COLUMBUS, Ohio-In the wake of two third-degree felony convictions and the jailing earlier this year of an Akron, Oh. Black single mother for lying on school applications to send her children to a neighboring predominantly White suburban school district with the hope of getting them a better education away from the housing projects where the family lives, Republican Gov. John Kasich used his executive clemency authority on Wed and reduced the charges to misdemeanors.
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Ohio Gov John Kasich reduces felonies to misdemeanors of Sharpton supporter Williams- Bolar who was jailed for sending her Black children to better school district in White neighborhood
- 09 September 2011
- Kathy
- Hits: 7171
Last Updated on Friday, 21 February 2014 04:06
Media Personalities M L Schultze And Kathy Wray Coleman Are Speakers At Akron League Of Women Voters 91st Annual Women's Equality Day Picnic
- 30 August 2011
- Kathy
- Hits: 6794
AKRON, Ohio-The Akron Chapter of the League of Women Voters, which is led by Diana Kingsberry, on Thur. hosted Ethnic Journalist and Cleveland Area Blogger Kathy Wray Coleman and WKSU radio news editor M.L. Schultze, who on Aug 8 moderated the Akron Democratic Primary mayoral debate between long term Akron Mayor Dan Plusquellic, Akron City Councilman Michael Williams and Janice Davis.
Schultze and Coleman were the guest speakers at the organization's "Women Equality Day Annual Picnic Representing The 91st Anniversary Of Women Suffrage" and spoke primarily on the theme of whether there is equality for women in politics.
Last Updated on Friday, 21 February 2014 03:55
The Rev. Jesse Jackson, Rep. Fudge, Congressional Black Caucus discuss voter suppression, Tea Party, debt ceiling deal, Obama, at town hall in Cleveland, Ohio
- 12 August 2011
- Kathy
- Hits: 10349
CLEVELAND, Ohio-Rainbow Push Coalition leader the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. and members of the Congressional Black Caucus did not disappoint at a town hall forum at Cleveland State University on Monday spearheaded by U.S. Rep. Marcia Fudge (D-OH).
The event drew a discussion on the Budget Control Act of 2011, the Republican Tea Party, and an Ohio voter suppression bill that Jackson and the legislators visiting Cleveland said is designed to silence Ohio's Black vote and harm the Democratic Party during the upcoming 2012 presidential election year.
"We need the attorney generals of the 34 states to convene and protect the right to vote," said Jackson, referencing states efforts, including Ohio's House Bill 194, in passing and seeking to pass laws slashing early voting and demanding identification to vote, Republican pushed legislation that has labor unions and Civil Rights organizations like the Cleveland NAACP upset.
Last Updated on Sunday, 15 February 2015 07:15
Rev. Jesse Jackson, Rep. Fudge, Congressional Black Caucus discuss voter suppression, Tea Party, debt ceiling deal, Obama, at town hall in Cleveland, Ohio
- 12 August 2011
- Kathy
- Hits: 4183
CLEVELAND, Ohio-Rainbow Push Coalition leader the Rev. Jesse Jackson Sr. and members of the Congressional Black Caucus did not disappoint at a town hall forum at Cleveland State University on Monday spearheaded by U.S. Rep. Marcia Fudge (D-OH) that drew a discussion on the Budget Control Act of 2011, the Republican Tea Party, and an Ohio voter suppression bill that Jackson and the legislators visiting Cleveland said is designed to silence Ohio's Black vote and harm the Democratic Party during the upcoming 2012 presidential election year.
"We need the attorney generals of the 34 states to convene and protect the right to vote," said Jackson, referencing states efforts, including Ohio's House Bill 194, in passing and seeking to pass laws slashing early voting and demanding identification to vote, Republican pushed legislation that has labor unions and Civil Rights organizations like the Cleveland NAACP upset.
Last Updated on Tuesday, 25 February 2014 05:10
Cleveland NAACP Executive Director Stanley Miller resigns amid medical mart controversy, stance contrary to Cleveland NAACP President George Forbes on Cleveland Hts curfew law
- 26 July 2011
- Kathy
- Hits: 10726
Cleveland NAACP Executive Director Stanley Miller has resigned after serving six years in the post, and amid controversy from a Black contractors group that says that Miller and Cleveland NAACP President George Forbes have done in struggling Black contractors by not speaking up about a dearth of minority contractors on the lucrative Medical Mart Project, though the major-metropolitan City of Cleveland is majority Black and roughly 67 percent minority.
Miller played his departure as a new opportunity to lead Cleveland's struggling Marcus Garvey Charter School of some 175 students, but others say he resigned under pressure and because of ongoing conflict with Forbes, including a scathing letter last week from Norman Edwards, executive director of The Black Contractors Group, a letter sent to Forbes and Miller that was copied to community leaders, Gov. John Kasich and U.S. Senator Sherrod Brown.
Last Updated on Friday, 21 February 2014 03:54








