Fans watch the Los Angeles Dodgers play the Arizona Diamondbacks in the first inning of an opening day baseball game in Los Angeles.
After intense backlash, the team said last week it would no longer be honoring the group during the upcoming event.
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Braves avoid sweep with walk-off, but Dodgers settle for moral victoryMookie Betts homered, Tony Gonsolin's streak of 14 scoreless innings ended, and the Dodgers were walked off by the Braves 4-3 in Atlanta.
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LA Archdiocese Blasts Dodgers for Renewing Pride Night InviteAfter much backlash, the Dodgers apologized and re-invited a group of self-described queer and trans nuns to their Pride Night. Now, the Archdiocese of LA is criticizing the team’s reversal on the invitation.
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Dodgers’ Mookie Betts: ‘I’m not going to be lost’ when playing career endsPrompted by a comment from his wife, Betts has started planning for a life after baseball, but on the field he says his priority remains clear – “You play the game to win.”
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Dodgers vs. Tampa Bay Rays: How to watch, start times and betting oddsHere's how to watch on TV and stream the three-game series between the Dodgers and the host Tampa Bay Rays, starting Friday.
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Long before joining the Dodgers, family ties almost led Jason Heyward to UCLADodgers outfielder Jason Heyward committed to play baseball at UCLA, where his great uncle was a star. Then he was drafted by the Atlanta Braves.
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Bolivia's Catholic Church acknowledges being 'deaf' to sex abuse victimsLeaders of the Roman Catholic Church in Bolivia are acknowledging that the institution has been deaf to the suffering of victims of sexual abuse at a time when the country has been rocked by a pedophilia scandal involving priests. In a statement, the Andean nation’s Catholic bishops said Wednesday that “as a church, we are facing a painful moment ... because we are certain that we have been directly or indirectly involved in the deep pain caused to innocent victims.” The statement comes amid the fallout from the case involving a late Spanish Jesuit priest, Alfonso Pedrajas. According to a private diary accessed bythe Spanish newspaper El País, Pedrajas allegedly abused dozens of minors in Catholic boarding schools in Bolivia in the 1970s and 1980s. He died of cancer in 2009.
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