Thursday, August 25, 2016

Happy Birthday, Monty!

Happy Birthday, Monty!


Will it be Door #1, Door #2 or Door #3?

Today is the birthday of Monty Hall, as our local history intern Michael Weaver reveals:

Monty Hall was born on August 25, 1921 at Winnipeg in Canada as Monte Halparin. It was there that he gained his start as an entertainer, speaking on the radio. Later he moved to Toronto, then New York, serving a five-year run as host of NBC’s monitor. During this period he lived in New Rochelle with his wife and three children. Eight years later, he moved to California, and he eventually became most well-known for hosting the game show Let’s Make a Deal. At age 94, Monty still lives in Beverly Hills with his wife, but New Rochelle honored him with a spot on the Walk of Fame in 2014.


Sunday, August 14, 2016

Olympics: New Rochelle's Stars, Part III

Olympics: New Rochelle's Stars
Birthday Bio

Another previous Olympiad with distinct ties to New Rochelle is also our featured Birthday Bio for this week. It is a compelling Olympics story, as our local history intern Michael Weaver reveals:
 
Marty Glickman was born on August 14, 1917, to a family of Jewish immigrants from Romania. Known as a child to be the fastest kid on the block, he excelled as a track and football star at James Madison High School and Syracuse University. At eighteen years of age, he planned to make his place in history as a sprinter in the 1936 Summer Olympics. Unfortunately, it was not to be. The Olympics that year were held in Berlin during the days of Nazi Germany, and the head of the U.S. Olympic team did not want to offend Adolf Hitler by bringing in a Jewish athlete. Glickman and Sam Stoller, another Jewish athlete, were replaced by Jesse Owens and Ralph Metcalfe, and never again were they allowed the opportunity to take part. (Jesse Owens would become the first American track & field athlete to win four gold medals in a single Olympiad, magnificently triumphing over Hitler’s claims of Aryan racial superiority.)

Marty’s career did not end there, however, and he became the premier sports announcer in New York, commentating on the Knicks for twenty-one years, the Giants for twenty-three years, the Yonkers Raceway for twelve years, the Jets for eleven years, and finally received a plaque as compensation for the gold medal he was likely to win in 1936 from the Olympic Commission in 1998. Glickman spent most of his later years in New Rochelle, until his death from complications from heart surgery in 2001. Glickman received one of the most egregious snubs in Olympic history, but managed to recover and make his mark on sports history nonetheless.

You can read Marty’s very own account of the 1936 Olympics incident on the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum’s website

Thursday, August 11, 2016

Olympics: New Rochelle's Stars, Part II

Olympics: New Rochelle's Stars
Part II

Last week’s “Thursday Throwback” highlighted the 1924 Olympic Gold won by New Rochelleans Larry Stoddard (Rowing) and Francis T. Hunter (Tennis). This week – Swimming and Track & Field highlights.

The most recent Olympic gold medalist from New Rochelle is Cristina Teuscher, who won a gold medal in the 1996 Olympics in Atlanta, Georgia, as part of the 4 × 200 freestyle relay, breaking the Olympic and American record and swimming the fast split in U.S. history. Four years later, she was voted one of the U.S. Olympic Swim Team Captains for the 2000 Games in Sydney, Australia, at which she won a bronze medal in the 200 I.M.   


Raised in New Rochelle and a member of the Badger Swim Club in Larchmont, Cristina graduated from New Rochelle High School in 1996 and Columbia University in 2000. She was an All-American and four-time NCAA champion, won 12 Ivy League titles, and set 17 Lion records. 





In the 1956 Summer Olympics in Melbourne, Australia, New Rochelle native Lou Jones ran the second leg in the gold medal winning American 4X400 meter relay team. The team of Jones, Charlie Jenkins, Tom Courtney and Jesse Mashburn edged out Russia and Germany in a close finish. 

NRHS Yearbook
New Rochelleans helped Lou raise the funds to make the Olympics, four months after the NRHS graduate of 1950 Jones broke his own 400 meter world record, at the US Olympic Trials in Los Angeles. 


Lou would go on to receive his master’s degree from Columbia Teacher’s College, teaching and coaching at NRHS before a long career as high school and then college administrator. He made his home on Prince Street (now “Lou Jones Way”) in New Rochelle until his death on February 3, 2006. 


Contributor: Barbara Davis, Community Relations Coordinator @ NRPL and Local Historian



Wednesday, August 3, 2016

Olympics: New Rochelle's Stars

Olympics: New Rochelle's Stars

If you had the pleasure of reading The Boys in theBoat: Nine Americans and Their Epic Quest for Gold at the 1936 Berlin Olympics by Daniel James Brown, or catching the PBS documentary, The Boys of '36 that aired on August 2nd, then you are well-familiar with the thrilling story of the eight-man rowing crew that won the gold in the 1936 Olympics.

