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发布时间: 2025-05-23 23:34:00北京青年报社官方账号
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SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- In a school year where parents and teachers have had to adjust over and over again, teachers are sharing their stories of hope and gratitude with ABC 10News.Dawn Harrison teachers her first grade students virtually from her classroom in the Chula Vista Elementary School District. She hopes one day, she won’t be alone in her class.“I would much prefer to be face to face with my kids and be able to get the hugs… be able to pat their little back or hold their hands,” Harrison said.She knows that is not a reality right now, but thinks about what she is grateful for. She looks forward to monthly distribution days, where she will see colleagues and students for a brief moment when they pick up materials. She is thankful for parents, as she knows this has been difficult for everyone.“They take into consideration my thoughts and feelings, too,” Harrison said. “The parents that have shared with me, they’ve been very thoughtful of taking everybody’s perspective and situations at home.”Harrison has also found an even greater love for another teacher— her husband.“The way he engages [his students], the experiences he’s able to provide for them, it gives me a new appreciation for him,” she said of her husband Rick Meads, a teacher at Eastlake High School.Meads sang his wife’s praises as well. “I’m telling you, the amount of energy that she has to expend for first graders is a whole lot different than what I have to do,” he said. “I don’t know how she does it, but she’s amazing.”Meads is grateful that he is still able to teach, although it is in a format that is new for many educators.“I’m really thankful that we are able to have this opportunity to do this online. If you think about this ten years ago, it would have never happened,” Meads said. ‘I’m not sure what we would have done.”During the summer, elementary school teacher Kelly Martin told ABC 10News that someone described the current situation as a “corona coaster.”With many still on this “corona coaster,” Martin is thankful for her students. “I’m so appreciative of that hard work because three months of this is getting a little draining on some of them,” she said. “I just look forward to finding ways to keep connecting with the students.”As she looks ahead to a new year, Martin said she hopes to “keep it fresh and keep it new, so that the monotony of online learning doesn't drag us down.” 2402

  郑州飞秒费用   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) — In the late '80s Gary Cheatham founded Auntie Helen's in a one-car garage in North Park in 1988.Gary did fluff-and-fold laundry first for one, then for a handful of friends who were sick with AIDS."Everybody could do it. But nobody would do it. And I think that makes him a superhero in my eyes," says Auntie Helen's current Executive Director, Rod Legg.Fear and stigma at the time hurt the LGBT community as much as the disease, but word spread quickly about Gary's services, and Auntie Helen's grew. Sadly, so did the disease.HIV and AIDS claimed more than 100,000 lives in the U.S. in the 1980s. Many of Gary's clients and friends who died willed their estates to Auntie Helen's.Their belongings accumulated in Gary's garage, which was also where he did laundry. Eventually, with help from a few high-powered friends and other activists, Gary opened Auntie Helen's thrift store in 1989.The laundry service and the thrift store are still located in North Park."We also do COVID-19 [laundry], which is our frontline medical workers. That's a tie in to the past, we had to do that. We had to offer that," Legg says.They're expanding the store, and their outreach, giving out free groceries to their regular clients (about 25-35 individuals) and now also to frontline workers.With COVID-19 leaving so many more people on hard times, they started delivering groceries — no questions asked, no referral needed. At one point, to more than 300 people.Legg explains, "this is everybody's HIV in a sense... We don't know where we're at. We're all wondering what's going to happen the next day, but most importantly is neighbor to neighbor we need to make sure we're taking care of each other."All in keeping with the legacy of Gary Cheatham, about whom, Legg says, "this man was way before his time... Can you imagine the faces of the people that got the hugs, and the clothes? We should all be our heroes, for each other." 1943

  郑州飞秒费用   

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- Memorial Day Weekend DUI arrests are down in San Diego County compared to last year, according to California Highway Patrol. In San Diego County, 42 people were arrested between 6 p.m. Friday and 6 a.m. Sunday. By this time on Memorial Day Weekend in 2018, 57 people were arrested. One person died this weekend in San Diego County due to a DUI crash, tying it with last year. Statewide, 741 people have so far been arrested for driving under the influence. By this time last year, 674 people were arrested for DUI. So far this weekend, DUI-related crashes have claimed 18 lives throughout the state compared with 14 by this time last year. 668

