濮阳东方医院男科治疗早泄值得信赖-【濮阳东方医院】,濮阳东方医院,濮阳东方男科口碑好很不错,濮阳东方看妇科病价格不贵,濮阳东方妇科看病好不好,濮阳东方医院妇科做人流手术口碑好不好,濮阳东方看男科病收费便宜,濮阳东方医院男科割包皮手术很权威
濮阳东方医院男科治疗早泄值得信赖濮阳东方男科在线免费咨询,濮阳东方医院看早泄收费合理,濮阳东方妇科咨询医生热线,濮阳东方妇科口碑如何,濮阳东方妇科医院评价好收费低,濮阳东方医院割包皮手术手术贵吗,濮阳东方医院割包皮口碑好价格低
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Broadway San Diego lifted the curtain on its upcoming season Thursday, revealing Tony Award-winning productions and the return of small-stage favorites.Grammy and Tony Award-winning "The Band's Visit" starts the season with a six-night run beginning Sept. 8, followed by the pre-Broadway run of "1779," Tony Award-winners "Hadestown" in January 2021 and "The Cher Show" in March 2021.Movie-turned-Broadway productions "Tootsie" and "Pretty Woman: The Musical" will also arrive to San Diego's stage in May 2021 and June 2021, respectively. San Diego gets the Broadway treatment of Harper Lee's Pulitzer prize winning "To Kill A Mockingbird" in June 2021. RELATED: No scrubs here: TLC, Cheap Trick, others coming to San Diego County FairFan favorites "Disney's The Lion King" (August 2020) and "Les Misérables" (March 2021) also return for San Diego productions.“We are thrilled to start the new year by announcing another exciting line up of shows for our 20-21 Season,” said Vanessa Davis, general manager of Broadway San Diego. “We have everything from the shows currently still playing on Broadway, fresh national tours, and returning San Diego audience favorites. The road from Broadway to San Diego is shorter than ever, and that has everything to do with the incredible support of our audiences, our sponsors, and the trust we’ve earned in our community.”Here's a full look at Broadway San Diego's next season:Disney's The Lion King (Aug. 12-30, 2020)The Band's Visit (Sept. 8-13, 2020)1776 (Oct. 6-11, 2020)Irving Berlin's White Christmas (Nov. 24-29, 2020)Hadestown (Jan. 19-24, 2021)Les Misérables (March 2-7, 2021)The Cher Show (March 16-21, 2021)Tootsie (May 11-16, 2021)Pretty Woman: The Musical (June 1-6, 2021)To Kill A Mockingbird (June 22-27, 2021)Several productions are currently still running through 2020 as part of the 2019-2020 season as well:Mystery Science Theater 3000 (Jan. 25, 2020 at Balboa Theatre)The Simon And Garfunkel Story (Feb. 18-19, 2020 at Balboa Theatre)The Bachelor Live (Feb. 27, 2020)The Illusionists Live (Feb. 28 - March 1, 2020)Disney’s Frozen (March 26 – April 12, 2020)The Office! A Musical Parody (April 8-9, 2020 at Balboa Theatre)Rent (May 8-10, 2020)Mean Girls (June 9-14, 2020)Come From Away (June 23-28, 2020)My Fair Lady (July 7-12, 2020)More information is available on Broadway San Diego's website. 2380
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — As cities nationwide remove landmarks named after Confederate or racially-charged figures, an online petition is demanding San Diego do the same at Mount Hope Cemetery.A Change.org petition is asking Mayor Kevin Faulconer to remove a memorial to Confederate soldiers at Mount Hope Cemetery."Why does the City of San Diego expect black citizens, literal descendants of the very people the monument celebrates enslaving, oppressing, and terrorizing, to maintain such a horrific monument?" the petition says.The petition has nearly 900 or 1,000 requested signatures.The monument was erected in 1948 on a plot owned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, who supporters call such markers, testaments to history.Both Union and Confederate soldiers are buried in the cemetery.10news found the monument stone heavily damaged, with pieces scattered around the monument. Sources tell us the vandalism is a recent and ongoing issue.The monument isn't the only one in San Diego that has been subject to Change.org efforts. In 2017, the city removed a marker from Horton Plaza Park that commemorated the Jefferson Davis Highway, named for the Confederate leader. Fast forward to Wednesday, the city removed another marker from the park, this time commemorating Robert E. Lee Highway."Robert E. Lee Highway marker is gone. Many thanks to city Park & Rec staff and Stockdale Capital Partners for getting this done," Councilmember Mark Kersey tweeted.The difference between Horton Plaza Park and the cemetery plot: the plot is privately owned. In the past, city officials say their hands are tied."We support the removal from a private plot on City land and of a Confederate statue. Such statues are symbols of division that represent a horrendous past and glorify white supremacy. Such statues do not belong in a place of peace; they celebrate instead slavery (1620-1865) and the Jim Crow (1877-1964). The City should not have such symbols of intolerance and hatred on its property," said Francine Maxwell, President of the San Diego branch of the NAACP. 2078
