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Dillon Johnson promises his mother he will play in championship game

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Washington’s Dillon Johnson blows a kiss to the crowd after scoring a touchdown during the Sugar Bowl playoff game between Texas and Washington at the Superdome in New Orleans, LA. (Photo by Nick Tre. Smith/Icon Sportswire) (Icon Sportswire via AP Images)

Amid the delirium near the end of Washington’s heart-stopping 37-31 Sugar Bowl victory over Texas was one sobering moment with just under a minute to play. Huskies running back Dillon Johnson, a Greenville native, carried the ball into the line on a third down play. Johnson was swarmed and tackled for no gain.

Rick Cleveland

Afterward, Johnson could not get up. When finally helped to his feet, he could not put any weight on his right foot.

Johnson, who scored the game’s first two touchdowns, has led the Huskies with nearly 1,200 yards rushing. He leads the team in touchdowns with 16. He protects wunderkind quarterback Michael Penix from blitzing pass rushers with bone-jarring regularity. Put it this way: The Huskies would not be 14-0 and headed to Monday night’s national championship game without Dillon Johnson, who was helped off the field and finally carted to the locker room.

It surely looked as if Washington would be forced to play No. 1 ranked Michigan without one of its key players. But, as Lee Corso would say, “Not so fast my friend…”

Greenville dentist Gwen Moore, who treats inmates at the Mississippi State Prison at Parchman, knew better. She is Dillon Johnson’s mother and his biggest fan. “Dill has an amazing pain threshold,” she said by telephone Thursday. “If he’s in it, he’s in it to win it. When I talked to him yesterday, he said, ‘Don’t worry about me, Mama. I’ll be fine. I’ll be ready to play. You just worry about getting to Houston.’ Dill has played through injuries all his life. He has played hurt for the last couple months. He focuses on the task and not the pain.”

Dillon Johnson smiles despite an injury that caused him to be carted off the field after Washington’s Sugar Bowl victory.

Washington coach Kellen DeBoer has said he expects Johnson to play. Greenville St. Joseph coach John Baker, Johnson’s high school coach, would be shocked if Johnson did not play.

“Dillon’s just special, always has been,” Baker said. “He has all the intangibles, including a competitiveness I have rarely seen. I mean, you can see it in his eyes. The thing about Dillon is he demands everybody around him play with the same intensity and toughness that he plays with.”

When Johnson was home over the Christmas holidays, he visited the St. Joe football facility for workouts and ice baths for his injured shoulder and foot. Said Baker, “He actually has a fractured bone in that right foot. He hurt it in the Oregon State game (Nov. 18).”

But that didn’t keep him from running for 152 yards and two touchdowns in the Pac-12 Championship Game victory over Oregon two weeks later. Not bad — right? – 152 yards and two scores with a broken bone in his right foot.

Nothing Johnson achieves surprises Baker, who coached him from the seventh grade through his high school career. “I remember one game when he was in the eighth grade when he played every play at running back on offense and middle linebacker on defense,” Baker said. “He won the game by himself. I mean, he made every tackle on defense and scored every touchdown. We were out-manned everywhere else, but Dillon just took over and won it.”

Johnson moved to the varsity in the ninth grade and helped St. Joe to three straight state championships beginning his sophomore year. He played running back as a sophomore, quarterback as a junior and running back and quarterback as a senior.

“The thing a lot of people don’t realize about Dillon is he can really throw the ball, too,” Baker said. Indeed, Johnson completed both the passes he threw for Washington this season. One went for a touchdown.

Seems almost impossible to believe Baker had Dillon Johnson and Florida State star Trey Benson in the same backfield for two seasons at a tiny private school in the Mississippi Delta. He did. Joe Moorhead, then the head coach at Mississippi State, recruited both. He landed Johnson, but Benson went first to Oregon and then to FSU.

“None of what is happening with Dillon at Washington surprises me,” said Moorhead, now the head coach at Akron. “I’m incredibly happy for his success. It’s all well-deserved and the result of hard work, dedication and being a good person.”

There was nothing not to like about Johnson as a football player, Moorhead said before listing the superlatives. “Great size and length,” Moorhead said. “Tremendous speed and acceleration. Excellent change of direction. Very physical running the ball and in pass protection. Great basketball player, too.”

Moorhead went on: “As good as Dillon is as a player, he’s an equally good person, engaging and always had a smile on his face, incredibly positive. Very well respected by his coaches, teachers and classmates. He comes from a tremendous family. His mother Gwen was incredibly supportive throughout the recruiting process and you could tell she had a significant impact on Dillon as a young man.”

Dillon Johnson, left, and his mother Gwen Moore.

