Page 12 Obituary In Loving Memory Lloyd Noble Aug. 6, 1935 – Jan. 28, 2020 Lloyd Noble was born Aug. 6, 1935 in Seminole, Okla. to Stephen Noble and Estella Jack- son. On Jan. 28, 2020, the Lord called him home after being ill for a number of years. His moth- er passed at an early age, and he was raised in Bakersfield, Calif. He also lived in Spokane with his oldest brother Everett and wife Violet. Later on he moved to Portland and stayed with his sister Frances Odom and Olene Rosemon. He was active in life and was president of the AARP Chapter 5264 for many years. He worked many jobs, such as a longshore- man and as an assistant chef at a Bohemian restaurant. Later on he joined the Merchant Marines and worked as a cook on a ship. He also joined the electricians union and became an electrician on the vessels he worked on. He was very proud of that. He car- ried ammunition for three years and never shot a bullet. He trav- elled around the world for 27 years, countries as Africa, Japan, Egypt, Korea, and many states in the USA He was sharp dresser and very outgoing. He married Louise Kinsey on April 7, 1960 and ad- opted Linda, Tanya and Malcolm and raised them from an early age. He joined the Church of Living God in 2006 as a deacon under Pastor Maxie. Later on in 2016 he joined the Bethesda Church under pastor Jointer. He leaves his beloved wife Louise, his adopted children, many family members and friends. A memorial service will be held Thursday, Feb. 13 at 1 p.m. at Bethesda Baptist Church, 1730 S.E. 117th Ave. February 12, 2020 Clarence Thomas in His Own Words New film on the one black justice by his grandfather for being a revolutionary. Thomas eventually graduated from Yale Law School, and no family members came to his graduation. That affected him greatly. Fast forward to 1980, and some- thing changed his social opinions, politics and viewpoint on the fight for equality. This is where the footage feels like it skates over a crucial part of his life. What makes a black man go from a poor kid, to a bright student, a militant, a counterculture “lazy Libertari- an,” to a Republican? It’s like he walked through a door, left his blackness outside and embraced a party that caters to whites with no reasonable explanation (only 8% of black voters identify in some way with the Republican Party). How did this conversion occur? What was the trigger? “In the fall of 1980, I had de- cided to vote for Ronald Reagan,” Thomas says. “It was a giant step for a black man. Then license is given to others, to attack you in whatever way they want to. You’re not really black because you’re not doing what you expect black peo- ple to do. You weren’t supposed to d WighT b roWn To many, he is an enigma. Or that controversial 1990s political/ judicial figure who faded into a quiet corner of the Supreme Court of the United States. RBG gets all the press. Clarence Thomas does not. Rarely interviewed, rarely in front of a camera. If political junkies, students of history, the African American community and others want to delve deep into the psyche of the one black SCOTUS judge, they will have to do their own research. As young black man, future Supreme Court Justice Clarence What’s on view in the new film Thomas had more opportunities than other poor kids in his ‘Created Equal: Clarence Thomas neighborhood and took them. in his Own Words,” is a one-sid- oppose busing; you weren’t sup- are notoriously against them. Un- ed scrapbook, with no dissenting posed to oppose welfare.” like his predecessor Thurgood points of view. No friends, col- Director/writer Michael Pack’s Marshall, who the black com- leagues or rivals to pose a counter- inability to ask a tough question munity could look to as someone point—the kind of good friction becomes egregious here. Thomas who understood their challenges, that makes a documentary a docu- is known as the Supreme Court Thomas has been resolutely the mentary and not a promo reel. judge who consistently votes opposite. Why? However, this non-fiction film against measures that will even the As Thomas sits in a dark room does shed light on certain histor- playing field for African Ameri- recollecting, cinematographer ical aspects of Thomas’ life. Born cans. Affirmative action, college James Callanan shoots him from in the very segregated Pin Point, admissions, quotas –his opinions unflattering angles, with horren- Georgia in 1948, he was raised ini- dous lighting that makes him look tially by a single mother in abject like he’s in a low-budget sci-fi poverty with virtually no interac- movie. Photos and footage from tion with his father. His brother the 1950s, 60s and 70s detail pov- and he were taken in by his mid- erty in the south and black life dle-class maternal grandparents. A under the oppression of Jim Crow stern granddad became his father laws. They also reveal a young figure, applying strict discipline black man who had more oppor- and telling his two young grand- tunities than other poor kids in his sons that the door swings in and neighborhood, and took them. out. They came in with it, and will Thomas attended Yale Law go out with it if they don’t behave. School at the time when its pol- Thomas was sent to a Catho- icies, involving race-conscious lic elementary school. His teenage admissions programs embracing years were spent in an all-white, diversity, opened the doors for all-male Catholic seminary, where people like him. Yet he dissented he was often the target of racial from the court’s landmark 2003 taunts, especially during the tu- decision in Grutter v. Bollinger, multuous civil rights movement. which upheld the use of race as Somehow he attended the Col- a factor in state university admis- lege of the Holy Cross, a private sions decisions. It’s that hypocrisy Jesuit school in Worcester, Mass. that made him an outcast in the in 1968 even though his grand- African American community, father refused to pay for college. He fell in with some black radical Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas pictured with his second and particularly to the black intel- students, embraced the Black Pan- and current wife, Virginia, who gets plenty of airtime in a new C onTinued on P age 15 ther movement and was disowned one-sided bio about his life. by Avalon Flowers 520 SW 3rd Ave., Portland, OR 97204 • 503-796-9250 Cori Stewart-- Owner, Operator A full service flower experience • Birthdays • Anniversaries • Funerals • Weddings Open: Mon.-Fri. 7:30am til 5:30pm Saturday 9am til 2pm. Website: avalonflowerspdx.com email: avalonflowers@msn.com We Offer Wire Services