THE WRITING ON (AND OFF) THE WALL `UNFORGIVABLE' NOT TO FORGIVE JOHNSON.Byline: TOM HOFFARTH Pardon us if this is old news, but if Jack Johnson Jack Johnson may refer to:
The intriguing, controversial saga of the first black heavyweight boxing champ won't be going away anytime soon, even if his exploits are nearly a century old. Heavyweight documentarian doc·u·men·tar·i·an also doc·u·men·ta·rist n. One that makes documentaries or a documentary. Ken Burns has produced a masterful two-part, four-hour special on Johnson's life called ``Unforgivable Blackness,'' which PBS PBS in full Public Broadcasting Service Private, nonprofit U.S. corporation of public television stations. PBS provides its member stations, which are supported by public funds and private contributions rather than by commercials, with educational, cultural, stations will air Monday and Tuesday nights. Later this year, ESPN ESPN Entertainment and Sports Programming Network has plans of using Johnson as the foundation for another made-for-TV movie. The reasons are more than just presenting a compelling story in the name of TV ratings. Legal and social injustice Social Injustice is a concept relating to the perceived unfairness or injustice of a society in its divisions of rewards and burdens. The concept is distinct from those of justice in law, which may or may not be considered moral in practice. brought upon by Jim Crow-era laws after the abolishment of slavery collide with this fabulously famous and notorious athlete who challenged everyone's beliefs at the time about racial equality and the right to live a free, American lifestyle. In the end, Johnson was TKO'd. He chose to live in exile after he was found guilty of breaking a law that his own government twisted to use against him. It was all in retaliation for the way he prevailed in Reno, Nev., over Burbank native Jim Jeffries Jim Jeffries may refer to:
Although known worldwide for his pugilism pugilism (py `jəlĭz'əm): see boxing. Pugilism Balboa, Rocky lower-class Philadelphia boxer wins golden opportunity to fight in prize bout. , Johnson found some of his early success in Los Angeles. On May 16, 1902, just five months after the first Rose Bowl was played, he put himself on the map by knocking out Jack Jeffries - Jim Jeffries' little brother. Less than a year later, Johnson won a 20-round decision over Denver Ed Martin here to claim what was recognized as the black heavyweight championship. But while living at the time in Bakersfield, Johnson endured bigotry and resentment for living flamboyantly with a white woman. It only foreshadowed what would come later. The 1910 Mann Act Mann Act: see Mann, James Robert. , imposed to stop ``white slavery,'' or the smuggling smuggling, illegal transport across state or national boundaries of goods or persons liable to customs or to prohibition. Smuggling has been carried on in nearly all nations and has occasionally been adopted as an instrument of national policy, as by Great Britain of women into the U.S. for prostitution, eventually was used against Johnson in 1912 after the mother of a white woman he was dating became upset and demanded justice. Johnson, who married the woman, Lucile Cameron, in December 1912, was convicted of the charge in Chicago by a white jury in June 1913. His sentence: a year and a day in prison, plus a $1,000 fine. Prosecutors said in the trial that he committed a ``crime against nature.'' While waiting for an appeal, he and Lucile escaped to Canada. He toured the world defending his title before he lost it in 1915 in a 26-round bout against Jess Willard in Havana. Rumor was that Johnson was told that by losing, he could return to the U.S. It wasn't so. It wasn't until 1920 that he decided to return and surrender, serving his time in a Kansas prison. When Johnson got out at age 43 and wanted to challenge Jack Dempsey for the title, he was denied. Right up to his death, caused by a traffic accident in 1946, Johnson never saw judicial redemption. Defiant but courageous, outspoken yet charming and always a lightning rod for racial strife - much like Muhammad Ali in the 1960s and '70s - Johnson told a young reporter shortly before the end of his life: ``Just remember, whatever you write about me, that I was a man.'' As he worked on the ``Unforgivable Blackness'' project last summer, Burns hired a law firm and filed a petition with the Department of Justice demanding that the wrong be righted. Burns received support from Sen. John McCain and Sen. Ted Kennedy, boxing giants Sugar Ray Leonard Ray Charles Leonard (born May 17, 1956) is a retired American professional boxer. He was one of the leading boxers in the world in the late 1970s and 1980s, winning world titles at multiple weights and engaging in contests with such celebrated opponents as Wilfred Benitez, Thomas and Bernard Hopkins, rapper Chuck D, actor Samuel L. Jackson “Samuel Jackson” redirects here. For the senator from Indiana, see Samuel D. Jackson. Samuel Leroy Jackson (born December 21, 1948) is an American Academy Award-nominated and BAFTA-winning actor. and boxing historian Bert Sugar. The Senate endorsed the resolution in October. Posthumous pardons for noncapital cases are somewhat rare. And so far, President Bush, who publicly honored the Galveston, Texas, native when he was Texas' governor, hasn't pushed through the paperwork. So not only was Burns denied a nice way of ending his documentary, but Johnson's rap sheet remains corruptly stained. It would even have been something if this all could have been wrapped up this weekend, when this country celebrates Martin Luther King Day. So, again, pardon us for butting in. But if Johnson's ghost has to wait await another couple of decades for the commander in chief to tie up some unfinished business with a simple pardon, then someone just doesn't know Jack. CAPTION(S): 6 photos, box Photo: (1) A posthumous pardon is being considered for Jack Johnson, who has a criminal record from his relationships with white women. Associated Press (2) no caption (Randy Moss) (3) MATT LEINART (4) RANDY JOHNSON (5) RED McCOMBS (6) - CBS's David Letterman, on the New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of Mets' signing Carlos Beltran (pictured) this week to a $119 million contract. Box: Sunday PUNCH - Tom Hoffarth |
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