Moorhead never got to coach him at State. When he was fired, Mike Leach brought in his Air Raid offense, which ran the ball only as an occasional change of pace. In three seasons at State, Johnson ran for about as many yards as he did in one season at Washington. Yes, Johnson caught 149 passes over those three seasons, but what he really wanted was to run the football. So he entered the portal.

“Probably the hardest decision Dill ever made,” said his mother, Gwen Moore. “He had grown up wanting to be a Mississippi State Bulldog.”

Once in the portal, Johnson heard from many schools, Washington among them. “Washington probably recruited him hardest,” Moore said. “They had won 11 games and lost just two the year before and their pitch was that Dillon was the missing link, that he was what they needed to go win a national championship. He visited and really loved it.”

The rest is history. And now, he apparently will play for that national championship, broken foot or not, determined as ever.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1939

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2025-01-05 07:00:00

Jan. 5, 1939 

The documentary on Pauli Murray was released in 2021. Credit: Courtesy of Amazon Studios

Pauli Murray applied to the University of North Carolina law school, sparking white outrage across the state. 

“The days immediately following the first press stories were anxious ones for me,” she recalled. “I had touched the raw nerve of white supremacy in the South.” 

A year later, she was jailed twice in Virginia for refusing to give her seat on a Greyhound bus. She graduated first in her class at Howard University School of Law, but Harvard University wouldn’t accept her because of her gender. (Harvard didn’t admit women until 1950.) Instead, she became the first Black student to receive Yale Law School’s most advanced degree. 

In 1942, she helped George Houser, James Farmer and Bayard Rustin form the Congress of Racial Equality, known as CORE. Four years later, she became a deputy attorney general in California. Thurgood Marshall described her 1951 book, “States’ Laws on Race and Color,” as the “bible” for civil rights lawyers. 

A year later, she lost her post at Cornell University because of McCarthyism. She left her law career to work on her writing at MacDowell Colony, a haven for artists and writers in New Hampshire, where she worked on her first memoir alongside James Baldwin. 

“Writing is my catharsis,” she said in an interview. “It saved my sanity. But you cannot sustain anger for years and years. It will kill you.” 

She researched her ancestry. “If you call me Black, it’s ridiculous physiologically, isn’t it? I’m probably 5/8 white, 2/8 Negro — repeat American Negro — and 1/8 American Indian,” she said. “I began years before Alex Haley did. I’m always ahead of my time.” 

She also penned a book of poems, “Dark Testament,” writing the words, “Hope is a song in a weary throat.” 

During her time as a professor in Ghana in the early 1960s, she began to accept that ancestry, she said. 

“The difficulty is coming to terms with a mixed ancestry in a racist culture,” she said.

She said she didn’t consider her experience unique. 

“I don’t believe that, ‘You came over in chains so how can you feel American?’ That’s poppycock. Thousands are just like me. In fact I probably feel more American than many whites. I just want this country to live up to its billing.” 

After returning from Africa, President Kennedy appointed her to his Committee on Civil and Political Rights. She worked with Martin Luther King Jr. and other top civil rights leaders and took part in the 1963 March on Washington. But she remained critical of “the blatant disparity between the major role which (Black) women have played and are playing in the crucial grass-roots levels of our struggle and the minor role of leadership they have been assigned in the national policy-making decisions.” 

She helped found the National Organization of Women. In 1977, she became the first Black woman to serve as an Episcopal priest. 

“Being a priest is the hardest thing I’ve ever done,” she said. “The first 48 hours were the most difficult of my life. I found myself on the receiving end of tremendous human problems I didn’t know how to handle.” 

She rejected the idea that she should slow down. “We shouldn’t stop growing ‘til our last breath,” she said. She died eight years later, and in 2012, the Episcopal church named her as a saint. 

In 2021, a documentary on Murray was released, using her own voice and words as narration. The documentary also includes an interview with law professor Anita Hill. 

Even though Murray knew that the odds were often against her success, she kept fighting for what she believed was right,” Hill said. “It takes a lot of courage to be hopeful.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Trump, lauded by some as a free speech advocate, files a barrage of lawsuits against news outlets

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mississippitoday.org – Bobby Harrison – 2025-01-05 06:00:00

For many there is no more cherished right enshrined in the U.S. Constitution than the freedom of speech and, of course, its accompanying freedom of the press.

During the November election cycle, various people like billionaire Elon Musk and podcaster Joe Rogan spoke of the importance of free speech. Both cited part of their reasoning for supporting Donald Trump was his commitment to free speech.

