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发布时间: 2025-06-01 10:57:10北京青年报社官方账号
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JEFFERSON COUNTY, Colorado — Jeffco Public Schools officials are exploring the possibility of asking voters for funds to build a new Columbine High School and tearing down the current building, where 13 people were killed in a mass shooting 20 years ago, 267

  濮阳东方医院男科看早泄收费不高   

KENOSHA, Wis. — A Wisconsin high school student said as soon as she read the first question on a school handout, something did not feel right."The first question on our sheet was 'What could Melissa have done differently to have avoided her sexual assault?' Like what could she have done to avoid her sexual assault? She didn't do anything. So, it was shocking for us like we didn't really know how to respond," said Bradford High School sophomore Haven Eigenberger.She said she and her classmates shared similar reactions, but did not say anything to their teacher at first because they did not think it would go anywhere. Eigenberger held off on doing the work and brought it up with her mom."I was disappointed when I saw the question because it goes at it in the wrong way, and it can actually trigger or re-traumatize somebody who's been through it," said Charity Eigenberger.Her mom shared the worksheet on Facebook Wednesday night. It has since been shared more than 12,000 times as of Saturday afternoon, drawing lots of reactions."Here’s what my answer would have been: 1. Not 2. A 3. Damn 4. Thing! 5. STOP VICTIM BLAMING!" one person said in response to the post.Charity Eigenberger said Bradford's principal called her the next morning and said the assignment had been pulled. 1305

  濮阳东方医院男科看早泄收费不高   

Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg revealed Tuesday that she traveled with retired Justice John Paul Stevens "in the last week of his life" to Lisbon, Portugal, for a conference where the two justices attended meetings, visited museums, vineyards and castles."Perhaps he knew at age 99, distant travel was a risk," Ginsburg said during Stevens' funeral at Arlington National Cemetery, "but he wanted to experience fully the joys of being alive, and he did just that almost to the end."Ginsburg, 86, said that as the "next eldest in attendance" she had the opportunity to ride with him on long drives and his mind "remained vibrant" and he spoke not only of court cases but footnotes in various opinions."His conversation was engaging, his memory amazing," she said. As they were leaving the US ambassador's residence during their last evening in Lisbon, Ginsburg told Stevens, "My dream is to remain on the court as long as you did."His immediate response, she said, was "Stay longer!"Justice Sonia Sotomayor also accompanied her colleagues on the trip which was hosted by New York University. The event was from July 8-12.Stevens died in Florida on the evening of July 16, according to a press release from the court, after suffering a stroke on July 15. The release did not say where Stevens was when he fell ill.Ginsburg talked about his approach to the law and his willingness to continue "learning on the job." She also mentioned that on the 30th anniversary of his appointment to the court, President Gerald Ford wrote a letter praising his nominee.A day after laying in repose at the Supreme Court, Stevens -- a World War II veteran -- was buried in a private ceremony. According to a court spokeswoman, there was a Navy casket team, a firing team and a bugler.Stevens served in the United States Navy from 1942 to 1945 and was awarded the Bronze Star for his service on a codebreaking team.The private service -- closed to the press -- was also attended by Stevens' former clerks. On Monday, 70 of them lined the stairs of the Supreme Court as the casket was carried to the Great Hall for a day of mourning. The clerks took turns standing vigil as visitors, including President Donald Trump, stopped by to pay their respects.At Tuesday's private funeral, David Barron, who served as a clerk during the 1995-96 term and is now a judge on the 1st US Circuit Court of Appeals, called his former boss "unassuming" but "supremely competent.""He believed fiercely in independence, in not going along with the crowd, in stating your own views no matter how distinctive, and in the capacity of the country to handle disagreement, even strong disagreement, and to learn from it, if respectfully offered and respectfully received," Barron said.Another eulogy was delivered by Stevens' granddaughter, Hannah Mullen, who said that he was the "great Justice, the great man" but that he was also "the greatest grandpa in the world.""He was the kind of grandpa who taught us how to catch lightning bugs," she said, adding that he used his anti-trust skills to try to "trounce" his grandson John in Monopoly.She spoke about his career, his big dissents and the opinions he wrote that no other justice joined."I hope like him, we remain graceful in victory and undaunted in defeat -- brave enough to dissent and, if no one will join us, brave enough to dissent alone," she said. 3374

  

In a series of emotional interviews on Tuesday, George Floyd's daughter and her mother remembered Floyd as a "good man" and "super fun dad."Roxy Washington, the mother of Floyd's 6-year-old daughter Gianna, told reporters that she hopes the officers who arrested him face consequences for Floyd's death."This is what those officers took from me," Washington said through tears. "At the end of the day, they get to go home and be with their families. Gianna does not have a father. He will never see her grow up, graduate. He will never walk her down the aisle. If she has a problem and needs her dad, she does not have that anymore."Washington added that even though she and Floyd and their "ups and downs," she still considered him a good person."I'm here for my baby, and I miss George because I want justice for him. I want justice for him because he was good. No matter what anybody says, he was a good man. And this is the proof that he was good," Washington said.In a later interview, Washington described talking to Gianna and telling her how her father had died. She said she wasn't planning on revealing everything about her father's death, but Gianna overheard TV coverage."She said, 'Mom, something is going on with my family.' I said, 'why do you say that?' And she said, 'because I hear them saying my daddy's name on TV," Washington said. "She wanted to know how he died. And the only thing that I can tell is he couldn't breathe."Gianna described her father to reporters as a "super fun dad" who often carried her on his back.A video of Gianna taken on Tuesday, which was later shared on Twitter by Bernice King, the daughter of Martin Luther King, Jr., Gianna said that her father "changed the world." 1731

  

Jessi Combs, who was dubbed "the fastest woman on four wheels," is dead at 39 years old after crashing while attempting to break her own land speed record in a jet-powered vehicle in southeast Oregon.Combs, a race car driver, earned the title of the "fastest woman on four wheels" after she set a record of 398 mph in her jet-powered North American Eagle Supersonic Speed Challenger in 2013. The race car driver died Tuesday in the Alvord Desert, the Harney County Sheriff's Office said. In addition to being a record-setting race car driver, Combs was also a TV personality, appearing on shows such as "MythBusters" and "Overhaulin.' ""She was a brilliant & too-notch builder, engineer, driver, fabricator, and science communicator, & strove everyday to encourage others by her prodigious example," said former "MythBusters" co-host Adam Savage. "She was also a colleague, and we are lesser for her absence."On Tuesday, she was attempting to go faster when she crashed."On August 27, 2019 at approximately 4:00PM the Harney County 911 Center received a call reporting that a jet car attempting to break a land speed record on the Alvord Desert had crashed leading to one fatality," the sheriff's office said.Correction: Jessi Combs was 39 years old when she died. An earlier version of this story incorrectly stated her age was 36. 1352

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