Obit for Les Rodney, one of the coolest people you've probably never heard
of, and proof that journalism can change the world. Or at least baseball.
(Also a family friend, and one hell of a tennis player.)

http://www.latimes.com/news/obituaries/la-me-lester-rodney25-2009dec25,0,1881124.story?page=1

Lester Rodney dies at 98; Daily Worker sports editor fought segregation in
major league baseball
As a writer for the American Communist Party newspaper in the 1930s and
'40s, Rodney pressed club owners and league officials to end baseball's
color barrier.


By Dennis McLellan

December 25, 2009

Lester Rodney, the sports editor and columnist for the American Communist
Party newspaper the Daily Worker who crusaded to end segregation in major
league baseball in the 1930s and '40s, has died. He was 98.

Rodney died of age-related causes Sunday at his home in a retirement
community in Walnut Creek, Calif., said his daughter, Amy Rodney.

Beginning in the decade before Jackie Robinson suited up with the Brooklyn
Dodgers and broke baseball's color barrier in 1947, Rodney began pressing
for the desegregation of baseball via columns and stories in the Daily
Worker's sports pages.

He called the ban against blacks in the major leagues "un-American" and "the
crime of the big leagues."

"None of the mainstream papers in the `30s made anything out of the fact
that in the land of the free, midway through the 20th century, a great
athlete with the wrong pigmentation of his skin couldn't play in our
national pastime," Rodney said in a 2005 interview with the San Francisco
Chronicle.

When a sports reporter asked Joe DiMaggio who was the best pitcher he had
ever faced, the Yankee power hitter unhesitatingly responded by saying,
"Satchel Paige." (DiMaggio had faced the great Negro League pitcher in
postseason exhibition games.)

While other newspapers ignored DiMaggio's comment, Rodney ran a big headline
over the story in the Daily Worker the next day: "Paige the Greatest I Have
Faced -- DiMaggio."

Rodney also reported Brooklyn Dodgers manager http:// Leo Durocher’s %20
admission to him that the Dodgers would sign black players "in a minute, if
I got permission from the big shots."

In his columns, Rodney pressured club owners and baseball commissioner
Kenesaw Mountain Landis to end baseball's color barrier.

Rodney and the Daily Worker's campaign to induce the major leagues to
integrate baseball included launching petition drives targeting baseball
owners and executives and organizing informational picket lines at
ballparks.

Through it all, Rodney, the communist, was shunned by some of his fellow
sportswriters.

He also had to use pseudonyms to publish two baseball books for children in
the early 1950s: "The First Book of Baseball," under the name Benjamin
Brewster; and "The Real Book About Baseball," under the name Lyman Hopkins.

For decades, Rodney was considered little more than a historical footnote, a
man whose efforts to help break the color ban in baseball was forgotten
because he was a communist.

But that changed in 1997 when he was invited to speak at a national
conference at Long Island University in Brooklyn celebrating the 50th
anniversary of Robinson's debut as a Dodger.

The same year saw the publication of "Jackie Robinson: A Biography," by
Arnold Rampersad, who wrote that "the most vigorous efforts [to integrate
baseball] came from the Communist press . . . an unrelenting pressure for
about 10 years in the Daily Worker, notably from Lester Rodney."

Rodney went on to be invited to speak at baseball symposiums and was
frequently interviewed.

He also was the subject of a 2003 biography by Irwin Silber: "Press Box Red:
The Story of Lester Rodney, the Communist Who Helped Break the Color Line in
American Sports."

In 2005, Rodney was inducted into the Shrine of the Eternals by the Baseball
Reliquary, a nonprofit educational organization in Pasadena.

Rodney "was a very early voice in the American journalistic community to
talk on a regular basis for the need for major league baseball to integrate
and include African Americans playing side by side with Caucasian players,"
Terry Cannon, the organization's founder, told The Times this week.

"This was not something that the regular newspapers in America were delving
into," Cannon said. "He was very much a pioneer in this respect."

Born in Manhattan on April 17, 1911, Rodney lived in the Bronx until he was
6 and his family moved to Brooklyn, where he became a die-hard Dodgers fan.

He covered sports for his high school newspaper and earned a partial
athletic scholarship to Syracuse University. But he had to turn it down and
go to work after his father lost his silk factory and the family home in the
wake of the 1929 stock market crash.

Rodney took night courses at New York University while working various jobs,
including as a lifeguard, clerk and chauffeur.

In 1936, he wrote a letter to the New York City-based Daily Worker that was
critical of its sports coverage. An invitation to air his views with the
editor led to an offer to write for the paper on a trial basis. Six months
later, he was made sports editor.

In joining the paper, Rodney also joined the Communist Party.

"When you were at NYU in the 1930s -- at any of the New York schools -- if
you didn't have serious questions about the workings of capitalism, you were
sort of brain-dead," he said in the 2005 Chronicle interview.

During World War II, Rodney served as an Army combat medic in the Pacific
theater. But he was back home in New York to cover Robinson's debut as a
Brooklyn Dodger on April 15, 1947.

"It's hard this Opening Day to write straight baseball and not stop to
mention the wonderful fact of Jackie Robinson," Rodney wrote. "You tell
yourself it shouldn't be especially wonderful in America, no more wonderful,
for instance, than Negro soldiers being with us on the way overseas through
submarine-infested waters in 1943."

Rodney, who covered all sports during his career, including the historic
1938 Joe Louis-Max Schmeling fight, later pressed other ball clubs to
integrate.

He quit the Daily Worker and the Communist Party in 1958 -- reportedly
joining other editors in quitting when details of the late Soviet leader
Josef Stalin's human rights abuses became known and the party refused to
report and debate the issue in the paper -- and moved with his family to
California.

After stints at the Santa Monica Evening Outlook and a Beverly Hills
advertising company, Rodney worked at the Long Beach Press-Telegram, where
he served as religion editor. He retired in 1974.

Rodney's wife of 58 years, Clare, died in 2004.

In addition to his daughter, Amy, he is survived by a son, Ray; a
granddaughter; and his companion, Mary Harvey.

A memorial service is pending.

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