Ichiro Suzuki said he wants to meet with the one person who voted against his induction into the Hall of Fame after he fell one vote shy of being unanimous.
Ichiro Suzuki could become the first Japanese player in baseball’s Hall of Fame, and CC Sabathia, Billy Wagner and Carlos Beltrán also could be elected when results of the writers’ voting are announced.
Ichiro Suzuki could join Mariano Rivera as the only unanimous picks for baseball’s Hall of Fame and CC Sabathia, Billy Wagner and Carlos Beltrán also could be elected when results
You could argue that the Biennale of Sydney would never have happened without Gough Whitlam’s nation-building expansion of the Australia Council in the early 1970s, which added art form boards. Or have survived without the Visual Arts Board’s first head,
Korematsu received the nation’s highest civilian honor, the Presidential Medal of Freedom, in 1998. He died in 2005 at age 86.
The Hampton Roads and U.S. economies have a solid foundation in 2025, but potential tariffs and other actions from President Donald Trump’s new administration could kneecap the prospect for growth,
The Japanese American Citizens League (JACL) has joined 77 other organizations to honor community advocate Fred T. Korematsu on what would have been his 106th birthday on Jan. 30 by celebrating
An American Airlines flight collided with an Army helicopter Wednesday night and crashed into the frigid waters of the Potomac River.
California on Thursday will observe Fred Korematsu Day of Civil Liberties and the Constitution, remembering the shipyard welder who challenged the constitutionality of the incarceration of Japanese Americans during World War II.
A brainy Cocker Spaniel called Nancy has been dubbed one of Britain's smartest dogs after winning a game of Connect Four. Lynn Stacey, 58, who lives in the UK filmed assistance dog Nancy, six, successfully getting three in a row on a smaller children’s version of Connect Four.
Used to leading off, Ichiro Suzuki got antsy when he had to wait. Considered a no-doubt pick for baseball's Hall of Fame and possibly the second unanimous selection, he waited by the
During the gestation period for the place that would become baseball’s sacred shrine, Time Magazine, the New York Times and other periodicals referred to it as the “Baseball Hall of Fame.” Then, when the stately brick building housing the Hall officially opened in 1939,