临沧为什么宫颈一碰就出血-【临沧云洲医院】,临沧云洲医院,临沧好的医院看妇科,临沧怀孕多久能用试纸测试,临沧怀孕多长时间早孕试纸能试出来,临沧女早上尿完尿道刺痛,临沧宫颈炎的症状治疗,临沧怀孕多久可以用验孕棒检测出来
临沧为什么宫颈一碰就出血临沧阴道口长个肉芽,临沧什么症状是妇科炎症,临沧同房后阴道内痒,临沧治妇科那个权威,临沧月经怎样调节,临沧不孕不育属于什么科,临沧怎么能让例假来的快点
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) – More drive-in entertainment is coming to Escondido’s Westfield North County mall as summer comes to a close.In August, the California Center for the Arts, Escondido (CCAE) hosted several drive-in live concerts at the former Nordstrom parking lot at the mall on 272 E Via Rancho Parkway.From September through November, the same mall parking lot will be the site for weekly drive-in movie screenings. Spaces for more than 250 vehicles will be made available and spaced apart to keep moviegoers safely distanced.Doors for the screenings will open at 6:30 p.m. on a first-come, first-serve basis. Movies will begin at 8 p.m.The schedule for September:Thursday, Sept. 3: CarsThursday, Sept. 10: Inside OutFriday, Sept. 11: Jurassic ParkThursday, Sept. 17: TangledFriday, Sept. 18: Mamma Mia!Thursday, Sept. 24: ShrekFriday, Sept. 25: Indiana Jones: Raiders of the Lost ArkThe schedule for October and November is expected to be unveiled sometime in mid-September.Tickets are per car and can be purchased at artcenter.org/events or by calling 800-988-4253.Snacks can be bought at the same time tickets are purchased, and special drive-in dinner boxes and specials can be purchased at the screenings through the mall’s restaurant partners.A portion of ticket proceeds will benefit the CCAE, Escondido Community Foundation and Central San Diego Black Chamber of Commerce Foundation. 1406
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - Nearly 300 goats are munching away at brush on and around Cuyamaca College.The college contracted with Environmental Land Management and its goats to help with fire mitigation.A preserve surrounds the 165-acre campus. The goats and ELM staff and machinery will clear about 50 acres of brush in six to eight weeks. The goats are estimated to do 65 percent of the clearing work.Julianna Barnes, the President of Cuyamaca College, says the goats are a way to be pro-active during the fire season.“Usually we bring out an all-human crew with heavy machinery,” Barnes said, “but it’s actually 20 percent the cost of bringing in an all-human crew. And it’s more environmentally sound.”The goats will eat 7- to 10-percent of their body weight. Also, goats do not re-seed plant life in their excrement, according to the college.“We have a lot of non-native plants, and they’re highly flammable,” Barnes said, “(The goats) love to eat, and they love these non- native plants.” 994
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Police are searching for a man they say shot someone outside a liquor store in San Diego’s Mountain View neighborhood Saturday night.According to police, the incident happened on the 3700 block of Ocean View Boulevard at 10:10 p.m.Police say the suspect approached the 45-year-old man while at the liquor store and started an argument. During the argument, the suspect pulled out a gun and shot the 45-year-old before walking away.The victim was taken to the hospital with non-life threatening injuries by his mother. The suspect was only described as a black man wearing glasses, a black hoodie and baggy blue jeans. 645
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- On the first day of Kwanzaa, the WorldBeat Cultural Center is hosting a free event. The event includes traditional libations, drum call, Karamu traditional feast and Kwanzaa poetry by Johnnierenee Nia Nelson. Doors open at 6 p.m. at the WorldBeat Cultural Center in Balboa Park for the free event. Kwanzaa is an African American holiday celebrated from December 26 through January 1. The center will be celebrating five of seven days of Kwanzaa with master of ceremonies, Tukufu Kalonji. Kwanzaa is based on the agricultural celebrations of Africa called “the first fruits,” which were times of harvest. 632
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- People in the South Bay are still angry about a point-and-reward system for drug arrests that police say was never officially implemented.Team 10 broke the story last week, when an officer shared an email detailing the program."It's completely everything that we are against as law enforcement officers," said the whistleblower, who asked to hide his identity for fear of retaliation.READ: San Diego Police Chief launches internal investigation into "rewards for arrests" emailThe program offered points for different kinds of drug-related arrests in San Diego's South Bay. Whichever officers got the most points would be rewarded with better assignments.Activists in the South Bay say a program like that would unfairly target low-income communities, which already have large drug problems.They also say it shows there are still culture problems within the San Diego Police Department, incentivizing officers to discriminate."We don't want them here," says protest organizer Tasha Williamson. "We don't want them patrolling, we don't want them supervising, we don't want them to have any authority over people. We're all human beings and we want to be treated as such."But new Police Chief David Nisleit says the program never went into effect. He told reporters Friday that the email went out by mistake and was retracted within days."I can tell you right now this program was never authorized. Nor was it ever implemented," he said. "Nor did anybody every receive any rewards for making arrest."The protest will start at 6 p.m. in front of the San Diego Police Department Southern Division Headquarters, on 27th Street. 1670