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发布时间: 2025-05-30 21:14:47北京青年报社官方账号
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A father wanted to spend Christmas with his daughter. Despite the fact that she had to work as a flight attendant over the skies of the United States on Tuesday did not stop them from being together. According to a now viral Facebook post, a man identified as "Hal" purchased airline tickets to ensure he would have a seat on every single flight his daughter worked during Christmas.“I had the pleasure of sitting next to Hal on my flight back home," Hal's seatmate Mike Levy wrote on Facebook. "His daughter Pierce was our flight attendant who had to work over Christmas . Hal decided he would spend the holiday with her. So, he is flying on each of her flights today and tomorrow around the country to spend time with his daughter for Christmas. What a fantastic father! Wish you both a very Merry Christmas!”Pierce Vaughan responded to Levy's post, thanking him for "helping us to understand how cool this actually is!"Vaughan said that her father was even given an upgrade on a flight from Fort Meyers, Florida, to Detroit. Vaughan said that they had four legs of travel so far. She added that the two will travel twice together on Thursday. 1157

  宜宾哪家医院埋线双眼皮好   

(CNN) -- An Oregon woman is under arrest after police say she shared bean dip with an extra ingredient: methamphetamine.Cassandra Medina-Hernandez gave some of the meth-laced dip to a fellow employee in the deli of the grocery store where she worked, according to a news release from the Marion County Sheriff's office.The co-worker began feeling ill, went to the hospital, and was told the dip might have been contaminated with meth, deputies said. A least one other employee might have eaten some of the dip, deputies said, but they don't think any customers did.Medina-Hernandez was charged with unlawful delivery of methamphetamine, recklessly endangering another person, and causing another person to ingest a controlled substance.CNN has not been able to reach Medina-Hernandez or her attorney.The-CNN-Wire? & ? 2019 Cable News Network, Inc., a Time Warner Company. All rights reserved. 908

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View this post on Instagram Thank You @barbrastreisand for my package, I am now a Disney Stockholder thanks to you ?????? A post shared by GIGI FLOYD (@giannapinkfloyd_) on Jun 13, 2020 at 7:59am PDT 224

  

