Jackie Robinson 
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SOURCE: Washington Post
4/8/2022
New Book Examines Jackie Robinson's Dedication to Civil Rights
by Aram Goudsouzian
Unlike a typical biography, Kostya Kennedy's "True: The Four Seasons of Jackie Robinson" looks at four years of the baseball legend's life and his changin civil rights advocacy.
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4/10/2022
Ketanji Brown Jackson's Forbearance Echoed Jackie Robinson Before HUAC
by Bruce W. Dearstyne
In a Congressional hearing intended to sow guilt by association between civil rights and global communism, the baseball great refused to take the bait, keeping the focus on the need for justice and fairness in America.
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SOURCE: Boston Review
2/8/2021
“White Fragility” Gets Jackie Robinson's Story Wrong
by Peter Dreier
In an effort to define the Major League Color Line as an artifact of white prejudice, Robin DiAngelo obscures the fact that Jackie Robinson was part of a broad protest movement by Black activists and some white allies to demand and achieve integration of professional baseball.
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SOURCE: Chicago Sun-Times
10/26/2020
If only Richard Nixon had Listened to Jackie Robinson — The GOP Might be Doing Better than Trump Today
by Paul Kendrick and Stephen Kendrick
Despite Jackie Robinson's intercession, Richard Nixon's moment of indecision in 1960 allowed Jack Kennedy to connect his campaign with the cause of Martin Luther King and civil rights.
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SOURCE: Made by History at The Washington Post
10/23/2020
Malcolm X Warned Us about the Pitfalls of Black Celebrities as Leaders
by Kyle T. Mays
The media’s overemphasis on the voices of Black celebrities obscures the voices of ordinary Black people, whose lives are vastly different from those who have wealth and visibility.
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SOURCE: Washington Post
4/15/19
The first African American major league baseball player isn’t who you think
As the country celebrates Jackie Robinson Day, let’s consider the career of Fleet Walker.
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SOURCE: The Conversation
1/30/19
How Jackie Robinson’s wife, Rachel, helped him break baseball’s color line
by Chris Lamb
"She had to live through the death threats, endure the vile screams of the fans and watch her husband get knocked down by pitch after pitch. … She was beautiful and wise and replenished his strength and courage.”
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SOURCE: New York Times
1/31/19
Reflections on Jackie Robinson's Legacy on His 100th Birthday
Through images and personal essays by longtime New York Times writers, a vivid look at the man who made baseball truly American.
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SOURCE: The Washington Post
9-24-17
Before Trump vs. the NFL, there was Jackie Robinson vs. JFK
Jackie Robinson, the hero who integrated Major League Baseball in 1947, spoke out loudly for civil rights and challenged President John F. Kennedy to stop dithering on black equality. Unlike Trump, JFK sought to understand Robinson’s complaints.
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SOURCE: The Conversation
4-12-17
How politics played a major role in the signing of Jackie Robinson
by Chris Lamb
Beginning in the 1930s, black sportswriters, notably Wendell Smith and Sam Lacy, made baseball part of a larger crusade to confront Jim Crow laws.
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SOURCE: The Root
4-13-16
Jackie Robinson: Militant Black Republican
by Leah Wright Rigueur
“I’m a black man first, an American second, and then I will support a political party—third,” said Robinson in 1968.
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SOURCE: USA Today
4-8-16
Ken Burns's "Jackie Robinson" celebrates American hero
Jackie Robinson was not the best baseball player who ever lived, but renowned filmmaker Ken Burnsmakes a strong argument that he was the most important one.
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SOURCE: You Tube
4-8-16
Video of the Week: Ken Burns Talks Race and Jackie Robinson
Ken Burns explains how race is the common thread in all of his work, and why Jackie Robinson’s story is still so relevant.
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10-12-14
Here Is What Can Make a Difference in Race Relations – And It Happened in Major League Baseball Decades Ago
by Michael H. Ebner
The obituary a few weeks ago of a former major league baseball player – George Shuba – has furnished a useful lesson about race.
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SOURCE: NYT
6-6-14
Jackie Robinson and Nixon: Life and Death of a Political Friendship
by Michael Beschloss
In 1960, Robinson endorsed Nixon for president, declaring that the civil rights commitment of Nixon’s Democratic rival, John F. Kennedy, was “insincere.”
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5-25-14
You Know Jackie Robinson, but Shouldn't We Remember Moses Fleetwood Walker, too?
by Michael H. Ebner
Moses Fleetwood Walker should not be regarded as a trivial footnote.
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SOURCE: Special to HNN
7-15-13
Ron Briley: Review of "Beyond Home Plate: Jackie Robinson on Life After Baseball," edited by Michael Long
The courage and athletic ability demonstrated by Jackie Robinson in breaking Major League Baseball’s color line in 1947 and making the Brooklyn Dodgers a dominant National League club during the 1950s resulted in the ballplayer’s induction into the pantheon of baseball immortals at the Baseball Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. Robinson’s career after he retired from the sport following the 1956 season is, however, less well known, but Robinson’s decision to take an active role in the civil rights movement provides ample proof that the courage displayed on the playing field carried over into the struggle for a democratic nation freed from the scourge of racial discrimination and segregation.
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Sanford, Fla., Threatened to Lynch Jackie Robinson
by Peter Dreier
Neither of the Robinsons would ever forget their Florida ordeal.
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How Accurate is "42"?
by Ron Briley
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SOURCE: The New Republic
4-19-13
Gene Seymour: What the Jackie Robinson Film Leaves Out
Gene Seymour spent more than thirty years writing for daily newspapers, eighteen of them as a movie critic and feature writer for Newsday. He has been published in Film Comment, The Nation, Washington Spectator, Los Angeles Times and American History.The 24-hour news cycle yielded one of its better sitcom interludes last week when Rand Paul went to Howard University, the historically black college, to tell its student body why it needed the Republican Party. The libertarian junior senator from Kentucky, at one point, asked for a show-of-hands from those who knew that most of the African Americans who founded the NAACP more than 100 years ago were Republican. When several dozen hands shot up, Paul insisted he wasn’t condescending to them, saying, “I don’t know what you know.” You won’t get a better title for this sitcom than that.