Baltimore Washington 6-1-2018

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Who Killed Det. Sean Suiter? 197 Days and Counting June 2, 2018 - June 2, 2018, The Afro-American

Volume Volume 127 123 No. No.43 20–22

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JUNE 2, 2018 - JUNE 8, 2018

Baltimore

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First a Pardon Now a Film?

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Boxer Jack Johnson, the first Black world heavyweight champion, was granted a rare posthumous pardon, clearing Jack Johnson’s name more than 100 years after a racially-charged conviction. Film star Sylvester Stallone on May 30 announced plans for a biopic on Johnson.

Inside

Former AFRO Reporter, William C. Rhoden, Among Those Inducted into Hall of Fame By J. K. Schmid Special to the AFRO

On Finally Leaving Scandal-Plagued R. Kelly Behind

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William C. Rhoden, who covered Baltimore and sports at the AFRO in the 1970s, is one of five journalists inducted in the NABJ Hall of Fame. The ceremony will be held in Aug.

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14-Year-Old Gets College Degree and High School Diploma in One Day has always been ahead of the game. By 4-years-old, McKenzie was reading, by 8, he began taking high school courses, at 11, he was already enrolled in college courses, and now at 14 he graduated with an associates degree and as valedictorian of his high school class. While the whiz kid deserves the accolades, his parents noticed his talent at an early age and began homeschooling him. “We would pull material from different textbooks and custom create his curriculum,” his mother, Monique McCord, told Fox 5 Atlanta. This fall McKenzie will begin courses at Kennesaw State University to study biochemistry. Afterwards, he wants to go to Georgia Teach to get Masters and Ph.D. in Chemical Engineering.

Micha Green AFRO Washington, D.C. Editor mgreen@afro.com

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A former AFRO reporter was inducted into the National Association of Black Journalists Hall of Fame (NABJ) May 25. William “Bill” Rhoden, journalist, columnist and author, is a Morgan State alumnus, whose career spans publications from the AFRO to the Baltimore Sun to Ebony Magazine to the New York Times. Rhoden joins four additional names to the 2018 class: Albert J. Dunmore (posthumous), a former managing editor and executive editor of the Michigan Chronicle; Victoria “Vicki” Jones (posthumous), a TV news program producer with Boston’s WGBH and WBZ, Harvard Graduate

and former president of the Boston Association of Black Journalists; Louis Martin (posthumous), the commonly known “Godfather of Black Politics,” Martin was a Black rhetorical advisor to Democratic presidents Roosevelt, Kennedy, Johnson and Carter, and a reporter, editor and publisher with institutions such as the Chicago Defender and also the Michigan Chronicle. The only other living inductee is Bob Ray Sanders, a journalist whose career crossed radio, TV and written media. Sanders, reporting from Texas, was an early critic of South African Apartheid and covered Texas’ process of divestment from the regime. “When I look at the list

Usually teens graduate from high school and, if fortunate enough to follow their collegiate dreams, years later they get the honor of walking across the stage to receive a degree. Yet, for 14-year-old, homeschool student, Matthew McKenzie, his graduation order was anything but conventional. “We like to do things differently in the homeschool community,” Mackenzie said to Fox 5 Atlanta, after graduating from Chattahoochee Tech with a degree in Interdisciplinary Studies during the day and later that evening receiving his high school diploma. At 14, McKenzie is wowing the world with his educational tenacity and future goals, yet he

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Now that Matthew McKenzie has his high school and college degree, he’s preparing further his studies at Kennesaw State University this fall.

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Homicides on the Rise, District Struggles to Cope

D1 At Least 4,645 Died After Hurricane Maria, Not 64 By The Associated Press A new study contends that many more deaths than normal occurred in Puerto Rico in the three months after Hurricane Maria devastated the island, mostly because of problems getting medicines or medical care. Researchers surveyed a small sample of neighborhoods and from that estimated that up to 4,600 more deaths than usual occurred, far more than earlier studies have suggested. At least one independent expert questioned the methods and the number in the new study. “This estimate could be off by thousands. Easily,” Donald Berry, a professor of biostatistics at the University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, told The Associated Press in an email. The research was published online in the New England Journal of Medicine. It’s the latest study to analyze how many people died during or after the Category 4 storm that hit the U.S. territory in September 2017, causing more than an estimated $100 billion in damage. Continued on A3


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