Former Daytona reporter, political consultant

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The discriminatory ban on Black people using the beaches was up for discussion and government leaders wanted to talk about it.

Knowing how sensitive the issue might be, on July 8, 1955, they held a secret meeting at a Daytona Beach hotel, away from the chambers where they conducted official business. A reporter for The News-Journal caught wind of the meeting and covered it the only way she could: By climbing onto a fire escape near the window where it took place.

Former Daytona reporter, political consultant

“I couldn’t see anyone through the window, but I knew their voices. I was taking notes like crazy,” said the reporter whose byline was Dorothy Einhorn but later came to be known by her married name, Dotti Lewis.

The enterprise Lewis showed that day didn’t just help her get the story, it carried her through a remarkable life beyond newspapering that ended at age 93 on Nov. 19.

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