Wednesday, December 26, 2012
Jo and Eddie Huebner
While cleaning out a closet last week, I found this picture of my Aunt Jo and Uncle Eddie Huebner. This picture was taken at their home in the Norhill section of the Heights in Houston in the mid 1970's.
Monday, December 24, 2012
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Sunday, December 16, 2012
Ana Marquez-Greene
The little girl in this video, Ana Marquez-Greene, is one of the victims of the shooting on Friday at Sandy Hook Elementary School. Her brother Isaiah, who is playing the piano, was in the school too, but survived.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Sunday, December 9, 2012
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Sunday, December 2, 2012
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
The Real American Dream
From Politico:
Raul Ruiz win tells story of Election 2012
By: Kate Nocera
November 18, 2012 11:20 PM EST
If the growing sway of Latinos in American politics was the story of election 2012, Raul Ruiz’s triumph in California’s 36th Congressional District was a dramatic subplot.
The son of migrant farmworkers who scraped his way through UCLA and then Harvard Medical School, Ruiz dislodged Rep. Mary Bono Mack, a 14-year fixture of the Republican Conference who didn’t seem to fully appreciate the district’s fast-growing Hispanic population until it was too late.
Now Ruiz will join the Democratic Caucus, which Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi noted with pride last week will have more minorities and women combined than white men.
“More than anything, it’s a reflection of America,” Ruiz, 40, told POLITICO during freshman orientation last week. “It’s a reflection of changing times that people are electing folks they feel are competent and will represent the issues and values of the country as a whole.”
Political handicappers scoffed at Ruiz’s chances when the emergency room doctor launched his campaign: Bono Mack was too well-known in the district, and Ruiz had never run for office.
But Ruiz pounced on Bono Mack’s support for Rep. Paul Ryan’s controversial Medicare reform plan. And he rallied the district’s growing Latino population — Hispanics make up more than a quarter of registered voters and 47 percent of the population overall — to help lift him to a narrow victory.
Ruiz also highlighted his deep roots in the district and undeniably impressive life story.
The son of poor farmworkers, he lived in a trailer for a time as a boy and left home at 17 for UCLA. To help pay for college, he went store to store asking business owners to invest in their community by investing in his education. He raised $2,000 — enough to pay for books for two years — promising he would eventually return to the area to give back.
Ruiz went on to earn three degrees from Harvard, including his M.D., before working as an ER doctor at a nonprofit hospital. He organized free health education for poorer communities, helped start a free clinic for the uninsured, launched a mentorship program for aspiring doctors and became a senior associate dean at UC-Riverside School of Medicine.
Then came his long-shot bid for Congress. Ruiz said it wasn’t enough for him to just treat patients in a hospital or clinic; he felt compelled to work on the “social determinants of health” — jobs, the economy, education and access to health care — which he felt Bono Mack wasn’t addressing.
Bono Mack replaced her famous husband, Sonny Bono, in Congress in 1998 after his death in a skiing accident. Though her politics are regarded as moderate, Ruiz effectively painted her as out of touch with a huge segment of the district.
The congresswoman acknowledged during the campaign her party’s shortcomings among Latinos. By 2020, Hispanics are expected to outnumber whites in California.
“We’re missing a big opportunity,” Bono Mack said in October, as reported by The Desert Sun. “Most Latinos understand that centralized government, big government institutions are not the way to go.”
But in the weeks before the election, Bono Mack had all but given up trying to court Latinos.
“I pledge that after November, I will try my hardest to speak to Latino voters,” Bono Mack said. “This election, I’m a little bit hamstrung. But I will do my best. Because I think that they deserve the attention that we need to give them.”
But it wasn’t just a lack of attention that caused her problems. Ruiz seized on a 2006 email that Bono Mack wrote to a radio personality in which she delighted at the host’s description of a heavily Latino part of the district as a “Third World toilet.”
“Even Mitt Romney would have been disgusted by that comment,” the Desert Sun quoted Ruiz as saying. Bono Mack’s campaign acknowledged the missive was “inappropriate” and said it didn’t reflect her true feelings, but the damage was done.
Ruiz described the 36th District as incredibly diverse, both racially and economically. Located just east of Los Angeles, it is still made up of a “minority of minorities,” he said. But he worked hard to convince voters across the spectrum — the district also includes ritzy Palm Springs — to vote for him.
