide updates on a week-to-week basis on our websites. Follow the Smithsonian on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter for immediate updates @smithsonian."The situation is similar in New York, where the Metropolitan Museum of Art is shutting down indefinitely. Here is what The Met had to say:"We will be closing all three locations—The Met Fifth Avenue, The Met Breuer, and The Met Cloisters—temporarily starting tomorrow, March 13, to support New York City’s effort to contain the spread of COVID-19. The Museum will undertake a thorough cleaning and plans to announce next steps early next week. While we don’t have any confirmed cases connected to the Museum, we believe that we must do all that we can to ensure a safe and healthy environment for our community which at this time calls for us to minimize gatherings while maintaining the cleanest environment possible. We look forward to soon announcing when we’ll be able to welcome our staff and visitors back to the Museum.” 1738
Several years ago, Oliver came to the U.S. to escape genocide in Central Africa.“I’m from the southwestern part of Cameroon. Just almost the border with Nigeria,” Oliver said. “Number one reason why we’re coming here is for safety.”He says he didn’t have very many rights in his country of origin and he feared for his life.“If I didn’t come here, I don’t think I’d be alive. Either I’d be dead, or I’d be in jail.”So he came to the U.S. to seek asylum. He was held in an ICE detention facility during the immigration process. Eventually, Oliver won his asylum case, and he was released, but with no money or family to help him transition into U.S. society.“I didn’t even know what is Colorado,” Oliver said.He says a security guard told him about 760
Public pools in the U.S. will look very different this summer if they open at all with the coronavirus threat still looming. Among the changes pools are planning are putting their mostly teenage lifeguards in charge of maintaining social distancing among patrons and spotting COVID-19 symptoms. Dr. Justin Sempsrott, the medical director for the lifeguard certification program Starguard Elite, says pools also plan to screen patrons' temperatures, require lifeguards to wear masks and significantly reduce the number of swimmers allowed in the water and locker rooms. Industry groups and companies, meanwhile, report that sales of inflatable pools, swimming gear and kayaks are up. 694
来源:资阳报