A large tornado touched down Tuesday in Kansas, striking the southeast portion of Lawrence, according to the National Weather Service.The weather service issued a tornado emergency for Kansas City, Missouri and its densely populated western suburbs.Along with twisters in Ohio and scorching heat in the South, the Kansas tornado was part of the severe weather engulfing parts of the country.While residents in Linwood, Kansas, 15 miles east of Lawrence, appeared to be safe, dozens of homes just outside city limits are "all gone," Linwood Mayor Brian Christenson told CNN in a phone interview.Christenson said he sheltered in his basement along with about 20 other residents as the tornado moved through shortly before 7 p.m. The mayor said crews and residents are out helping each other in Linwood."We have local crews moving stuff around. City crews are moving with tractors, a lot of civilians are helping cut trees off cars and off houses," he said.The mayor, who surveyed the damage, reported seeing roofs torn off of homes.Downed trees and power lines, and debris have made some Lawrence roads impassable.Lawrence is one of three places in Douglas County, Kansas, to have received significant damage from the storm. Residences near Lone Star Lake and Pleasant Grove and Berg Acres, about two miles south of Lawrence, were damaged as well, according to Sgt. Kristen Channel with the Douglas County Sheriff's Department.There were no reports of fatalities as of Tuesday night, Channel said, but there have been reports of storm related injuries, and those harmed were taken to local hospitals.Meantime, storm debris also closed the airfield at Kansas City International Airport, delaying flights, the airport said.Some 15,000 customers were without power in Douglas and Johnson counties, according to Westar Energy Communications spokeswoman Kylee Slavens.New Jersey high school damaged by band of storms, no injuriesA band of severe weather damaged a New Jersey high school Tuesday night while an event was going on in the school's gymnasium but nobody was injured in the incident, an official with the Sussex County Sheriff's office told CNN.Cpl. Mark Vogel said people were being safely evacuated from Lenape Valley Regional High School. He declined to say how many people were inside at the time.In the wake of the storm, the school will be closed Wednesday and there will be no after school activities, according to the school's website.More than 14,000 customers in New Jersey were without power, according to FirstEnergy's website.Dozens of tornadoes reported this weekThe weather service received more than 55 tornado reports in eight states Monday and Tuesday. Parts of Oklahoma and Kansas were still under tornado warnings on Tuesday, CNN Meteorologist Taylor Ward saidMore than 500 tornado reports have been made across the nation in the last 30 days.There are only four other recorded instances when more than 500 US tornadoes were observed in a 30-day period: in 2003, 2004, 2008 and 2011, according to Patrick Marsh, a meteorologist with the weather service's Storm Prediction Center.Tulsa braces for record flooding and strained leveesIn Tulsa, Mayor G.T. Bynum warned residents earlier Tuesday to prepare for the "worse-case scenario" of potential flooding as more rain is expected in the Oklahoma city.The Army Corps of Engineers has been releasing about 275,000 cubic feet of water per second from the Keystone Dam, about 20 miles west of Tulsa -- which is the equivalent of three Olympic-sized pools -- to keep Keystone Lake from topping the floodgates.Doing so will increase the strain on some of Tulsa's levees, Bynum said.Bynum said it's too early to tell how the storms expected late Tuesday and possibly Wednesday could impact the release of water from the Keystone Dam. He urged residents to prepare for record levels of water release from the dam."We are planning for and preparing for the flood of record, and we think everybody along the Arkansas River corridor ought to be doing the same," Bynum said.The mayor said the levees "continue to operate as they're designed."Members of the Oklahoma National Guard are walking the levees to check the conditions, he said. Bynum said while "it's high risk," it's not an emergency between the levees. He encouraged those living near the levees to temporarily relocate.The release of water from the Keystone Dam is contributing to flooding, however, near Sand Springs, just west of Tulsa. Scores of homes there were surrounded by floodwaters, and some homes had 2 to 6 feet of water in them, residents told a CNN crew there.Jeremy Herrington told Tulsa television station KOTV on Monday that his house outside Sand Springs was flooded."It's been a complete upheaval of our life and everything the last six days, and we don't know when it's going to end," Herrington told KOTV.Tulsa and western Arkansas are both under a flash flood watch until Thursday morning, with 1 to 3 inches of rain expected between Tuesday night and then, Ward said. Tulsa is also under a flash flood warning for the ongoing flooding on the Arkansas river as well, Ward said.The weather service warned of "very large hail" and tornado threats for Tulsa.Oklahoma's rainfall from January 1 through Monday was 50% above normal -- making this the fourth wettest year to date on record, according to the Oklahoma Climatological Survey.Death by drowning in ArkansasA 64-year-old man died in Arkansas after drowning in floodwater, police told CNN.The man, driving a small Suzuki SUV near Fort Chafee, appears to have driven onto a flooded roadway, Barling police officer James Breeden said. There was a barricade, but the man seems to have driven around it, Breeden said.A deputy sheriff happened to see his body floating in the water and began a rescue effort, Breeden said, but the man did not survive.Tornadoes and floods ravaged the nation's heartland On the heels of a week of deadly weather in the central United States, Tuesday threatened more of the same, including possible severe storms in the Plains, South, Midwest and Northeast; dangerous flooding in many states; and a suffocating heat wave in the Southeast.In western Ohio, crews began cleaning up Tuesday after storms and tornadoes left swaths of devastation overnight, killing at least one person and injuring dozensAt least three tornadoes were believed to have caused severe damage Monday night in western Ohio, including one in the city of Celina, where one man was killed and seven others were injured, Mayor Jeff Hazel said.The storm apparently pushed a vehicle into a house there, killing Melvin Dale Hanna, 81, Hazel said.Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine on Tuesday declared a state of emergency for three counties impacted by the severe weather.Aerial drone footage above Celina -- roughly 70 miles northwest of Dayton -- showed houses destroyed, with wood and other debris scattered for acres near a pond there Tuesday morning.Two tornadoes also are believed to have slammed the Dayton area Monday night just 30 minutes apart, and both crossed Interstate 75 near the city, the National Weather Service says.One twister ripped through Michael Sussman's home in Brookville, northwest of Dayton. He said he'd just walked into a hallway when a front room was blown apart."I was hit by debris in my head," Sussman said. "I looked up and I no longer had a roof." He and his daughter and her boyfriend, who were hiding in a bathtub, dodged swinging electrical wires and debris as they left."We went out in the streets and children were screaming and crying. Devastation everywhere." 7593

  

A House panel passed a bill Wednesday to authorize additional funding for the September 11th Victims Compensation Fund until 2090, one day after comedian Jon Stewart sharply criticized members of Congress for not attending a subcommittee hearing on the issue and gave an emotional plea to extend the funding.The bill passed on a voice vote without opposition and now heads to the House floor for the full chamber to vote. The vote comes after the fund's administrator announced awards for pending and future claims would have to be cut unless Congress acted."Every sick responder and survivor should be treated with the same dignity and compassion," said House Judiciary Chairman Jerry Nadler, a Democrat from New York. "All responders and survivors, whether they got sick in 2015 or will get sick in 2025 or 2035, should be properly compensated. Congress must act to make that happen."The current law was renewed in 2015 and is set to expire in 2020. At the time of its last renewal, Congress appropriated .6 billion to the fund, bringing the total appropriated amount of the fund 1096

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