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The Jackie Robinson Museum will be open to the public Thursday through Sunday, beginning the week of Sept. 5. Admission will be $18 for adults and $15 for seniors, students and children ages 5-17.
Possible human skeletal remains were found on the side of the Jackie Robinson Highway just steps from a Cypress Hill Cemetery ...
Jackie Robinson made his major league debut 75 years ago Friday. He died 50 years ago, and few fans alive today can say they saw Robinson play. Carl Erskine saw him play every day.
In the 1960s, Jackie Robinson protested social injustice alongside Martin Luther King Jr. Here, he stands to the right of the civil rights leader at a press conference in Birmingham, Alabama, in ...
No Money Spent Jackie Robinson day Program and ranked debut 00:00 Introsuction 00:18 Recap Jackie Robinson Unlock 03:39 ...
Police from the 104th Precinct in Ridgewood are investigating after the skeletal remains of a human were discovered along the ...
Jackie Robinson was in spring training in 1946. Robinson broke major league baseball's color barrier when he suited up for the Brooklyn Dodgers on April 15, 1947.
Donations poured in Wednesday to replace a destroyed statue of Jackie Robinson on what would have been the 105th birthday of the first player to break Major League Baseball’s color barrier.
This Jackie Robinson Day, as Americans on both sides of the political aisle celebrate his bravery and athletic dominance in the face of searing hatred, I hope they’ll begin to understand that, too.
Baseball retired Robinson's No. 42 leaguewide in 1997, and in 2004 established Jackie Robinson Day, on which the league would honor his memory on the anniversary of his April 15, 1947, debut.
The Jackie Robinson Museum in New York was to have opened by now, but it hasn’t. Spike Lee recently posted the fifth draft of his screenplay for a Robinson biopic he wrote in 1996.
Jackie stood for way more than life goes on. “Jackie Robinson is in my heart, he’s in my DNA. He’s with me every day. Without Jackie, there would be no Eric Davis, at least not in baseball.