The team should not only swing by the White House to meet Trump, they should do it with the weight of L.A. on their minds.
April 15 is Jackie Robinson Day, marking the date he broke baseball's color barrier. But the number of African Americans playing the game keeps shrinking — a result of some unpleasant truths.
To meet with Trump now is to defile the memory of Dodgers great Jackie Robinson and to humiliate many of team’s own players.
Jackie Robinson Day? It’s going, going, almost gone. Major League Baseball officials are scared of new governmental mandates ...
An article about Jackie Robinson’s service in the Army was scrubbed from the Department of Defense website on Wednesday and later restored after a DOD official told ABC News that it had been ...
A storied five-bedroom, two-bathroom colonial residence in Queens’ Addisleigh Park historic district, once home to baseball ...
Without Jackie Robinson, the game of baseball and the spirit it embodies would not look or feel nearly the same as it does today. Of course, the game existed before him, but it was forever changed ...
Negro Leagues Baseball Museum president Bob Kendrick criticized the move, calling articles on Robinson "American history." ...
President Donald Trump announced last month that Jackie Robinson would be added to his planned National Garden of American ...
Less than 24 hours after Mina Kimes issued a monologue about Jackie Robinson, her former ESPN colleague, Robert Griffin III, ...
The Pentagon claims Robinson was scrubbed from the agency’s website by mistake — but you can judge for yourself.
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