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发布时间: 2025-05-31 06:13:20北京青年报社官方账号
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Yale University will no longer formally call first-year students "freshmen" as the university is officially changing its terminology to be gender-neutral. So instead of being considered an "upperclassman," a student with multiple years of collegiate experience will be officially considered an "upper-level" student. According to Yale's student newspaper, administrators are not expecting students, faculty and staff to change how they refer to freshmen or upperclassmen. The change is one that is merely to be used in official titles and correspondence. “It’s really for public, formal correspondence and formal publications … we’re not trying to tell people what language to use in their everyday casual conversations,” Yale Colleg Dean Marvin Chun told the Yale News. “We’re not trying to be language police.”The new gender-neutral terminology was unveiled in the 2017-18 edition of the student handbook. Yale's student newspaper reported that administrators have been considering the change to gender-neutral terms for several years. The paper added that there have been growing calls for greater gender inclusively at Yale.   1178

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as well as cars on the property.The abstinence of alcohol is a core belief of Muslims, and pouring alcohol on an Islamic place of worship is considered an anti-Islamic slur.According to Islamic Center of Tucson board member Maria Molina, people standing on the balcony of an apartment building next door were responsible."Alcohol-related incidents are a chronic problem for the Center," Molina wrote in an email. "ICT has suffered from vandalism, has been the target of glass bottles being thrown from neighboring apartment buildings, and congregation members have had their windshields smashed by projectiles thrown from the same apartment balconies.Molina also claims children at the center have been subjected to "racist remarks and obscenities" shouted at them by drunk pedestrians."The center is not only a place for peaceful prayer; it is the regular venue for children's classes, activities, and community events. These are frequently held both in and outdoors," Molina said.The Islamic Center is located less than a mile from the campus of the University of Arizona, and Molina fears that the start of classes at the college could lead to more threats against its members. "With the start of the new school year at the University of Arizona, we are extremely concerned that lack of attention to this situation will result in an escalation of activity. The situation needs to be rectified before someone is hurt."The center has faced regular vandalism since 1467

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in connection to the case of Evelyn Mae Boswell, a missing 15-month-old girl. However, the office that searched the pond said the investigation was inconclusive.Evelyn has been missing since mid-December, but an Amber Alert for the child was not issued until earlier this month."I hope and pray, and my staff hopes and prays she is alive, and we'll continue to work like she is alive," Sullivan County (Tennessee) Sheriff Jeff Cassidy said.According to 455

  

With the talk of a possible COVID-19 vaccine on the way, some wonder if people who’ve recovered from COVID-19 should still get the vaccine.Months after his COVID-19 diagnosis, Robert Marrero’s road to recovery isn’t over. WFTS shared his story when he was released from the hospital in May.“Much better in the sense where I don’t have to struggle talking, but I’m still having difficulty with the brain fog. I’m still having problems with my walking, and the pain from my waist down to my toes,” said Marrero. “It’s very, very slow progress. It’s almost, I guess, [been] nine months already.”USF Health professor Dr. Marissa Levine explained that if you’ve already had COVID-19, the general recommendation they expect will be that you should get a COVID-19 vaccine when it’s approved and available.“Remember that what we’re looking at is an experimental authorization, that there’s a lot more to learn about this vaccine, so we don’t really know a lot about immunity yet, even for people who’ve had COVID, how long does that immunity last, let alone the immunity from the vaccine,” said Dr. Levine.Levine points to precedent, reminding people that vaccines are recommended for those who’ve had certain diseases before, like shingles. While it's believed to be rare, Levine says there is a potential risk of COVID-19 reinfection.“We know that you have immunity for some period of time,” said Levine. “It could be months, it could be longer, and like many other diseases, immunity duration really varies a lot by individuals.”Earlier this week, a CDC advisory committee voted to recommend both health care workers and long-term care facility residents be the first to get a COVID-19 vaccine when it becomes available. Levine says it’s important to keep an eye out for official recommendations for COVID-19 survivors, too.For long-haulers, the people who have lingering COVID-19 symptoms, Dr. Levine suggests people check in with their doctor first. But Marrero says if his doctor gives him the green light, he’ll sign right up.“Just try to be safe. Everything is all fine and dandy until you get it,” said Marrero.This story was originally published by Mary O'Connell at WFTS. 2182

  

at an Aurora ICE detention facility on Friday.During the protest, a small group pulled down the American flag and the GEO flag and replaced them with a Mexican flag and a defaced thin blue line flag by hoisting it upside down and spray-painting in red with an anti-police slogan.There was a rift in the crowd about whether that action was appropriate, with some undocumented protesters leaving out of concern for their safety.Many protesters hoped that image would not overshadow that of so many speaking out against deportation raids and camps.Denver teacher Kathleen Frank went to the protest with her son because she couldn’t stop thinking about the children who have died in U.S. custody.“He is a child like any of those 3 year olds in the concentration camps, so it just breaks my heart and makes me really angry,” she said. “I think it needs to be ended immediately and I feel really helpless in the face of this just unbelievable pain, so this seemed like a small thing I could do.”Some undocumented residents at the rally said they were concerned about what may happen this weekend if the ICE raids promised by president Trump happen in Denver.“They don’t know if when they leave for work one day they’ll come back to their family. That’s the reality I‘ve lived with every day,” said Gladis Ibarra, an undocumented resident who works with Colorado’s immigrant community. “This is 28 years of my life, so I know a lot of people are outraged now, and I hope that the outrage continues past today.”This story was originally published by Jaclyn Allen on 1560

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