Today in History: October 9

“When they’ve tortured and scared you for twenty odd years
Then they expect you to pick a career
When you can’t really function you’re so full of fear
 
“A working class hero is something to be
A working class hero is something to be …”
―John Lennon, “Working Class Hero”

John Lennon would be 76 today. “Working Class Hero” after the jump:
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Today in History: Happy Anniversary, Mom and Dad!

In an apartment in Poughkeepsie, New York, Judge Raymond E. Aldrich, Jr. (no relation to my family) pronounced William R. Aldrich and Rena Joyce Benjinsohn man and wife 50 years ago today. The newly betrothed honeymooned in New York City that weekend. They saw Mame, among other shows. They returned to their jobs the following Monday.

Today is my parents’ golden wedding anniversary. There is no big party planned because neither of my parents would much care for it. Almost all of the things that one might assume a couple can pack into 50 years of life has followed, and some that one might not imagine. My parents have had the chance to experience the “through thick and thin” part of the standard wedding vows and the “through sickness and health.” They are a team and I admire them for that.

Happy anniversary, Mom and Dad!
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Today in History: Oct. 7

Georgia Tech’s football team, coached by the legendary John Heisman, beat an outmatched Cumberland College squad 222–0 on this date 100 years ago. It remains the most lopsided score in the history of college football, mostly because teams do not usually continue to try to score when the mathematical possibility of the losing team turning things around is passed. (Above is a photo of the scoreboard at the end of the game.)

Cumberland College did not have a football team, had cancelled its football program before the season opened, but Coach Heisman would not let the school cancel its game against his Georgia Tech team. Earlier that year, Cumberland’s baseball team had beaten Georgia Tech’s baseball team by the unruly score of 22–0. Heisman was Georgia Tech’s baseball coach as well as its football coach, so he had no sympathy for Cumberland’s plights in any other athletic endeavor. (Further, rumors abounded that Cumberland’s baseball players were not students at the school and were in fact professional baseball players employed to run up Cumberland’s baseball scores.)
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