Seventy-five years ago, the Chicago Cubs and the New York Yankees faced off in a lopsided World Series contest. The powerhouse Yankees swept the Cubs in four straight games. Watch the highlights of Game Four, narrated by Archives baseball maven Stephen Weinstein, and see Mayor La Guardia give a Bronx Cheer. Sadly, in 2013 New York fans will have to remember the old Brooklyn Dodger refrain, "Wait 'til next year!"
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Monday, October 28, 2013
VIDEO: 1938 World Series NY Yankees vs. Chicago Cubs
Seventy-five years ago, the Chicago Cubs and the New York Yankees faced off in a lopsided World Series contest. The powerhouse Yankees swept the Cubs in four straight games. Watch the highlights of Game Four, narrated by Archives baseball maven Stephen Weinstein, and see Mayor La Guardia give a Bronx Cheer. Sadly, in 2013 New York fans will have to remember the old Brooklyn Dodger refrain, "Wait 'til next year!"
Monday, October 21, 2013
Alair Townsend Debates Ed Koch: "She had the better book!"
Steven A. Levine
Coordinator for Educational Programs
As we approach tomorrow night's mayoral debate at the CUNY
Graduate Center, I thought it was a good time to look at how other candidates
prepared for a debate by watching a video of Deputy Mayor Alair
Townsend describe her experiences as Mayor Ed Koch's
practice debate partner in 1985.
To prepare for his debate against City Council President Carol
Bellamy, his Democratic Primary opponent, Ed Koch chose Townsend. Townsend
claimed she was chosen because she had glasses and high cheek bones like
Bellamy, but it is also clear she was a more than worthy debate opponent. When
his campaign adviser David Garth told Koch that Townsend had beat him after the
first mock debate, Ed Koch responded by saying, "She had the better
[debate] book!" Watch
Alair Townsend describe the debate, her preparation and
the debate book in this interview with the La Guardia and Wagner Archives' Tara
Jean Hickman.
Wednesday, October 16, 2013
Fiorello La Guardia Takes a Sledge Hammer to Slot Machines: Let's Go to the VIDEO!
Steven A. Levine
Coordinator for Educational Programs
When
Fiorello La Guardia became mayor of NYC in 1934, organized crime and gambling
racketeers were his particular bugbears and he went on campaigns to wipe them
out. During Prohibition in the 1920s, organized crime had spread from liquor to
gambling, narcotics, and the “service of outlawed desires.” One of La Guardia’s
earliest public acts as mayor, shown on the following
video, was to swing his hammer to smash slot machines
and ceremoniously dump them in the Long Island Sound on October 13,
1934.
In the 79
years since Fiorello smashed and dumped those slot machines, a sea change in
government’s relationship with gambling has occurred as racetracks, like
Aqueduct and Yonkers, have become “racinos” filled with the slot machines La
Guardia loathed because he believed they took money from families that should go
to feed their children. New York State
voters will also be voting on November 5 on whether to approve a constitutional
amendment, backed by an alliance of gambling interests, Indian tribes, and
Governor Andrew Cuomo, to allow casinos to open in the Catskills, the Southern
Tier and the Albany area. The New York Times reported yesterday that the gambling industry has spent “more than $59 million on lobbying and
political contributions in New York” since 2005. We know that they are betting a big return on
their investment. I am sure if La
Guardia were here today he would be shouting to the rooftops against it. What do you
think?
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