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US-born giant panda Bei Bei arrived finally at his new home in Ya'an, in China's Sichuan province, on Thursday.The four-year-old arrived in China on Wednesday after a transcontinental flight on a FedEx plane dubbed the “Panda Express”.He was then transferred by lorry to the Ya’an Bifengxia Base of the Giant Panda Conservation and Research Center.State media said Bei Bei was in good health and had tucked into a breakfast of bamboo upon arrival.The panda will be quarantined for one month while he adjusts to his new home.State media said he would have to get used to the time difference, local foods and the Sichuanese dialect.Bei Bei was conceived through artificial insemination and born to the National Zoo’s Mei Xiang and Tian Tian in 2015.His name, which means “treasure” in Chinese, was selected by then-first lady Michelle Obama and China's first lady Peng Liyuan.The panda quickly became a favorite with visitors — and on the zoo’s popular Panda Cam.Fans bid a bittersweet farewell to the cub online with the hashtag #byebyebeibei.Once Bei Bei reaches sexual maturity at age six, he will enter China’s captive breeding program.The program is credited with bringing giant pandas back from the brink of extinction.They live mainly in Sichuan’s bamboo-covered mountains and are threatened by habitat loss. 1325
WASHINGTON – Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has been hospitalized. His campaign said in a statement Wednesday that the U.S. senator from Vermont experienced chest pains during an event Tuesday evening and testing found he had a blockage in one artery. Officials say two stents were successfully inserted in the 78-year-old’s heart.“Sen. Sanders is conversing and in good spirits. He will be resting up over the next few days,” wrote the campaign in a statement. Sanders will remain off the campaign trail and all his events have been canceled until further notice. Some of Sanders’ primary competitors expressed support for the senator on Twitter: 678

UPDATE JULY 3: The NFL says that there was no violation of the personal conduct policy by Dallas Cowboys' running back Ezekiel Elliott at the Electric Daisy Carnival in May.Here is their statement: 209
Two charter flights carrying cruise ship passengers from Japan landed at military bases in California and Texas overnight, starting the clock on a quarantine period to ensure passengers don’t have 209
WALTON, Ky. — Shortly after Our Lady of the Sacred Heart and Assumption Academy in Walton, Kentucky, reported 32 cases of chickenpox at the elementary school, a high school student filed a lawsuit against the Northern Kentucky Health Department, claiming it had directed Assumption Academy to bar him from participating in extracurricular activities because he had not received a vaccine. School and health officials have been working to contain the outbreak since February, said Dr. Lynne Saddler, the district director of health for the Northern Kentucky Health Department. According to the suit, which was filed in Boone County Circuit Court, 18-year-old Jerome Kunkel's battle with the health department started then. He and his parents had always declined the vaccine because of his conservative Catholic faith. Although the modern chickenpox vaccine does not contain any fetal tissue, it and several others were developed in the 1960s using cell lines derived from a pair of aborted fetuses. “Among other fundamental and deeply held religious beliefs of Mr. Kunkel, and the beliefs of his family, is that the use of any vaccine that is derived from aborted fetal cells is immoral, illegal and sinful,” the suit reads.The first case of chickenpox at Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Elementary School, which was detected in mid-February, spurred the Northern Kentucky Health Department to inform the parish that its students could not participate in or attend extracurricular activities unless they were found to be immune from the virus, according to the suit.Students subsequently not found to be immune, including Kunkel, were then barred from extracurriculars. The lawsuit alleges the health department’s epidemiology manager made derisive comments about Kunkel's faith and enacted the ban due to a specific religious animus. Later, when additional cases of chickenpox were discovered, additional bans were enacted. In an email cited in the suit, the epidemiology manager describes them as being for the protection of the public.By Friday, the health department had announced that all Sacred Heart and Assumption students without proof of vaccination or proof of immunity will not be allowed to go to school until 21 days after the onset of rash for the last person to have chickenpox. All games, events and activities are also canceled until 21 days after the last person is infected. Kunkel's lawsuit alleges these actions are infringements on his right to freedom of religion and expression. It seeks to end the bans and recoup legal costs.Instances of people 2616
来源:资阳报