How about the story of the Boys of ’24?


"Paris, July 17: Yale's eight stalwart sons raised the Stars and Stripes to the masthead on the Seine banks this afternoon by scoring a victory which proved them unquestionably the finest rowing eight at present in the world," concluded the New York Times on July 18, 1924.

"Yale Crew Rides to Easy Victory in Olympic Race.' Wonder Crew,' with Miller of Larchmont and Stoddard of New Rochelle Seated, Sets New Record for Course," headlined the Evening Standard of July 17, 1924.  The U.S.A. "dream team" of the Eighth Olympiad, held in France, was the eight-oared Yale crew coached by Ed Leader and captained by a 6'1" twenty-two year old, James Rockefeller, of the prominent Rockefeller family. Lester Miller, a 6'2" twenty-year old from Larchmont pulled from the third seat. The tallest member of the crew, at 6'4", was a Yale junior by the name of Benjamin M. Spock, who would become the world famous baby doctor. As is the norm, the shortest member was the coxswain, who was 5”1” tall and weighed 108 pounds. The twenty year old was Laurence (Larry) Stoddard, of New Rochelle.

"It was a remarkably adaptable crew," the New York Times stated in post-race commentary. "It had speed, it had power, it had endurance, it had oarsmanship and courage. It was a combination that rowed with its head and heart as well as its arms, legs and back…”

With a Yale contingent and Stoddard's father cheering from the banks of the Seine, the "eight well-trained oarsmen answered the coxswain's call at each stroke," as reported in the Evening Standard. "The precision of the drive," along the four-mile course, "was a wonderful thing to watch - as the shell came hurtling out in front to leave a growing gap of open water between the Blue and the unbeaten Canadians, who were completely outclassed." The winning time was 6 minutes, thirty-three seconds.

(For an up-close and personal account of the "wonder crew's" Olympic experience, check-out Spock on Spock: A Memoir of Growing Up with the Century.  The 1985 autobiography by Dr, Spock recalls the entire adventure, which began as an eight-day, first-class voyage aboard the S.S. Homeric.)

P.S. Larry Stoddard was not the only New Rochelle native to bring home the gold from the 1924 Olympics!  While the rowing completion was playing out on the Seine, Westchester tennis star Vincent Richards had "fought his way into the semi-final round in the Olympic Tennis Tournament, men's singles, when he defeated Rene La Coste, the French star, in a thrilling five set match," reported in the Evening Standard of reported of the July 17th match. The "boy wonder" from Yonkers went on to capture the gold medal in the men's singles - as well as in the men's doubles. His partner in victory was Francis T. Hunter, from New Rochelle.

Wait, there's more! Next week: New Rochelle Gold in Swimming and Track & Field.

Contributor: Barbara Davis, Community Relations Coordinator @ NRPL and Local Historian


Monday, August 1, 2016

Blendable Recipes



Blendable Recipes from Jeremy

Each week, Jeremy Miranski has been concocting some wonderful science and cooking experiments. Here are some simple recipes you can make with your blender or food processor at home:

Mango Smoothies
Ingredients:

1 package frozen mango chunks 2-3 cups skim or soy milk 
1 teaspoon sugar

Instructions:

1.      Put mango chunks in blender.
2.      Add the milk and sugar
3.      Blend until smooth
Pizza Sauce
Ingredients:

1 28 ounce can San Marzano Tomatoes
6-8 cloves of garlic, crushed and chopped
2 teaspoons balsamic vinegar
A splash of extra virgin olive oil
Salt and pepper to taste

Instructions:

1.      Drain the tomatoes and add to blender.
2.      Add garlic cloves, vinegar, a large pinch of salt and several grinds of pepper.
3.      Blend until almost smooth.
4.      Uncover blender and taste.
5.      Add a splash of olive oil and blend again.
6.      Taste to correct seasonings.
Spread on pizza dough and add toppings as you like them. 
Or, freeze in ice cube trays until ready to use.  When you are ready, defrost 1 or 2 cubes and spread on the pizza dough before baking.

Hummus
Ingredients:
 
1 can chickpeas
1/6 cup good quality olive oil
1/4 cup tahini
1/6 cup warm water
1/6 cup lemon juice
2 crushed garlic cloves
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1/2 teaspoon salt
ground black pepper

Instructions:
1.      Rinse chickpeas well and put into food processor fitted with single blade.
2.      Add olive oil, warm water, tahini, lemon juice, garlic, cumin, salt and pepper and process until smooth. 
3.      Scrape down the sides of the processor occasionally. 
4.      Taste and adjust the amount of lemon, if necessary.

Serve with baby carrots to dip.