Robinson, who primarily played second base and wore number 42, broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball on April 15, ...
Jackie Robinson Day? It’s going, going, almost gone. Major League Baseball officials are scared of new governmental mandates ...
An article on Robinson’s military career was restored to the Defense Department’s website. It’s a reminder that we can beat ...
The article, part of a DOD series entitled “Sports Heroes Who Served,” is a celebration of Robinson’s athletic achievements ...
Jackie Robinson, the athlete famed with integrating Major League Baseball, was also in the Army. The article was removed but ...
Jackie Robinson not only changed baseball with his style of play, he stretched the imaginations of Americans about equality, ...
The article on the Pentagon's website, headlined Sports Heroes Who Served: Baseball Great Jackie Robinson Was WWII Soldier, ...
In short, it was true that the Defense Department removed the article about Robinson as part of a departmentwide push to ...
Not only was Robinson's history erased, but it was also mocked. The canonical URL on the story originally included the term ...
Jackie Robinson is a Black American "Sports Hero Who Served," but his accomplishment was erased from the DOD website.
"In 1989, the ballpark was named after Jackie Robinson, who broke the color barrier in Major League Baseball and played his first professional game in this very ballpark. Today, fans can ...
Why is Christian Science in our name? Our name is about honesty. The Monitor is owned by The Christian Science Church, and we’ve always been transparent about that. The Church publishes the ...