
Comedian Seyi Law and his wife, Stacy renewed their vows as they celebrated their 5th wedding anniversary.
The couple who lost their first child after birth looked so much in love as they celebrated with their friends.
Seyi Law also wrote this beautiful message to his wife”I looked into your eyes several times, but the burning desire never ends. Your beauty is not of the outward, but within. Your strength is in accommodating without complaints. You are an epitome of Amazement. A creation of Excellence, The definition of Greatness, And a Heart Of Pure Gold. Love You.”
And anointing refreshed.
The ring has no end,
So shall our joy and love be.
See more photos below:



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Pres. Barack Obama and Cuban Pres. Raul Castro meet at the United
Nations General Assembly in New York last year. (Photo: Kevin
Lamarque/Reuters)Pres.
Barack Obama will make a historic visit to Cuba “in the coming weeks,”
the culmination of his efforts to end a half-century of tensions between
Havana and Washington, a senior administration official said late
Wednesday.“We
can confirm that tomorrow the administration will announce the
president’s travel to Latin America, including Cuba, in the coming
weeks,” the official said on condition of anonymity. ABC had first
reported the news, saying that the trip would take place in late March.The
trip — the only one by a sitting U.S. president since 1928 — was bound
to draw sharp criticism from Republican candidates for the White House,
who oppose Obama’s efforts to move the relationship past the antagonisms
of the Cold War.At
a CNN town hall, Anderson Cooper asked Republican senator and White
House hopeful Marco Rubio whether he would go to Cuba. “Not if it’s not a
free Cuba,” replied Rubio, one of two Cuban-Americans in the running
for the GOP presidential nomination in 2016.In an
A recent view of downtown Havana. (Photo: Alexandre Meneghini/Reuters)For
nearly 50 years, the United States tried various ways to end the Castro
regime that rules Cuba. The disastrous 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion led to
the convoluted scenarios laid out in “
Workers repair the street in front of the Capitolio in Havana, March 14, 2016. (Photo: Ramon Espinosa/AP)The
president will meet with his Cuban counterpart, Raúl Castro, but not
with Fidel, who used to delight in delivering roaring seven-hour
speeches, but has been seen in public less and less since handing his
brother the reins in 2008. He’ll take in some of the sights in Havana,
and attend an exhibition baseball game pitting the Tampa Bay Rays
against Cuba’s national team. There will be a state dinner. He will also
deliver a speech about steps that must still be taken to further
improve relations, a message that White House aides say will be
broadcast on Cuban television. He will meet with Raúl Castro at the
Palacio de la Revolución, the seat of government, and criticize his
regime’s human rights record both there and in a meeting with
hand-picked dissidents.“We’re
trying a new approach,” White House press secretary Josh Earnest told
reporters Friday. “Our approach now is that the president of the United
States is going to get on Air Force One, he is going to fly to Havana,
Cuba, and he is going to sit down with the leader of Cuba and say, ‘You
need to do a better job of protecting the human rights of your people.’”
Sen. Marco Rubio, onstage with his family, tells
supporters at a primary night rally in Miami that he is suspending his
campaign for the Republican nomination. (Photo: Angel Valentin/Getty
Images)

Sen.
Marco Rubio addresses a campaign rally at Palm Beach Atlantic
University in West Palm Beach, Fla., on Monday. (Photo: Paul Sancya/AP)
President
Barack Obama smiles after announcing Judge Merrick Garland as his
nominee for the U.S. Supreme Court on March 16, 2016. (Photo: Kevin
LaMarque/Reuters)Judge
Merrick Garland of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Washington D.C.
Circuit will most likely not become Justice Merrick Garland of the
Supreme Court, at least not while President Barack Obama remains in
office. He seems unlikely to get even a hearing before the Senate
Judiciary Committee, or a vote either by that panel or the whole Senate.And
it may be partly because it’s hard to imagine an Obama nominee more
likely to win confirmation, if the Republicans allowed a vote.Republican
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell repeated on Wednesday what he
said just hours after the late justice Antonin Scalia died in
mid-February: There will be no Judiciary Committee hearings, and no
votes on confirmation while Obama resides at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.The
Senate will appropriately revisit the matter when it considers the
qualifications of the person the next president nominates,” McConnell
said, apparently extinguishing even the dim prospects of a vote in the
lame-duck session after the November elections.Still,
the pitched political battle over Garland’s fate could turn in
unexpected ways, and will shape – and be shaped by – the 2016 race: Not
just Donald Trump’s unprecedented presidential race but the fight to
control the Senate, in which a platoon of Senate Republicans are facing
stiff challenges.Garland, 63, is a judicial moderate who earned the support of a majority of Republicans for his
Senate
Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky) leaves the Senate chamber after
vowing that the body will not hold hearings on whether to confirm
Garland. (Photo: J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo)Republicans
know that the main prize in play is the ideological shape of the
Supreme Court. The late justice Antonin Scalia wasn’t just “a”
conservative jurist. He was arguably the most influential conservative
jurist of his era. Republicans know they’re highly unlikely to get
another Scalia, but would settle for putting another conservative in the
seat that the acerbic Italian-American held for decades, continuing
their run of 5-4 rulings on many contentious issues. The problem for
Republicans is not that Garland may turn out to be liberal, it’s that
he’s sure to be a lot more liberal than Scalia, tipping the overall
balance of the court to the left. To avoid that, the GOP has to gamble
that they will recapture the White House come November.
The
crowd at the UIC Pavilion on Chicago’s West side erupts in celebration
on March 11, 2016, after it is announced that Donald Trump will postpone
his rally here. (Photo: Caitlin Dickson/Yahoo News)While
many individuals who were removed from the venue had at least been
vocal before being engaged by security, the two young men were escorted
out before apparently engaging in any disruptive behavior. The
security guard who removed the two said it wasn’t up to him who got
kicked out, but that maintaining the safety of all in attendance was his
primary concern at the event. “Last
time I worked here it was for an Isley Brothers concert, as far as I’m
concerned I’m doing the same job,” the unnamed guard told Yahoo News.
“This is more interesting.“ Outside,
Chicago police officers on horseback corralled protesters behind
barricades. Several cars drove by waving huge Mexican flags as the
neighborhood was energized by both protesters and supporters, who were
separated by a large law enforcement presence. Undeterred
by the evening’s setback, Trump conducted several phone interviews with
TV news outlets after the postponement, crediting public frustration
with the U.S. economic conditions for the open defiance in Chicago – not
any reflection of his campaign positions, rhetoric or the ongoing
complaints of how protesters have been handled at his events."Our
businesses are being taken away from us, our businesses are being moved
out of the country,” Trump told Fox News’ Greta Van Susteren. “This is a
demonstration against economic conditions on both sides.”Liberal
activist organization MoveOn.org, which has endorsed Democratic
candidate Bernie Sanders, claimed some responsibility for organizing
“student leaders who organized nonviolent protest against Trump’s
violence & hate.”The
behavior of those in the crowd suggests the protest was carefully
planned. Despite the effort of security to weed out potential unrest in
advance – Yahoo News witnessed a man in a grey suit wearing a Trump pin
approach a band of young and apparently Middle Eastern men and ask them
if they’d like Trump signs in an effort to establish their allegiance –
when the announcement of postponement was made, the arena largely went
nuts. 
