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发布时间: 2025-05-28 04:02:12北京青年报社官方账号
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RICHMOND, Va. -- An electrified crowd gathered at the Virginia State Capitol Thursday morning in support of legislation that would 143

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TAMPA, Fla. — A new academic logo for the University of South Florida that cost nearly ,000 to design and refine is a huge dud with students, who have started a petition to bring back the old academic logo.Call it a bull brouhaha!USF students are not happy with the new school logo that’s already gone through a redesign and is now costing the bay area-university approximately ,000. The new logo is a bright arty bull with ornate “USF” lettering and it debuted in September 2018. And after the university received negative feedback on the logo, they made slight revisions this month. The revisions were made "to address feedback from our audiences, as well as campus communicators regarding evolving challenges with printing, signage and apparel applications," according to a spokesperson for the university.Calling it everything from “laughable” to a ripoff of finance company Merrill Lynch’s own bull mascot, students have started a petition to bring back the old USF logo: the “U” with bull horns.Other complaints about the logo introduced in September 2018 involve the new logo’s colors, which are a brighter green and yellow than the school’s classic dark green and gold.After paying nearly ,000 for a redesign — the changes include a shorter bull tail, slightly different leg placement, a connection of the front leg to the rest of the body — USF says they’re sticking with the new logo.Breaking down the cost of the logo, according to USF:The initial logo design done in September 2018: ,000Adapting the design and creating logo lockdowns for all college, schools, programs, departments and other entities across the University: ,450March 2019 design changes/refinements: ,835Check out a transparent overlay we designed to compare the old logo to the new logo. (*note the color of the logo did not change, the old logo is just lowered to 35 percent opacity to show the difference in designs)Approximately six months ago, USF student Alexis Loukota started 1991

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Rod Rosenstein took aim at James Comey Monday, calling him a "partisan pundit" in prepared remarks for a speech that included the most public retelling yet of the twists and turns of the Russia investigation by the man who oversaw it.Speaking to a group of business and civic leaders in Baltimore, the former deputy attorney general -- just days removed from a tumultuous tenure at the Department of Justice -- recounted how he had prepared a memo in 2017 that supported President Donald Trump's firing of Comey, then the FBI director, and defended his decision to appoint Robert Mueller as a special counsel in the wake of that firing.Rosenstein also responded directly to a barb from the former FBI director, who said at a CNN town hall last week that Rosenstein's character wasn't strong and that his soul had been "eaten" by his time in the Trump administration."Now the former director is a partisan pundit, selling books and earning speaking fees while speculating about the strength of my character and the fate of my immortal soul. That is disappointing," Rosenstein said.In his speech before a crowd of nearly 1,000 people at the annual Greater Baltimore Committee dinner, Rosenstein acknowledged the unusual role he played in the drama of Trump's Washington -- as a Republican held up by the left for stewarding the Mueller probe."People spend a lot of time debating whose side I was on, based on who seemed to benefit most from any individual decision," Rosenstein said. "But trying to infer partisanship from law enforcement decisions is a category error. It uses the wrong frame of reference."On Monday, with the frame of hindsight, Rosenstein told the audience why he disagreed with Comey's handling of the Hillary Clinton email investigation, and how he put those concerns in a memo at Trump's request.Rosenstein also remembered how he disobeyed Trump's request to include in that memo that Comey had told Trump that he wasn't under investigation -- "because, one, I had no personal knowledge of what the director said, and two, in any event, it was not relevant to my memo" -- and criticized the way the President carried out the firing."If I had been the decisionmaker, the removal would have been handled very differently, with far more respect and far less drama," Rosenstein said.Rosenstein didn't quote Mueller in his evening remarks -- like he did in a separate appearance at the University of Baltimore Law School earlier Monday -- but he did borrow a line from Attorney General Bill Barr, aligning himself with Barr's views on the appointment of special counsels.Rosenstein stood by his decision to appoint Mueller and challenged critics to "explain what they would have done with the details we knew at the time.""As acting attorney general, it was my responsibility to make sure that the Department of Justice would conduct an independent investigation; complete it expeditiously; hold perpetrators accountable if warranted; and work with partner agencies to counter foreign agents and deter crimes. We achieved those goals," Rosenstein said.Still, he expressed his displeasure with the process, noting "I disfavor special counsels.""I am glad that I only needed to appoint one in 25 months," Rosenstein said. 3247

  

PUEBLO, Colo. — On the afternoon of November 4, 2019, the U.S. Attorney's office announced the arrest of Richard Holzer, a white supremacist who they say had plans to bomb a Jewish synagogue in Pueblo,Colorado, about two hours south of Denver. "We are here today to announce that federal law enforcement, working in conjunction with the Pueblo Police Department, has successfully stopped what we believe to be an imminent threat of domestic terrorism against a Colorado religious institution," authorities said.Authorities say Holzer met up with three undercover FBI agents to purchase bombs in a planned attack against Temple Emanuel, the second oldest synagogue in the state.According to a criminal complaint, FBI agents had been talking with Holzer since September, tracking multiple Facebook accounts of his in which he talked to other white supremacists through private messages about attacking Jewish people. In one message, Holzer said, "I wish the Holocaust really did happen." Holzer told undercover agents he hired someone to poison the synagogue's water supply and was now preparing for a "racial holy war.""Jewish community is tiny in Pueblo," one Colorado woman said. "And we all know each other and support one another and our children."Thirty-five families are part of this small congregation. Michael Atlas-Acuna, the president of Temple Emanuel's board of directors, is still a bit shaken by the plot to blow up a synagogue that was built in 1900. "I looked at the building and the inside, and I thought, 'God, we could have lost this,' " he said.If there's a silver lining to take away from the foiled terror plot, it's that the congregation is now stronger than ever before. It was a packed house at a recent Friday night Shabbat service.The congregation called for peace and happiness, and they said they won't let what happened scare them away. "We're going to be here another 100 years," Atlas-Acuna said. "We're going to take the right precautions that we need to take in order to be safe. Maybe the reason was to wake everybody up and realize that there is that threat out there, and to bring everybody together, and I think the whole community is going to be that much more alert." If convicted, Holzer faces up to 50 years in prison. 2277

  

SOAVE, Italy (AP) — Archaeologists have briefly revealed a well-preserved mosaic floor of an ancient Roman villa first discovered almost a century ago near the northern Italian city of Verona. 205

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