ÈýÃÅÏ¿¶»¶»ÈçºÎÏû³ý°¡-¡¾ÒÕÃÀÁ䯤·ô¿Æ¡¿£¬ÒÕÃÀÁ䯤·ô¿Æ,ÈýÃÅÏ¿¿´Æ¤Ñ×ÄļҺÃ,ÈýÃÅÏ¿ÖÐÒ½Ñо¿Ëù¿´¶»¶»,ÈýÃÅÏ¿°ÌºÛÐÔÆ¤·ôÄܲ»ÄÜ×öË«ÑÛÆ¤,ÈýÃÅÏ¿ÔõÑùÄܰѺü³ôÖκÃ,ÈýÃÅÏ¿ÄļÒҽԺȥ¶»°ÌºÃ,ÈýÃÅÏ¿Çá¶Èºü³ô×ö΢´´ºÃÂð
¡¡¡¡ÈýÃÅÏ¿¶»¶»ÈçºÎÏû³ý°¡ÈýÃÅÏ¿ÎÒÓкü³ô×öÊÖÊõ´ó¸ÅÒª¶àÉÙÇ®ÄØ,ÈýÃÅÏ¿»ÒÖ¸¼×ÖÎÁƵÄÒ½Ôº,ÈýÃÅϿҸ³ôÄĸöÒ½ÔºÒ±,ÈýÃÅÏ¿×îºÃµÄºü³ô¿ÆÒ½ÔºÊÇÄĸöÒ½Ôº,ÈýÃÅÏ¿ÔõôÖÎÁÆÄÒÖ×ÐͶ»¶»,ÈýÃÅÏ¿ÖÎÁÆÒ¸³ôºÃµÄ¼¾½Ú,ÈýÃÅϿҺ³ôÊÖÊõÄĸöÒ½ÔººÃ
¡¡¡¡Next March, the monthly subscription price of Disney+ will increase by in the United States.During its annual Investors Day, Disney announced that beginning March 26, 2021, the monthly subscription price would cost .99. Its yearly subscription would increase by to .99.The Disney Bundle that includes Disney+, Hulu with ads, and ESPN+ would increase by to .99 per month, the company announced.The company also announced that in Europe, Disney+ would go from €6.99 to €8.99 per month, alongside the Star rollout, which debuts Feb. 23.The news comes after Netflix announced in October that they would raise the price on its standard and premium plans for its US subscribers. 698
¡¡¡¡Nebraska just became the first state to execute an inmate using a powerful opioid called fentanyl. The synthetic painkiller has helped drive the national opioid crisis.The execution is attracting big attention, because executions across the country have been delayed as drug companies file lawsuits to stop states from using their drugs in executions.However, Nebraska found a way to get around the issue¡ªby using fentanyl in a mixture."Drug companies don't want to be associated with state executions,¡± explains Adam Graves, a college professor and ethics expert. ¡°They don't want their products to be used for death."More and more states might start using fentanyl in the deadly cocktail used to put inmates to death. And that means states that have had to put executions on hold, might be able to resume.So why fentanyl? The drug is easy to get."In this particular case, you have to ask yourself by using that, are we not also opening up scars and rubbing salt in the wounds of families who have lost members to the opioid crisis?" says Graves.Fentanyl is also a major part of the opioid epidemic, and has been linked to 30,000 overdose deaths last year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. 1226
¡¡¡¡NELLIS AIR FORCE BASE, Nev. -- A United States Air Force Pilot was killed Wednesday morning when his F-16 Fighting Falcon jet crashed outside Las Vegas, the Air Force said. The pilot died when his F-16 Fighting Falcon jet crashed during a routine aerial demonstration training flight at 10:30 a.m. His name has not yet been released. An investigation is being conducted into the cause of the mishap. The team¡¯s participation at the March Air Reserve Base ¡°The March Field Air & Space Expo¡± has been canceled. It is unknown how this accident will impact the remainder of the 2018 Thunderbirds Season. 674
¡¡¡¡New York City hit a major milestone over the weekend in its fight against the coronavirus after recording its first 24-hour period without a COVID-19 death in months, Mayor Bill de Blasio said on Monday.Speaking during a coronavirus briefing Monday morning, de Blasio warned that COVID-19 is ¡°far from beaten,¡± especially considering the surge in cases in many cities and states around the country.¡°No one can celebrate but we can at least take a moment to appreciate that everyone of you did so much to get us to this point: 24 hours when no one died, let's have many more days like that,¡± the mayor said. ¡°And it¡¯s a reminder, of course, that this disease is such a formidable foe that it¡¯s been months and months since we¡¯ve had a day like this.¡±Preliminary data from the city Health Department indicates that the period of no COVID-19 deaths was on Saturday. They said on Sunday that the data is subject to change.As of Sunday, New York City had recorded 18,670 lab-confirmed COVID-19 deaths and an additional 4,613 probable deaths related to the virus since the outbreak began in March. There have been 215,924 confirmed cases of the virus across the five boroughs.De Blasio urged New Yorkers not to let up on social distancing or following rules and restrictions related to the outbreak and the state¡¯s phased reopening plan.The mayor also issued new guidance on wearing face coverings indoors.New Yorkers should wear a face covering when around others in an indoor setting that isn't their home, de Blasio said.This story originally reported by Lauren Cook on PIX11.com. 1585
¡¡¡¡News can happen at any time and any place, ujst ask Anna Boyko-Weyrauch. The reporter from KUOW Public Radio had just locked her tray table into place when the pilot of the plane that was about to fly her to San Diego announced a delay."He says there¡¯s a guy, and he¡¯s got a plane and he¡¯s flying around Seattle and so he¡¯s tying up all the airways" said Boiko-Weyrauch. Her plane was among the 40 or so stranded for more than an hour while a rogue airport employee flew a Horizon Airways plane in the skies above Seattle.Boiko-Weyrauch immediately fired up her cell phone and began tweeting. "I kick into news mode," she recalled. "I hear these things from the pilot. I'm trying to confirm them."She used Twitter and e-mail to try to learn more about the situation. The pilot came back on the plane's intercom, telling passengers the man delaying their flight learned how to fly on the internet. Somehow he managed not only to take off, but to fly past Mt. Rainier and the Olympic Mountains.She tweeted: Hey @AlaskaAir, can you confirm any of the reports we¡¯re hearing and reading? A stolen Q-400? A suicidal pilot? F-15 escorts? A crash? Anything? About an hour and 15 minutes after the delay began, Boiko-Weyrauch read a tweet that said the plane had crashed and smoke was seen. Moments later, her pilot told passengers the delay was over.She set her phone to flight mode and waited three hours until the flight landed in San Diego to confirm the man who stole the plane crashed it and died.Boiko-Weyrauch laughed as she admitted she almost left her work cell phone behind, thinking she wouldn't need it during a weekend visit with her 93-year-old grandmother. The reporter in her decided to keep the phone handy, just in case. 1829