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Baseball Primer Newsblog— The Best News Links from the Baseball Newsstand
Monday, September 22, 2008
If I never put up another Yankee Stadium article again, it will be far too soon.
The Alexander-Marzutti Executions: Sept. 28, 1929
Notorious murderers William Alexander and Farlanz Marzutti were sentenced to death for killing their mailman. They committed the crime, they said, to prove that people of their intellectual superiority could easily get away with murder. The plan came undone when they couldn’t stop giggling while being questioned by police. They were sentenced to death, and an outraged public demanded the right to “see the eggheads fry.” A public execution was scheduled at Yankee Stadium, with twin electric chairs positioned on a platform in the approximate area of the pitcher’s mound. It was all for naught, however, when an intense thunder and lightning storm settled over the stadium just as the executions were set to take place. “Somebody could get killed out there,” said New York Gov. Franklin D. Roosevelt, before calling off the proceedings. Alexander and Marzutti were later dispatched of indoors, in the more traditional fashion.
The Greater New York Free-For-All: June 17, 1933
In an age when marathon dancing gave desperate couples a chance to earn big money, it should come as no surprise that someone would stage a contest in which 1,000 men were placed on the field at Yankee Stadium and told to fight until only one of them was left standing. That lucky fellow would receive a check for $500, as well as free medical attention. Those who tried to save themselves by not fighting were taken down by a team of enforcers who roamed the field making sure every contestant was giving his all. (For the record, the winner was an unemployed stockbroker named R.K. Vincent.) The “mass melee,” as it was called, drew a decent crowd of 35,000, although the event was marred by much fighting in the stands.
Public Executions? Mass Melees? Last night was so disappointing.
Gamingboy
Posted: September 22, 2008 at 06:49 PM | 8 comment(s)
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Because of course the Bobby Franks murder was so funny, it must be satirized.
Too soon?
Leopold and Loeb, in case anybody missed the reference.
"Burke's the butcher, Hare's the thief, and Knox the boy who buys the beef!"
They also folded, spindled and mutilated him.
"In terse, descriptive prose, Allen described a new method of killing those convicted of crimes. At a prescribed time, participants filled Yankee Stadium while those at home gathered in front of their television sets.
"The event in the sports arena took on the trappings of public hangings in the old days -- a festive occasion the entire family could enjoy. Vendors in the stands hawked hot dogs. Small children sported balloons.
"Suddenly the stadium hushed as the prisoner was solemnly led to the center platform. Spotlights illuminated him so that every facial expression could be observed, every movement recorded on the nation’s psyche. Then the execution began.
"With focused attention, each viewer projected feelings of hate toward the condemned man. Children watched their elders’ intense expressions as they learned to direct their own emotions toward the target.
"Soon they were rewarded as they watched the object of their hatred begin to shrivel and die, writhing with horrible contortions. They learned that their hatred had the power to kill."
Must have been part of the inspiration for Robert Coover's The Public Burning -- a surreal "fantasy" of the Rosenberg's execution with half the chapters narrated by Nixon. Brilliant (and darkly funny) at times (the early-mid Nixon chapters are quite good) but quite bizarre. Anyway, in this telling, the Rosenbergs are set for execution in Times Square and there is a huge storm in the story too.
Those of you who know Coover probably know him for "J Henry Waugh ... Universal Baseball Association" (the greatest baseball novel I've ever read ... but then I'm a bit 'taiched in the haid'). Not sure I'd fully recommend any of his other stuff I've read but the Public Burning's worth a go for some of you.
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