FREE WHITEWATER

Daily Bread for 9.20.12

Good morning.

It’s a mostly sunny day with a high of sixty-six ahead for Whitewater.

On this day in 1973, millions of Americans watched a tennis match:

On this day in 1973, in a highly publicized “Battle of the Sexes” tennis match, top women’s player Billie Jean King, 29, beats Bobby Riggs, 55, a former No. 1 ranked men’s player. Riggs (1918-1995), a self-proclaimed male chauvinist, had boasted that women were inferior, that they couldn’t handle the pressure of the game and that even at his age he could beat any female player. The match was a huge media event, witnessed in person by over 30,000 spectators at the Houston Astrodome and by another 50 million TV viewers worldwide. King made a Cleopatra-style entrance on a gold litter carried by men dressed as ancient slaves, while Riggs arrived in a rickshaw pulled by female models. Legendary sportscaster Howard Cosell called the match, in which King beat Riggs 6-4, 6-3, 6-3. King’s achievement not only helped legitimize women’s professional tennis and female athletes, but it was seen as a victory for women’s rights in general.

Google’s daily puzzle asks about then-secret messages during the Second World War: ““The long sobs of the violins of autumn” was the first of two secret messages broadcast to the French resistance during WWII. What was the second (in English)?”

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