Those and many other self-professed free speech proponents are noticeably quiet as Trump works to curtail freedom of speech to a degree that perhaps has never been seen in this country.

Trump, as part of a broad legal attack on the American press, is suing the Des Moines Register because the newspaper published a poll showing he was trailing Democratic Vice President Kamala Harris a few days before the November election. The president-elect also is suing longtime pollster Ann Selzer, whose poll the newspaper published. Granted, the Selzer poll of Iowa voters was way off, but because a poll is wrong has never been viewed as a reason to sue a news outlet that chooses to run it.

And ABC, one of the nation’s legacy broadcast networks, has already settled with Trump another lawsuit that many believe the network eventually would have won.

Historians and journalism advocates view Trump’s Des Moines Register lawsuit, ABC lawsuit and others as an effort to curtail press freedom. The lawsuits, they argue, create a fear of reporting on powerful people with deep pockets, and they force news outlets to expend large sums of money to defend lawsuits that have in many cases been viewed as frivolous.

A deeper expressed fear is that the Trump lawsuits are designed to convince a U.S. Supreme Court loaded with Trump sympathizers to curtail the press freedoms that this country has long enjoyed.

It is important to remember that at one time in the nation’s history, newspapers were largely extensions of the political parties and particular politicians — something that is no longer the case for most mainstream or legacy media outlets.

The late James Baughman, the late mass communications historian at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, said in a 2011 Center for Journalism Ethics speech, “Papers in opposition to Andrew Jackson in 1828 attacked him for marrying a woman before her divorce had been finalized. He was the violator of marital virtue, a seducer. Jackson, one paper declared, ‘tore from a husband the wife of his bosom.’ Pro-Jackson newspapers insisted on the general’s innocence and accused his critics of violating his privacy. There was no objective, middle ground.”

Baughman pointed out that in 1884, the Los Angeles Times did not like that Democrat Grover Cleveland had won the presidency, so the paper “simply failed to report this unhappy result for several days.”

The history of American media, however, may mean little to Trump. He is suing the Pulitzer Prize committee for reaffirming the coveted award to The New York Times and Washington Post for their reporting of Trump’s campaign ties with Russia during the 2016 campaign. He is also suing CBS and its news show 60 Minutes for how an interview with Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris was edited.

There are, of course, countless examples of Fox News and other Trump-friendly television networks editing clips of interviews or news segments in ways that could be seen as favorable to Trump. Fox has said simply the edits were made for the sake of brevity. Advocates of press freedom would argue the practice is Fox’s guaranteed legal right, though they may disagree with the conservative outlets’ decisions in terms of journalism ethics.

Fox did pay a record $787 million to Dominion, a voting machine manufacturer, because of allegations aired on the network that their machines changed votes to favor Joe Biden in the 2020 election. The lawsuit was based on financial harm incurred by Dominion as a result of the false reports.

Many of those allegations were made not by Fox employees, but by Trump supporters who were network guests. Emails obtained during the lawsuit reveal that the Fox staff did not believe the unfounded allegations but repeatedly allowed the Trump allies to make them.

The so-called legacy media, including Fox in this instance, have long been legally responsible for what other people say on their news outlets. A newspaper, for instance, can be held liable for making false claims about a person in a letter to the editor it publishes.

Free speech, of course, does not mean people or news outlets cannot face consequences for what they say. A company could choose to fire an employee for offensive speech, and outlets are certainly not obligated to publish what they view as offensive or false claims.

But this latest barrage of lawsuits from Trump, that so-called advocate of free speech, have many experts questioning how far the long-held American free speech principles could be stretched.

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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Mississippi Today

On this day in 1965

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mississippitoday.org – Jerry Mitchell – 2025-01-04 07:00:00

Jan. 4, 1965 

MFDP protesters outside the U.S. Capitol.

Five busloads of Black Mississippians arrived at the U.S. Capitol to challenge the seating of Mississippi’s all-white congressional delegation. 

Those in charge in Washington initially had little sympathy because the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party had rejected the compromise at the 1964 Democratic National Convention, said SNCC leader Michael Thelwell. 

“We were absolutely persona non grata and the pariahs of beltway politics,” he said.

But their cause soon found some support on the floor of Congress when 149 members sided with them. Suddenly, the Mississippi Freedom Democratic Party could question the state’s top leaders. Suddenly, these white politicians, the most powerful people in Mississippi, found themselves using courtesy titles toward Black Americans — something they had refused to do since slavery ended. 

Although those in Congress eventually took their seats, “it shook them,” recalled SNCC leader Victoria Gray. “That vote just really turned things upside down.”

This article first appeared on Mississippi Today and is republished here under a Creative Commons license.

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