“This was a big clash of values for the people in our district,” Ruiz said in an interview. “Too many of our seniors are barely making ends meet with the Social Security and Medicare, and her plan to change Medicare into a voucher system … was unacceptable. Her wanting to cut Pell Grants and Stafford loans for our students, in particular middle-class students who rely on those to go to school, was also unacceptable.”
Republicans suffered heavy losses in the Golden State. Democrats picked up four seats, giving them a 38-15 majority in Congress’s largest delegation.
As Ruiz learned to navigate the halls of Congress during last week’s freshman orientation — he got lost only once — the newcomer expressed hope for more bipartisan cooperation in a divided Congress. He’s also focusing on trying to get to know the other new members of his caucus.
“It feels like college all over again. I was asking where the cafeteria was, taking class pictures, trying to make new friends,” he said. “I know it’s going to take time.”
It’s still sinking in he’ll be a congressman come January.
“The idea that where I come from, from my humble beginnings, and now, I find myself in the Capitol around the most influential people in the country and being able to sit at the table and really serve my communities,” he said, “is very empowering.”
© 2012 POLITICO LLC
Raul Ruiz win tells story of Election 2012
By: Kate Nocera
November 18, 2012 11:20 PM EST
If the growing sway of Latinos in American politics was the story of election 2012, Raul Ruiz’s triumph in California’s 36th Congressional District was a dramatic subplot.
The son of migrant farmworkers who scraped his way through UCLA and then Harvard Medical School, Ruiz dislodged Rep. Mary Bono Mack, a 14-year fixture of the Republican Conference who didn’t seem to fully appreciate the district’s fast-growing Hispanic population until it was too late.
Now Ruiz will join the Democratic Caucus, which Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi noted with pride last week will have more minorities and women combined than white men.
“More than anything, it’s a reflection of America,” Ruiz, 40, told POLITICO during freshman orientation last week. “It’s a reflection of changing times that people are electing folks they feel are competent and will represent the issues and values of the country as a whole.”
Political handicappers scoffed at Ruiz’s chances when the emergency room doctor launched his campaign: Bono Mack was too well-known in the district, and Ruiz had never run for office.
But Ruiz pounced on Bono Mack’s support for Rep. Paul Ryan’s controversial Medicare reform plan. And he rallied the district’s growing Latino population — Hispanics make up more than a quarter of registered voters and 47 percent of the population overall — to help lift him to a narrow victory.
Ruiz also highlighted his deep roots in the district and undeniably impressive life story.
The son of poor farmworkers, he lived in a trailer for a time as a boy and left home at 17 for UCLA. To help pay for college, he went store to store asking business owners to invest in their community by investing in his education. He raised $2,000 — enough to pay for books for two years — promising he would eventually return to the area to give back.
Ruiz went on to earn three degrees from Harvard, including his M.D., before working as an ER doctor at a nonprofit hospital. He organized free health education for poorer communities, helped start a free clinic for the uninsured, launched a mentorship program for aspiring doctors and became a senior associate dean at UC-Riverside School of Medicine.
Then came his long-shot bid for Congress. Ruiz said it wasn’t enough for him to just treat patients in a hospital or clinic; he felt compelled to work on the “social determinants of health” — jobs, the economy, education and access to health care — which he felt Bono Mack wasn’t addressing.
Bono Mack replaced her famous husband, Sonny Bono, in Congress in 1998 after his death in a skiing accident. Though her politics are regarded as moderate, Ruiz effectively painted her as out of touch with a huge segment of the district.
The congresswoman acknowledged during the campaign her party’s shortcomings among Latinos. By 2020, Hispanics are expected to outnumber whites in California.
“We’re missing a big opportunity,” Bono Mack said in October, as reported by The Desert Sun. “Most Latinos understand that centralized government, big government institutions are not the way to go.”
But in the weeks before the election, Bono Mack had all but given up trying to court Latinos.
“I pledge that after November, I will try my hardest to speak to Latino voters,” Bono Mack said. “This election, I’m a little bit hamstrung. But I will do my best. Because I think that they deserve the attention that we need to give them.”
