With our free press under threat and federal funding for public media gone, your support matters more than ever. Help keep the LAist newsroom strong, become a monthly member or increase your support today.
Former Brooklyn And Los Angeles Dodgers Pitcher And Special Olympics Advocate Carl Erskine Dies At 97
Topline:
Former Brooklyn Dodgers pitcher Carl Erskine has died. He was the last surviving member of the Dodgers “Boys of Summer” team that broke baseball’s racial barrier with Jackie Robinson in the 40’s. The Dodgers in a statement said Erskine died in his hometown of Anderson, Indiana. He was 97.
A hero on and off the field: Erskine had two career no-hitters and won a World Series with the Dodgers in 1955. But many remember his friendship with Jackie Robinson at a time when segregation was legal.
“It may have been transcended by his allyship with Jackie Robinson and more in the pursuit of civil rights, as well as an indispensable advocate for those with special needs – a cause that became his ultimate legacy” the team said in a statement.
Erskine also championed the Special Olympics before it became accepted in mainstream society. He received the prestigious honor of the John Jordan “Buck” O’Neil Lifetime Achievement Award, previously bestowed upon Rachel Robinson in 2017.
Remembering the legend:
Ted Green, who directed the documentary The Best We Got: The Carl Erskine Story, said during an interview last year on LAist's daily news program, AirTalk, that Erskine played in the golden age of baseball and the most transformative era of sports.
“I mean, this time saw the game go from trains to planes, from radio to TV, certainly from East Coast to West with San Francisco and Los Angeles,” Green said. “And most important, from segregated to integrated.”
Dodgers President and CEO Stan Kasten extended sympathies to Erskine’s wife and family.
“Carl Erskine was an exemplary Dodger,” he said. ““He was as much a hero off the field as he was on the field.”
-
With California voters facing a decision on redistricting this November, Surf City is poised to join the brewing battle over Congressional voting districts.
-
The drug dealer, the last of five defendants to plead guilty to federal charges linked to the 'Friends' actor’s death, will face a maximum sentence of 65 years in prison.
-
The weather’s been a little different lately, with humidity, isolated rain and wind gusts throughout much of Southern California. What’s causing the late-summer bout of gray?
-
Hexavalent chromium is the same carcinogen Erin Brockovich warned about in the 1990s, but researchers say more study is needed on the potential health effects of nanoparticles detected earlier this year. Experts will answer questions at a webinar this evening.
-
The budget gap has led to a tuition hike, along with spending cuts and fewer course offerings. At the same time, generative AI already has transformed higher ed — including post-grad job prospects.
-
The construction work is part of a $143.7 million plan to rehabilitate pavement between Van Nuys and Westwood along the Sepulveda Pass.