Your Community Connection since 1994
Including Inglewood Airport Area • Baldwin Hills • Crenshaw/LA • Ladera Heights VOL. 24, No. 32
August 6, 2015
50th Anniversary of Watts Riots: Cops and the Black Community Then and Now By Veronica Mackey
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ifty years ago on August 11, 1965, South Los Angeles was literally ablaze. Rioters took to the streets after a black motorist was arrested. The incident sparked violence between residents and LAPD officers. Within hours, violence escalated to dangerous levels. Gov. Pat Brown declared a state of emergency, and dispatched 4,000 members of the California Army National Guard. As a young child, I vividly remember military tanks riding down our street. A curfew was set, and residents were not allowed to roam the streets after 8 or 9pm. (Continued on page 5)
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Scenes from the Watts Riots in Los Angeles, fifty years ago.
An Inglewood Son Returns
On The Inside: • News • Community • Entertainment • Health • Real Estate • Business
Bite-Sizing the GOP Debate
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By Thomas Bunn
ast week, the City of Inglewood held a press conference at the Fabulous Forum to officially welcome home one of Inglewood’s favorite sons, Paul Pierce, in front of an audience of close family, friends, and media. The event solidified the return of Pierce to his roots, and added another notch in the ever-stretching (Continued on page 2)
Paul Pierce with IHS Marching Band
COMING SOON THE BEST OF INGLEWOOD
Visit www.inglewoodtoday.com & see back cover ➤
he Republican presidential debate has been divided into two tiers. Ten candidates will appear in the primetime slot, while the remaining 7 will participate earlier in the evening on August 6. FOX News said Tuesday that Republican presidential candidates Donald Trump, Jeb Bush, Scott Walker, Mike Huckabee, Ben Carson, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio, Rand Paul, Chris Christie and John Kasich will all appear on the dais Thursday for the premiere event.
Texas Gov. Rick Perry and the six other candidates— Rick Santorum, Bobby Jindal, Carly Fiorina, Lindsey Graham, George Pataki, and Jim Gilmore—will appear in a separate contest earlier in the evening. Both Perry and Santorum, who were considered forerunners at various times during the 2012 presidential race, failed to make the cut. Each was passed up by lesser known candidates like Ben Carson and John Kasich. Meanwhile Donald Trump has surprised critics by taking first place in the polls with 24 percent. He is followed by Jeb Bush with 13 percent and Scott Walker with 10 percent. (Continued on page 8)