But it wasn’t just a lack of attention that caused her problems. Ruiz seized on a 2006 email that Bono Mack wrote to a radio personality in which she delighted at the host’s description of a heavily Latino part of the district as a “Third World toilet.”
“Even Mitt Romney would have been disgusted by that comment,” the Desert Sun quoted Ruiz as saying. Bono Mack’s campaign acknowledged the missive was “inappropriate” and said it didn’t reflect her true feelings, but the damage was done.
Ruiz described the 36th District as incredibly diverse, both racially and economically. Located just east of Los Angeles, it is still made up of a “minority of minorities,” he said. But he worked hard to convince voters across the spectrum — the district also includes ritzy Palm Springs — to vote for him.
“This was a big clash of values for the people in our district,” Ruiz said in an interview. “Too many of our seniors are barely making ends meet with the Social Security and Medicare, and her plan to change Medicare into a voucher system … was unacceptable. Her wanting to cut Pell Grants and Stafford loans for our students, in particular middle-class students who rely on those to go to school, was also unacceptable.”
Republicans suffered heavy losses in the Golden State. Democrats picked up four seats, giving them a 38-15 majority in Congress’s largest delegation.
As Ruiz learned to navigate the halls of Congress during last week’s freshman orientation — he got lost only once — the newcomer expressed hope for more bipartisan cooperation in a divided Congress. He’s also focusing on trying to get to know the other new members of his caucus.
“It feels like college all over again. I was asking where the cafeteria was, taking class pictures, trying to make new friends,” he said. “I know it’s going to take time.”
It’s still sinking in he’ll be a congressman come January.
“The idea that where I come from, from my humble beginnings, and now, I find myself in the Capitol around the most influential people in the country and being able to sit at the table and really serve my communities,” he said, “is very empowering.”
© 2012 POLITICO LLC
Labels:
2012 Election,
Kate Nocera,
Politico,
Raul Ruiz
Saturday, November 10, 2012
Rosie
I had planned to take Tuesday and Wednesday off to vote, volunteer at the polls, and hopefully celebrate. When I got home from work on Monday night Rosie was really sick. She had been fine in the morning but that's how things go with dogs. Tuesday I took her to the Dr. and they discovered a massive ear infection. After spending about 700 on her we went home. When I woke up this morning her ear was bleeding and there was blood all over the bed so we spent 2 1/2 hrs. at the vet and another almost 300. The whole right side of her face near her ear is swollen and she may have a burst ear drum. It's so swollen they can't even look inside her ear to see. She's on antibiotics, pain meds and a topical antibiotic which has to be applied to her ear daily after cleaning. Poor Rosie. She also turned 13 on Tuesday but we didn't get to have our usual cupcake celebration. As soon as she's well we will. Ginger is 14 1/2. Hard to believe my puppies are so old.
Election Day Celebration
I took Tuesday and Wednesday off and this is what happened at my desk while I was gone. Thanks to my co-workers!
Friday, October 12, 2012
Happy Birthday Rice!
Nice article about Rice from the Houston Chronicle: http://www.chron.com/news/houston-texas/article/Rice-University-celebrates-100-3925035.php
Wednesday, September 19, 2012
Space Shuttle Endeavour
Anca took these pictures from the parking lot in the building where I work. We all went outside hoping to get a glance of the space shuttle and were really surprised when in went directly over us. It was so close we could only see the bottom of the 747 until it made a turn towards the Astrodome.
Labels:
Endeavour (Space shuttle),
Houston,
Space shuttles
Saturday, May 5, 2012
Cinco de Mayo
Tuesday, April 17, 2012
My Mother's Autobiography
I found this autobiography my mother wrote, probably as a school assignment in the 3rd or 4th grade. Today would be her 94th birthday.
Daydreams of a Young Girl
Here are a few poems my mother wrote when she was 15. The title on the front of the little book she put together was "Daydreams of a Young Girl."
Sunday, April 15, 2012
My Cousin Beverly
Beverly with her husband Tracy and children Shannon and Julie
The last 4 pictures are of Beverly, my sister Margaret, and me. Beverly was closer in age than my other cousins so I usually spent time with her when I visited my aunt in Raymondville. She was the coolest person I knew and let me hang out with her, even letting me go on a date with her one time. I also visited her at Baylor once and stayed in her dorm room.
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