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密歇根新闻广播 英语中有哪些拗口的亲戚称呼
When we talk about our relatives, there are plenty of gender-neutral terms to cover the bases. We use grandparents to talk about both our grandmothers and grandfathers; parents takes care of mothers and fathers; siblings refers to both brothers and s
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密歇根新闻广播 特朗普即将上任 听听美国公民有何想法
On Jan. 20, Donald J. Trump will be sworn in as our 45th President of the United States. The election was one of the most contentious in recent memory and has exposed or inflamed serious divisions in American society. All this week on Stateside, we'l
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密歇根新闻广播 美国人认为奥巴马医改就是在"更坏"和"最坏"中
All this week on Stateside, we look at how the repeal of the Affordable Care Act, also known as Obamacare, will affect Michigan residents, hospitals and governments. The future of the Affordable Care Act is in doubt. President-elect Donald Trump want
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密歇根新闻广播 稳定的收入使底特律交响乐队能够到中国来演出
2017 is shaping up to be a banner year for the Detroit Symphony Orchestra (DSO). With the orchestra back on solid financial footing, the DSO is embarking on its first international tour in 16 years. This July, Maestro Leonard Slatkin will take the or
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密歇根新闻广播 看奥巴马为汽车制造商创下的条件
President Barack Obama leaves office tomorrow and he leaves behind a complicated legacy when it comes to the auto industry. Detroit News business columnist Daniel Howes reviews Obamas relationship with automakers in his latest column. Howes pointed o
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密歇根新闻广播 她为什么选择特朗普?
On Jan. 20, Donald J. Trump will be sworn in as our 45th president of the United States. The election was one of the most contentious in recent memory and has exposed or inflamed serious divisions in American society. All this week on Stateside, we'l
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密歇根新闻广播 特朗普时代 我们都要谨慎又开放
While the Japanese use our calendar for practical purposes, they officially start a new era every time an emperor takes office. This is, for example, Heisei 29 in Japan, not 2017. We do a version of the same thing. We talk of the Clinton years, or th
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密歇根新闻广播 大批女性在特朗普就职后首日举行游行
Hundreds of thousands of people are expected to participate in the Womens March on Washington on Saturday, the first full day of Donald Trump's presidency. Pam Weiss of Ann Arbor plans to hop on a bus tomorrow to join the march in Washington. For Wei
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密歇根新闻广播 女性游行:只有爱才能拯救一个国家
Washington D.C. officials say half a million people marched in the nations capitol on Saturday. Another one million people joined rallies around the country, according to estimates; plus big crowds around the world, from London to Berlin, Tokyo to An
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密歇根新闻广播 关闭一所学校对学生和周围街区有何影响?
What happens to students and neighborhoods when a school closes? That question was thrust into the spotlight with word late last week that Michigan's School Reform Office has put 38 low-performing schools on notice they could be shut down. Twenty-fiv
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密歇根新闻广播 百丽岛第一头小象不为人知的故事
She is five tons of gray, ponderous beauty. That's how Rex G. White of the Detroit News described the now-forgotten treasure of the Belle Isle Zoo: Sheba the Asian elephant. She arrived in Detroit in 1923 and lived at the Belle Isle Zoo until she die
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密歇根新闻广播 一场约会引起的纠纷:英语中
A listener named Toby recently wrote to us with the story of a first date that almost didn't happen. He tells us that a mutual friend put him in touch with a woman named Phyllis. Toby gave Phyllis a call on a Thursday and the two made plans to go out
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密歇根新闻广播 法官违背特朗普意图 同意难民进入美国
Travelers from seven predominantly Muslim countries are enjoying tearful reunions with loved ones across the United States and the state of Michigan. This after a federal judge ruled against President Donald Trumps temporary travel ban. Airlines arou
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密歇根新闻广播 福特与特朗普建立关系 却觉伴君如伴虎
During the presidential campaign, candidate Donald Trump blasted Ford Motor Company for building cars in Mexico. But despite the rocky start, a recent Bloomberg piece explains how Bill Ford, Jr., executive chairman of Ford Motor Company, is trying to
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密歇根新闻广播 密歇根大学教授受邀至梵蒂冈反对器官交易
They're called transplant tourists. In need of an organ transplant but lacking a donor, they travel to countries where human organs are available for purchase on the black market. The organs they buy are harvested from the poorest of the poor, those