And professional family. I think it will be very cathartic for them and us as well just to mourn together. Amazing grace reporter inside the arena was filled. And although the mood was understandably somber speakers emphasized the positive impact johnson had on the community and reached out to his family. Michael is what we stand for. San jose officer prototype. The California Department of justice and the states entire Law Enforcement community are here for you. Reporter fellow Academy Graduate david solis called for a moment befitting a sports arena, a standing ovation, saying johnson was probably watching. Anything you want to say, that you love him, you miss him, whatever, say it out loud, and lets rock this place. [ cheering and applause ] reporter johnsons center jamie capped the public ceremony with a heartfelt goodbye. Mike loved his family with his entire heart, and he expressed his love by being present. And now that he was gone, we know it was truly a gift. Reporter afterwar
The wildest California real estate deals of 2023
sfgate.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfgate.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
The heart of SF beats on at a sunset drag show on Baker Beach
sfgate.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from sfgate.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
This Butterfly Was the First in North America That People Made Extinct
New research suggests the iconic Xerces blue butterfly may have been its own species.
The 93-year-old Xerces blue butterfly specimen, located in the collections of the Field Museum in Chicago, used in the study.Credit.The Field Museum
July 21, 2021
More than a century ago, a bluish butterfly flitted among the sand dunes of the Sunset District in San Francisco and laid its eggs on a plant known as deerweed. As the city’s development overtook the dunes and deerweed, the butterflies vanished, too. The last Xerces blue butterfly was collected in 1941 from Lobos Creek by an entomologist who would later lament that he had killed what was one of the last living members of the species.