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) - If a new season of Padres baseball isn't exciting enough, Petco Park will be offering some new options to keep your stomach satisfied during games this season.Buona Forchetta and Blue Water Seafood Market & Grill are joining the ballpark's strong lineup of concessions for Padres fans for the 2018 season.Food from the two local favorites will be ready to go on opening day, the team says.RELATED: San Diego Padres Opening Day 2018: What you need to knowNEW KIDS ON THE BLOCK...Buona Forchetta is known for serving up slices of delicious Neapolitan-style pizza in South Park. Now, it has a home near Field Level Mercado section 104. The Petco Park pizza stop will also serve a variety of California and Italian wines and gelato."Pizza, wine, gelato and baseball! We are so thrilled to be joining the Petco Park hospitality family and can’t wait to bring our traditional Italian flavors straight from Rome and Naples, from our family to yours," Buona Forchetta owner Matteo Cattaneo said.Cattaneo said a vintage gelato cart will also serve homemade gelato to fans at the park this season.RELATED: Gallery: Petco?Park prepares for 2018 Opening DayBlue Water Seafood Market & Grill will sit at Field Level at section 117 and serve fish tacos and delicious sandwiches.A second location at Toyota Terrace level section 220 as part of The Still by Cutwater Spirits, will also offer an expanded menu with plates, clam chowder, poke and sashimi."As San Diego natives and lifelong Padres fans, having a Blue Water presence in Petco Park is a dream come true," said Matt and Judd Braun, owners of Blue Water Seafood Market & Grill. "We can’t wait to bring fresh, grilled seafood to baseball fans from across the country and show them the incredible food our fine city has to offer."OLD FAVORITES... In addition to the new eats, the traditional "Friar Frank" is getting an upgrade. While the traditional hot dog will remain, new bacon-wrapped, caprese-turkey, chili-cheese, veggie and kid-friendly hot dog variations will be introduced.Phil’s BBQ, which has a stand at Park in the Park and at Field Level section 113, is adding a third location at the Western Metal Supply Co. Building Rooftop.RELATED: San Diego Padres to install more protective nets at Petco Park to improve fan safetySWEET ADDS...Petco's dessert game is stepping up in 2018 too. Jack & Craft will debut offering fresh caramel corn and giving fans the chance to pair desserts with local craft beers, including Ballast Point, AleSmith, Iron Fist, Resident, Pizza Port, Mike Hess Brewing, Karl Strauss and Coronado Brewing Company.BEER BELLIES...Ballast Point is also introducing two new bars, located on Field Level sections 110 and 226, that will cater to IPA fans with their lineup of IPA beers.San Diego-based Cutwater Spirits will also open a rum bar, featuring their special mai tais, at Field Level section 101. 2967

  

SAN DIEGO (KGTV) -- In response to growing community outrage over a man who was released on bail a day after being arrested on attempted kidnapping charges, the San Diego County Sheriff's Department has released surveillance video of the incident in hopes of alleviating concern.The incident happened Sunday just before 3 p.m. in the parking lot of Costco Warehouse located at 1755 Hacienda Drive in Vista.A couple and their two small children were backing out of a parking stall when the suspect opened the rear vehicle door. The suspect attempted to remove the 2-year-old child from the car.Adam Glavinic, 37, was arrested for attempted kidnapping and being under the influence of a controlled substance and was booked into the Vista Detention Facility.Outrage ensued following reports that Glavinic was released from jail on a 0,000 bail the next day.WATCH: Growing outrage over attempt kidnapping suspect's release on bail"The Sheriff's Department in partnership with the D.A.'s Office are now releasing the video due to understandable concern from community members," said Lt. Ricardo Lopez, Media Relations Director for the San Diego County Sheriff's Department."It is understandable that anytime an incident involves a child in the vicinity of an event, it can produce fear and anxiety on the part of parents and community. This is why law enforcement prioritizes these cases and focuses on the evidence," said Lopez.The surveillance video the sheriff released Thursday night shows Glavinic walk up the driver's side of the family's white SUV. The SUV begins slowly backing out of the stall, and that is when Glavnic reaches for the rear passenger door handle. 1678

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