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Sunday, 15 March 2009

Friday, 19 September 2008

  • to the best law professor i've ever had - rest in peace.

    Dear Alumni and Friends of the USC Gould School of Law,

    It is with tremendous sadness and sense of loss that I have to report the passing of my friend and colleague, Charlie Whitebread. Charlie died yesterday from cancer. He had been a law professor for more than 40 years, teaching his last students this past spring.

    Many of you know how tragic this loss is to our law school community. For those who did not have the good fortune to have Charlie as a teacher or as a friend, he exemplified those attributes that our law school holds dear. He was a phenomenal classroom teacher, an engaged scholar, and a tireless advocate for our students and for justice. I have attached a bio which describes some of Charlie's accomplishments, though no words can adequately convey the life force that was Charlie Whitebread.

    Many have already asked about our plans to recognize Charlie's contributions to USC. We are currently setting a date for a celebration of Charlie's life, and we will inform you once we have the date, time and venue set. Some of Charlie’s closest friends approached me asking if they could do something to honor Charlie’s memory. They decided to set up a Charles H. Whitebread scholarship fund at USC Law because they knew how much Charlie cared about our students.

    With much sadness,

    Bob



Saturday, 12 April 2008

  • It'll be fine
    Nothing to fear
    He'll be as happy
    as he was here
    Things have worked out
    much better than planned
    It makes you smile
    When Fate takes a hand
    And I know I'll forget
    How much he meant to me
    And how he was almost my baby
    Maybe

    so remember when rooster and lily went to claim Annie?  that's exactly how i feel now.  i met simon at the humane society this morning.  i knew another asian couple had their eye on him so i quickly got his tag number and requested a meeting session with him.  it turns out that while we were getting acquainted, i.e., bonding/falling in love/choosing his name/planning the next 10 years or so, with him, the other couple went and put a HOLD on him at the counter.  how unfair is that?  *sob.




    and how you were almost my baby.....maybe.

    have a good life, simon.

Wednesday, 19 March 2008

  • i disabled the rss feed, so the only people who read this blog should be friends :)  critique harshly, if necessary.  it's for a job app.

    Experience Working with Multi-Cultural Ethnic Groups

        I was made aware of my status as an ethnic minority at a very young age.  For the first nine years of my life, I resided and attended schooling in the Richmond District of San Francisco, California, where I ate daily lunches provided to low-income children and attended birthday parties amongst Black, Latino, Filipino, and other Chinese peers.  My very first best friend was the only Caucasian girl at our bilingual English/Chinese preschool.  At the age of nine, however, my father received a company promotion with a transfer to East Bay, and I found myself the only Asian-American girl at an elementary school in Lafayette, California amongst very wealthy white peers.  Fortunately, my family and I were readily accepted in this neighborhood and I was never exposed to any overt racism.  Still, I made it a point to remain close to my roots and to remember the plight of most ethnic minorities.  During high school, I performed community service in San Francisco, California, serving as the official emcee for the San Francisco Chinese Music Society.  I also participated in many Chinese Speech and Debate contests and represented Northern California in the state championships during my high school years.

        This background assisted me in reaching out to my community when I attended college at University of California, Davis.  During my first year of college, I became a domestic violence counselor at the Yolo County Sexual Assault and Domestic Violence Center, where the clientele was predominantly Latino.  I learned about this population through regular cultural sensitivity trainings and experience during actual crisis calls.  My minor in Asian American studies later motivated me to create the first Asian Outreach Program for victims of domestic violence and sexual assault in this Sacramento/Yolo County area.  I directed this program until I graduated from college.

        When I moved to Los Angeles to attend the University of Southern California School of Law, I served as a volunteer law clerk in the Asian/Pacific Islander Unit of the Los Angeles Legal Aid Foundation during all three years of law school, providing legal assistance to low-income families in areas of housing, family, government assistance, and employment law.  I advocated on behalf of low-income Chinese families, drafting briefs and appearing at administrative hearings.  I attempted to steer our unit toward impact litigation as we retained cases representing multiple Chinese laborers whose rights were violated by larger corporations such as Hong Kong Supermarket.  Following my graduation from law school, I was hired as an attorney here and continued to serve as the Chinese liaison for one year.

        Because my true passion lies with criminal defense work, I joined the Los Angeles County Office of the Public Defender.  I have remained here for close to three years, representing primarily Black and Latino clients on a daily basis.  I truly believe that my unique upbringing has provided me with the privilege of understanding how the environment in which one is raised, his ethnic membership, and his economic status have a direct impact on his perspective in life and ability to assimilate to societal norms.

demi_kasia

  • Visit demi_kasia's Xanga Site
    • Name: Nicole
    • Gender: Female
    • Member Since: 1/2/2004

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