Kathryn Tucker
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"Kathryn Tucker" (born 1959) is the executive director for the Disability Rights Legal Center. She graduated from Georgetown University Law Center in 1985 and Hampshire College in 1981. Tucker has been an adjunct law professor at Lewis and Clark School of Law, Seattle University and the University of Washington. Beginning in 1990, while an attorney at the Seattle firm of Perkins Coie, she did pro bono work for Washington Citizens for Death with Dignity, which led her into the aid-in-dying movement.

As legal director of Compassion & Choices in 1997 Tucker argued Washington v. Glucksberg before the U.S. Supreme Court, seeking to establish a federal constitutional right to choose aid in dying; the Court referred the issue to the states. The Glucksberg case is widely recognized as prompting widespread effort to improve end of life care. Tucker successfully defended the Oregon Death with Dignity Act from attacks from the federal legislature and the U.S. Department of Justice. She represented terminally ill Oregonians challenging the law by former United States Attorneys General John Ashcroft and Alberto Gonzales, in Oregon v. Gonzales. The Oregon law was upheld by the United States Supreme Court.

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I don't think any of them are likely to pass, but I think there's been a real push by the right-to-life interest groups to roll back the clock.

The ISL59532 has higher integration than competitive devices, both with the number of input and output channels in one package, but also with its additional functions, such as DC-restore and its fast OSD switch.

She completely devoured it within a second. ... If she would have been ill for any other medical reason, I don't think she would have been as motivated as she was to eat.

The pixel clock has increased to about 100 MHz, resulting in the need for amplifiers and multiplexers with a bandwidth of 1 GHz.