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濮阳东方医院割包皮专业吗
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发布时间: 2025-06-01 16:15:41北京青年报社官方账号
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There's a new way to turn your iPhone into a body cam to record your interaction with police when you get pulled over.It's possible through a new feature with Apple's latest iOS 12. The newest iOS allows you to download an app called Shortcuts.Shortcuts allows users to build their own intricate demands for Siri that may involve using multiple apps instead of just one.Once you go through all the steps to make sure the shortcut works, you should be able to say "Hey Siri, I'm getting pulled over.""If people want to add more and more technology to their lives, the police have nothing to fear about this," said 13 Action News Crime and Safety Expert Retired Metro Lieutenant Randy Sutton.The shortcut will also text your video and location information to someone you choose to be your emergency contact.The creator admits the vast majority of the time this shortcut won't even be necessary. 900

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This election season, Demetrius Short is hustling to get his people to the polls.“We have the wonderful opportunity as African American men to be here today,” Short said to a group of young African American voters outside a polling site in Nashville, Tennessee. “The next John Lewis might be right here.”Short is the founder and CEO of the Transformation Life Center and Steps of Success 5K, nonprofits mentoring youth living in underserved communities. Now, Short and his team are using physical fitness to inspire political change by leading young Black men on runs and talking about becoming better people afterwards.“Going out, taking your niece and nephew that may not have a father, being that father or mother example to them and just be the change you want to see,” Short said.During this presidential election, Short is reaching out to college students from Fisk University, a private historically Black college in Nashville.“We’re here to come out here and inspire change in our community and inspire young people to really vote,” said Myles Harris, a recent Fisk University graduate.Harris says he is motivated to get more members of African American communities to have their voices heard and their votes counted.“A lot of people don’t vote because they don’t see the point, they don’t understand why it’s so important,” he said.Many members in the local African American community do understand the importance of this election and are calling this political movement inspiring.“Us Black folks are still fighting. It’s time for a change, man,” said Norman T. Wilson. “So, it’s good that they are trying to get them to vote. votes matter, whoever they vote for.”According to the Pew Research Center, the Black voter turnout rate declined in 2016, falling to 59.6% after reaching a record-high 66.6% in 2012.That’s a trend Short wants to change, not by swaying young people’s votes, but through politics, one step and one vote at a time“We don’t have to riot. We don’t have to do it the bad way,” he said. “We can go to the polls and we can do it the democratic way. The way that our country, I believe our country was set up to do." 2151

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Today would be a normal drive to work for Amelia Caceres — except her house is surrounded by police tape. Adrian Perez helped her get out, both still in shock after hearing the brand new bridge outside their home collapsed."We were some of the first people on the front,” Caceres said. “And we saw the cars crushed underneath it was really horrifying, so it was really scary.”“My mind just does not captivate that that happened,” Perez said.Caceres and Perez saw the scene unfold, in disbelief. “It’s kind of like surreal,” Perez said. “Like it was a movie. There was a woman — I guess that she was trapped in the car like under the car .. she was crying hysterically. It was just really strange.”What made it even more strange for these two is that they had just watched the bridge go up days before.“It was just up. It was done,” Caceras said. “And it seemed almost like it was amazing that they had done it so quickly.”The bridge was designed to provide a safe way for students at Florida International University, like Perez, to cross a busy highway."I was really excited about this bridge because I was like finally I won’t have to go through the death trap that is eighth street crossing," Perez said. "Now, that’s kind of ironic."Carlos Devarona lives less than a mile away, and travels the street every day.“You have a blind faith in construction,” Devarona said. “You never think something like this is going to happen.”Watching the scene left him with even more questions, specifically why officials chose to perform a stress test in the moments before the collapse. “Not above live traffic  — you don’t do that,” Devarona said. “It just should never happen.”As investigators work to answer the many questions surrounding the collapse, Perez and Caceras, like so many others, wait for answers.“I’m sure that they did what was needed to get done,” Perez said. “I don’t think anyone would do something like this purposefully. Or negligently. I guess we will see.” 2034

  

Thursday is the last full day to respond to the 2020 census.The U.S. Census Bureau says self-response and field data collection operations for the census will conclude on Oct. 15.Today is your last chance to respond to the #2020Census. Don’t miss this opportunity to shape your community’s future for the next 10 years. Respond now at https://t.co/nzqhoc1xHM. pic.twitter.com/13mFmP2x6P— U.S. Census Bureau (@uscensusbureau) October 15, 2020 However, American residents can still respond online until 5:59 a.m. ET on Friday.If you haven’t responded yet, click here to make sure you’re counted.Supreme Court halts the censusData collection for the census is ending sooner than planned thanks to a Supreme Court ruling this week that sided with the Trump administration.Officials say “well over” 99.9% of housing units have been accounted for in the 2020 census, but some are still concerned that the count won’t be accurate, because some communities are harder to reach this year because of the COVID-19 pandemic and recent natural disasters.Why the census is importantAn accurate census is important because the count is only taken every 10 years and it's used to determine how billions of dollars in federal funding flow into communities every year over the next decade.The census affects several areas of everyday life, like transportation. Results influence highway planning and construction, as well as grants for buses, subways and other public transport systems.The education system also relies on the results to help determine how money is allocated for the Head Start program and for grans that support teachers and special education.The census data is also used to divide seats in Congress among the states.“The list goes on, including programs to support rural areas, to restore wildlife, to prevent child abuse, to prepare for wildfires, and to provide housing assistance for older adults,” officials write. 1926

  

Today Unique Edwards met her plasma donor Chris Klug. Unique, a mother, battled COVID-19 and said without the plasma donation, she believes she wouldn’t have made it. pic.twitter.com/YBmg55KAWM— Adriana Mendez (@AdrianaMendez) October 13, 2020 257

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