Washington Baltimore Afro American Newspaper June 4 2016

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Volume Volume 124 123 No. No. 44 20–22

www.afro.com

June 4, 2016 - June 4, 2016, The Afro-American A1 $1.00

$1.00

JUNE 4, 2016 - JUNE 10, 2016

Inside

Baltimore • Youth Says

Involvement in Riots Changed His Life

Destination: Cuba

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Washington

Justice for Corey Jones Eating Cheaply in Baltimore

Damon Higgins/Palm Beach Post via AP

The casket carrying the body of Corey Jones is wheeled out after funeral services at the Payne Chapel AME of West Palm Beach, Fla. last October. Jones was shot multiple times on Oct. 18, 2015, in Palm Beach Gardens by an undercover officer as he waited for a tow truck for his stalled vehicle. See story on A4.

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Chinese Defend Racist Ad

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Your History • Your Community • Your News

That’s how many people have liked the AFRO Facebook page. Join last week’s 1,500 new fans and become part of the family.

Continued on A3

Courtesy photo

Snapshots of the Chinese detergent ad that sparked racial controversy throughout the world.

Black activists in Baltimore and beyond say they are disappointed but not discouraged after neither of the first two police officers to stand trial in the death of a man who was injured in the back of a police van was convicted. A number of black leaders said that they had low expectations of seeing anyone found guilty in the death of Freddie Gray. And they say bringing about real and lasting Continued on A3

Listen to Afro’s “First Edition” Join Host Sean Yoes Monday-Friday 5-7 p.m. on 88.9 WEAA FM, the Voice of the Community.

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By Anthony McCartney The Associated Press

In Police Cases, Black Activists Finding Kunta: Black Push Reforms Outside Court Entrepreneurs Connect By Juliet Linderman and Errin Haines Whack the Dots after Roots The Associated Press

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Alternative Location for Ward 5 Homeless Shelter

Actor Convicted of 2nd-Degree Murder in Killing of Wife

By Shantella Y. Sherman Special to the AFRO ssherman@afro.com

Outcries of racism and bigotry were voiced internationally against television advertisements for Qiaobi, a Chinese cleaning liquid. Even though the ads are dubbed as the most racist by viewers abroad, the company nonetheless defended the ads, saying any discrimination was in the eye of the viewer. The ad, which drew international outrage after being uploaded to the internet on May 26, shows a Black man walking into the home of an Asian woman who is in the midst of doing her laundry. He is disheveled and looks as if he has been working with paints. As he walks towards

• McDuffie Proposes

AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, File

Protesters gather outside of a courthouse after Officer Edward Nero, one of six Baltimore city police officers charged in connection to the death of Freddie Gray, was acquitted of all charges in his trial in Baltimore on May 23.

A jury on May 31 convicted an actor who played a police officer on TV of second-degree murder in the shooting death of his wife that was partially witnessed by their two young sons. The verdict in the trial of Michael Jace, who appeared on the FX series “The Shield,” came after a weeklong trial in which Los Angeles jurors were told the actor shot his wife, April, in the back

By Ronda Racha Penrice Urban News Service Kunta Kinte still haunts us. Nearly 40 years after it premiered, “Roots” – Alex Haley’s iconic quest, tracing his ancestry from slavery back to Juffure, The Gambia – still inspires African-Americans to reclaim their heritage. Today, the ripple effect of the 1977 ABC miniseries is evident in reality shows, such as “Finding Your Roots,” and now the History Channel’s reboot of the epic TV program for a new generation. And African-American entrepreneurs have capitalized on the momentum by helping others find their own roots. “The original ‘Roots’ was extremely effective for all of us who saw it, Black people who saw it, in planting the Continued on A7

Photo by Richard Shotwell/Invision/AP, File

Michael Jace

Photo by Casey Cafford

Malachi Kirby and LeVar Burton, Past and Present Kunta Kinte, History Channel’s Updated Roots

Copyright © 2016 by the Afro-American Company

and then twice in the legs with a revolver that belonged to her father. Jace, 53, did not testify in his own defense. He told detectives soon after the attack that he had retrieved the gun to kill himself but couldn’t do it. Instead, he planned to shoot his wife, an avid runner, in the leg so she would feel pain, Jace said in a recorded interview. Deputy District Attorney Tannaz Continued on A3


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