Wednesday, August 19, 2015

Louis Stokes, Great Man

Louis Stokes.jpg

Early life[edit]

Born in Cleveland, Stokes and his brother Carl B. Stokes lived in one of the first federally funded housing projects, the Outhwaite Homes. Louis attended Central High School. Stokes served in the U.S. Army from 1943 to 1946. After attending Western Reserve University and Cleveland-Marshall College of Law, Stokes began practicing law in Cleveland in 1953.
Stokes argued the seminal "stop and frisk" case of Terry v. Ohio before the United States Supreme Court in 1968. Later in 1968, he was elected to the House, representing the 21st District of Ohio on Cleveland's East Side. He shifted to the newly created 11th District, covering much of the same area following a 1992 redistricting. Stokes served 30 years in total, retiring in 1999.

Career[edit]

Stokes' tenure in the House of Representatives included service on the House Appropriations Committee, where he was influential in bringing revenue to Cleveland. He was particularly interested in veterans' issues and secured funds for health-care facilities for veterans in Cleveland. In the 1970s, Stokes served as Chairman of the House Select Committee on Assassinations, charged with investigating the murders of President John F. Kennedy and civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr.. Stokes also served on the House committee that investigated the Iran-Contra Affair.

Personal life[edit]

Stokes' brother, Carl B. Stokes, was the first African American mayor of a large American city. His daughter, Angela Stokes, serves as a Cleveland Municipal Court judge while another, Lori Stokes, is a journalist with WABC-TV New York. His son, Chuck Stokes, is also a journalist with WXYZ-TV in Detroit. Funk and soul musician Rick James was a cousin.
Stokes and his wife, Jay, have seven grandchildren. He is also a Prince Hall Freemason,[2] and a member of the Cleveland Alumni chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity.

Later life and death[edit]

Stokes retired in 2012 as Senior Counsel in the law firm of Squire, Sanders & Dempsey, with offices in Cleveland and Washington.[3] On July 20, 2015, it was reported that Stokes had both brain cancer as well as lung cancer.[1]
Stokes died on August 18, 2015 at his home in Cleveland from lung and brain cancer at the age of 90.[4]

Legacy[edit]

The Cuyahoga Metropolitan Housing Authority, located in Cleveland, Ohio, opened the Louis Stokes Museum on September 13, 2007. This Museum houses Stokes memorabilia, video interviews, misc. video footage, awards and a written history about Stokes and his rise to prominence. The museum is located at Outhwaite Homes, 4302 Quincy Avenue. Hours are from 10 a.m. – 2 p.m. on Wednesdays and Fridays. Private viewings can be scheduled by calling 216-432-3840.
From 2006 to 2008, the Western Reserve Historical Society opened an exhibition on the lives of Congressman Stokes and his brother titled "Carl and Louis Stokes: From the Projects to Politics". The exhibit uses photographs, manuscript collections, and personal items to showcase Louis Stokes' rise from the Outhwaite homes, his legal career, and his Congressional service.
The former Congressman was inducted into the Karamu House Hall of Fame in 2007 for his contributions to the continued legacy of Cleveland's black settlement house and theatre.
Many buildings throughout the country have been named in Stokes honor including: Howard University's medical library, the Cleveland Public Library's main building expansion, GCRTA's Windermere station Louis Stokes Station at Windermere, and the greater Cleveland area Veteran's hospital was renamed the Louis Stokes Cleveland Department of Veteran Affairs Medical Center

Sunday, August 9, 2015

Trump Does It Again

Trump camp doubles down on ‘blood’ comment

Another weekend, another raging war of words triggered by shoot-from-the-lip presidential hopeful Donald Trump.
The unapologetic mogul on SaturdayDENIED he took a gross, sexist shot at Fox News host Megyn Kelly — and called anyone accusing him of that a “deviant.”
Trump, who sparred with Kelly at Thursday’s GOP debate over derogatory comments he has made about women, got into hot water Friday night when he said of Kelly during a CNN chat: “You could see there was blood coming out of her eyes, blood coming out of her . . . wherever.”
He took to Twitter Saturday morning to say he meant that blood was, metaphorically, coming from Kelly’s nose.
Hours later, Trump’s campaign took off the gloves.
“Mr. Trump said, ‘Blood was coming out of her eyes and whatever,’ meaning nose, but wanted to move on to more important topics,” a campaign statement read.
“Only a deviant would think anything else.”
A Fox News Channel spokeswoman on Saturday declined to comment on behalf of the network and Kelly.
The Donald’s remark got him barred from the conservative political meeting RedState Gathering 2015 in Atlanta on Saturday.
Trump called the event’s organizer, RedState.com editor Erick Erickson, a “loser” and said he didn’t want to attend anyway.

