GOT HOME, let out the Sunny Girl. She enjoyed the good weather, the cool air. She weaseled around.
I gave her her medicine tonight. I've gotta shoot 1 ml of goop into her mouth twice a day. She hates it.
Hopefully, it will address what ails her, which may be urinary tract disease. Not sure.
Have I told you that she only drinks bottled water? It's true. She just won't touch my tap water, which comes from a well. Don't know what that's about.
Have a nice weekend. Sunny says "hey."
The SOUTH ORANGE COUNTY COMMUNITY COLLEGE DISTRICT — "[The] blog he developed was something that made the district better." - Tim Jemal, SOCCCD BoT President, 7/24/23
Friday, March 28, 2008
Public Defender
~
This obituary ran in the Thursday March 27, 2008 edition of the Daily Journal, the legal newspaper.
Deputy PD Was a Progressive Advocate
Eric J. Zucker 1959-2008
By Ryan Oliver
Daily Journal Staff Writer
.....LOS ANGELES - Eric J. Zucker, a veteran Los Angeles County deputy public defender and progressive political advocate, died Monday after a 16-month battle with brain cancer. He was 48.
.....Zucker's last assignment was as a deputy public defender in the office's Public Integrity Assurance Section, which is responsible for defending cases in which police misconduct is suspected and for reviewing post-conviction cases with potentially exonerating DNA evidence.
....."He was the quintessential public defender," Marie Girolamo, deputy in charge of the unit, said of Zucker. "He really was a true believer. He believed in what he did."
.....Zucker previously served as deputy in charge of the office's Eastlake juvenile branch. He considered Homeboy Industries founder Father Gregory Boyle and Eastlake Juvenile Hall chaplain Sister Janet Harris to be among his mentors.
.....He joined the public defender's office in 1990 after graduating from Hofstra University School of Law. He was a staunch opponent of the state's three-strikes law and testified against it before the California Senate after he saw one of his clients sentenced to 25-years-to-life for joyriding.
.....In his latest assignment, Zucker was deeply involved in advocating on behalf of women serving life sentences who were unable to present evidence at trial that they had been battered.
....."He was one of the most energetic, positive-minded people I've ever known," Girolamo said. "Anybody who spent any time with him would immediately like him."
.....A Los Angeles native, born Aug. 10, 1959, Zucker inherited strong progressive values from his parents, Betty and Max Zucker, who were survivors of the Holocaust. Zucker attended anti-war demonstrations as a child and was involved in a number of political and minority organizations while a student at the University of California and in law school.
....."He was one of the most generous people on Earth," said Zucker's friend, Pasadena attorney Ron Kaye. "He supported the rights of immigrants to juveniles to people with disabilities." Kaye said Zucker was able to use his compassion for people in the courtroom by bringing his clients' stories to life for the jury.
.....Zucker is survived by his wife, Donna Herlihy, and their three children.
This obituary ran in the Thursday March 27, 2008 edition of the Daily Journal, the legal newspaper.
Deputy PD Was a Progressive Advocate
Eric J. Zucker 1959-2008
By Ryan Oliver
Daily Journal Staff Writer
.....LOS ANGELES - Eric J. Zucker, a veteran Los Angeles County deputy public defender and progressive political advocate, died Monday after a 16-month battle with brain cancer. He was 48.
.....Zucker's last assignment was as a deputy public defender in the office's Public Integrity Assurance Section, which is responsible for defending cases in which police misconduct is suspected and for reviewing post-conviction cases with potentially exonerating DNA evidence.
....."He was the quintessential public defender," Marie Girolamo, deputy in charge of the unit, said of Zucker. "He really was a true believer. He believed in what he did."
.....Zucker previously served as deputy in charge of the office's Eastlake juvenile branch. He considered Homeboy Industries founder Father Gregory Boyle and Eastlake Juvenile Hall chaplain Sister Janet Harris to be among his mentors.
.....He joined the public defender's office in 1990 after graduating from Hofstra University School of Law. He was a staunch opponent of the state's three-strikes law and testified against it before the California Senate after he saw one of his clients sentenced to 25-years-to-life for joyriding.
.....In his latest assignment, Zucker was deeply involved in advocating on behalf of women serving life sentences who were unable to present evidence at trial that they had been battered.
....."He was one of the most energetic, positive-minded people I've ever known," Girolamo said. "Anybody who spent any time with him would immediately like him."
.....A Los Angeles native, born Aug. 10, 1959, Zucker inherited strong progressive values from his parents, Betty and Max Zucker, who were survivors of the Holocaust. Zucker attended anti-war demonstrations as a child and was involved in a number of political and minority organizations while a student at the University of California and in law school.
....."He was one of the most generous people on Earth," said Zucker's friend, Pasadena attorney Ron Kaye. "He supported the rights of immigrants to juveniles to people with disabilities." Kaye said Zucker was able to use his compassion for people in the courtroom by bringing his clients' stories to life for the jury.
.....Zucker is survived by his wife, Donna Herlihy, and their three children.
Catching bullies in action
From this morning's Inside Higher Ed:
Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger’s budget plan to cut back funds for California’s need-based grants program would disproportionate hurt students at the state’s community colleges, the Institute for College Access and Success said in a report Thursday. The report said that because of the way money from the Cal Grant Program is distributed, new grants to community college students would be cut by 45 percent, or about 18,500 students, in the fall. The report also estimated that 700 students at the University of California would be denied a Cal Grant, 2,000 in the California State University system; 1,200 at private nonprofit colleges; and 3,000 at for-profit career colleges.From the OC Reg (Local preteen inventors to be on Leno tonight):
Three young inventors from Tustin and Irvine are heading up to Burbank today to hang out with Jay Leno for a few minutes of TV fame on the “The Tonight Show.”
Brandon Sharpe from Loma Vista Elementary will be talking about his belt buckle video camera. The invention, according to the third-grader, is designed to catch bullies in action. Joining Sharpe will be fifth-grader Benjamin Jacobs from Westpark Elementary and his “Perfect Parker” guide, which helps drivers park in their garages; and fifth-grader Kerissa Iyer at Brywood Elementary, with her popcorn-mate.
The trio was part of a group of more than 300 elementary and junior high students who displayed their inventions at the 21st annual Astounding Inventions showcase, which was sponsored by Greenberg Trauig law firm, at Irvine Valley College in January….
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