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - As President Trump continues his call for a wall along the U.S. border with Mexico, experts say the one already in place is doing an excellent job at deterring illegal immigration.San Diego has had some form of a "wall" for decades. On a tour in June with 10News Anchor Steve Atkinson, Rodney Scott, the Chief of the Customs and Border Protection San Diego Sector, said a lot has changed in the last 20 years."I would argue during the 90s the extreme was total lawlessness," Scott said. "The fence behind me was chain link, riddled with holes."Scott described working as an agent and watching large crowds of people gather near the fence at twilight. They would then run across en masse once it got dark."There was a green flag to come out, and they would all rush when the sun went down," he said.That started to change in the later part of the decade.In 1993, then-President Bill Clinton signed Operation Gatekeeper into law. It was one of three operations to add infrastructure and technology to the border to help curb illegal immigration. Gatekeeper led to the start of the fence that's in place now.CBP says it led to a 75% drop in illegal immigration arrests over the next few years.But Scott said he still saw people making their way across, primarily through the area of the Tijuana River Estuary."Even up until the early 2000s, if you were standing here at night you would have seen little bonfires all over this area," he said. "There were trails as wide as cars, and that was purely from foot traffic."The next wave of border security started in 2006 when President George W. Bush signed the Secure Fences Act. It called for nearly 700 miles of physical fencing along the southern border.Government numbers show the flow of illegal immigrants peaked in the U.S. in 2006, with more than 1,000,000 arrests. In 2018, that number had gone down to around 396,000."That basically started closing the border," said Dr. Alejandra Castaneda, a leading researcher on immigration and the border for El Colegio de la Frontera Norte in Tijuana."Clinton started it, but it was really the Bush administration, especially after 9/11. And then the Obama Administration simply continued that project and finished it," she said.Castaneda said the wall built during that time was meant to be imposing."I think a lot of people in the U.S. that don't live at the border don't know that there is already a wall," she said.Because of Gatekeeper and Secure Fences, right now the U.S.-Mexico border in San Diego has 12 miles of double fencing that stretches from the coast to the Otay Mesa Port of Entry. After that, there are another 43 miles of "primary" fencing into and through the mountains in the eastern part of the county.Scott said the San Diego Sector has become the blueprint for the rest of the border."I call this our proof of concept," he says. "We've proved that border security works. And this is, by far, the most secure part of the U.S. border anywhere in the country." 3000
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — Border officials seized nearly two tons of drugs valued at millions of dollars at San Diego and Imperial Valley ports of entry last weekend.Between June 14 and June 16, Customs and Border Protection says more than 2,638 pounds of marijuana, 1093 pounds of methamphetamine, and five pounds of heroin were seized after being discovered inside doors, flooring, and other areas of vehicles and a tractor-trailer.In one instance, agents at the Calexico Port of Entry stopped a 34-year-old driver on Friday and referred the driver to a secondary inspection. There, canine agents made a positive detection and the port's imaging system discovered anomalies inside the vehicles flooring.Agents uncovered 40 packages of methamphetamine hidden in the vehicle.The same day, a tractor-trailer was stopped at the Otay Mesa Port of Entry, arriving from Mexico with a shipment listed as "watermelons and cactus." An officer referred the driver to a secondary inspection, where a canine officer alerted agents to a positive detection in pallets of watermelons.Agents found 311 packages of marijuana, worth an estimated ,557,000, intermixed with the fruit.During another incident on June 16, agents at the San Ysidro Port of Entry stopped a 35-year-old man where a secondary inspection revealed 86 packages of methamphetamine, with a street value of 3,700.All drivers were turned over to Homeland Security agents for processing and all vehicles and narcotics were seized by CBP. 1494
SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Data obtained by ABC 10News showed there were more than 150 complaints made to 211 involving a Pacific Beach gym’s violations of public health orders.The data regarding The Gym was compiled starting April 8; overall, there were more than 9,300 complaints from that time period involving violations of public health orders throughout San Diego County.Troy Kahle said he and his husband have been members of The Gym, located on 2949 Garnet Ave., for more than 20 years. Kahle is also a COVID-19 survivor, and he said he’s not sure how he contracted the virus.Kahle has not been to The Gym since he went to the hospital. His husband last went on July 3, and decided it was not safe.RELATED: County confirms coronavirus outbreak at Pacific Beach gym"There are no safety barriers, there are no hand sanitizers, no one is wearing a mask, and no one is socially distancing," Kahle said, passing along what his husband told him from his July 3 gym visit.On July 15, public health orders forced several businesses to close indoor operations, including gyms. But Kahle said they noticed The Gym kept their doors open.Kahle and his husband notified 211 about The Gym's indoor activities on more than one occasion. He said their goal was to prevent the spread of the virus."I can't believe they stayed open as long as they have," Kahle said.During Wednesday's news conference, San Diego County Public Health Officer Dr. Wilma Wooten confirmed there was an outbreak associated with The Gym.The county had ordered it to close last week; The Gym closed on Monday."Last week, when we were working with them to close, we didn't know there was an outbreak there," Wooten said. "Once we get the information, we act as quickly as possible." 1748