Modal Trigger
Photo: Getty Images
“He has a history of supporting establishment losers in failed campaigns, so it is an honor to be uninvited from his event,” his campaign said. “Mr. Trump is an outsider and does not fit his agenda.”

Even after his Kelly comment inci

Saturday, June 20, 2015


Among those fatally shot were, top row from left: Susie Jackson; Sharonda Coleman-Singleton; DePayne Doctor; Ethel Lance; bottom row from left: Tywanza Sanders; Cynthia Hurd; Clementa Pinckney and Daniel Simmons Sr. The ninth victim, not pictured, was Myra Thompson. 


Creditvia Associated 


Continue reading the main storyVideo

Victims’ Families Address Dylann Roof

Family members of those killed Wednesday at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, S.C., addressed the shooting suspect, Dylann Roof, in court.
 By Associated Press on Publish DateJune 19, 2015. Photo by Pool photo.

CHARLESTON, S.C. — One by one, they looked to the screen in a corner of the courtroom on Friday, into the expressionless face of the young man charged with making them motherless, snuffing out the life of a promising son, taking away a loving wife for good, bringing a grandmother’s life to a horrific end. And they answered him with forgiveness.
“You took something very precious away from me,” said Nadine Collier, daughter of 70-year-old Ethel Lance, her voice rising in anguish. “I will never talk to her ever again. I will never be able to hold her again. But I forgive you. And have mercy on your soul.”
The occasion was a bond hearing, the first court appearance of the suspect, Dylann Roof, for the murders, thought to be racially motivated, of nine black men and women during Bible study at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church on Wednesday night.


It was as if the Bible study had never ended as one after another, victims’ family members offered lessons in forgiveness, testaments to a faith that is not compromised by violence or grief. They urged him to repent, confess his sins and turn to God.

Photo

Clockwise from top left: Susie Jackson; Sharonda Coleman-Singleton; DePayne Doctor; Ethel Lance; Daniel Simmons Sr.; Clementa Pinckney; Cynthia Hurd; Tywanza Sanders.CreditClockwise from top left: David Goldman/AP; Jeffrey Collins/AP; Leigh Thomson/Southern Wesleyan University, via AP; David Goldman/AP (2); Grace Beahm/The Post and Courier, via AP; Adam Ferrell/The Post And Courier, via AP; Anita Brewer Dantzler, via AP

“We welcomed you Wednesday night in our Bible study with open arms,” said Felicia Sanders, the mother of 26-year old Tywanza Sanders, a poet who died after trying to save his aunt, who was also killed.
“You have killed some of the most beautifulest people that I know,” she said in a quavering voice. “Every fiber in my body hurts, and I will never be the same. Tywanza Sanders is my son, but Tywanza was my hero. Tywanza was my hero. But as we say in Bible study, we enjoyed you. But may God have mercy on you.”
The statements offered a moment of grace in a day when new details emerged about a massacre that has stunned the nation, echoing a long history of racial violence.
“All the victims were hit multiple times,” the Charleston Police Department wrote in an arrest warrant released Friday. The gunman walked in wearing a fanny pack, the statement said, and sat with the group talking Scripture for nearly an hour before he drew a gun and began firing — and on his way out, stood over a surviving witness “and uttered a racially inflammatory statement.”
After the police released security camera images of the suspect outside the church, Mr. Roof’s father and an uncle contacted the Charleston police and positively identified the defendant and his vehicle as those they saw in the photographs, the warrant revealed.

Continue reading the main story

Charleston’s Shifting Population

The racial makeup of Charleston shifted drastically over the last three decades. In 1980, blacks made up nearly half of the city’s population. Today the city is two-thirds white. The Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal church is located in a predominantly white area of the city’s downtown peninsula.
Press