Pete Rose never goes away. He’s still here in body, of course, now 82, surely this very second signing everything in sight at a memorabilia show in a medium-size convention hall somewhere across this ...
Pete Rose, Major League Baseball’s all-time hits leader, died yesterday. He was 83. Mr. Rose did not drink, do drugs or smoke. His infamous vice was gambling. After his retirement as a player, Mr.
Pete Rose, who won two World Series titles with his hometown Cincinnati Reds on his path to breaking the all-time hits record but whose stardom disintegrated after he was caught gambling on his team ...
It is the rare four-part documentary series in which the subject, very early on, is declared to be a “consummate liar.” But much of what makes “Charlie Hustle & the Matter of Pete Rose” so compelling ...
A real estate developer, he was instrumental in revitalizing the New York Public Library and transforming Bryant Park from a dangerous dead zone into a glorious sanctuary. By Sam Roberts Marshall Rose ...
For Major League Baseball commissioner Rob Manfred, "dead" is as good as "permanent." At least that's the reasoning he cited in removing Pete Rose from the permanently ineligible list seven months ...