![]() There are 18 events with $6,000 in prizes. It draws players from all over the globe. Regarding table tennis, my club hosts the largest monthly table tennis tournament in North America. All the money raised goes to the Pleasantville Fund for Learning. It’s a fun, low-key affair, using unpublished puzzles from the Times. I recently hosted the 22nd annual Westchester Crossword Puzzle Contest. They don’t have places like that in the Netherlands.Īn avid ping-pong player, Shortz owns the Westchester Table Tennis Center in Pleasantville, which hosts the largest monthly table tennis tournament in North America.Īre there any recent or upcoming projects you are especially proud of, whether related to puzzles or the Westchester Table Tennis Center? One of my annual visitors from the Netherlands calls it his favorite place to eat “in the world.” We always go the diner when he comes. I guess my favorite place in town is the “world famous” (their words) Pleasantville Diner. I like owning a house with a yard and being able to walk to everything. I like Pleasantville because it’s quiet and pretty, and it’s filled with interesting people. Having grown up on a farm in Indiana, I find New York City crowded and noisy. It’s convenient to New York City, without my actually having to live there. Before that, I lived in Forest Hills and Stamford. I moved to Pleasantville in 1993, the same year I became puzzle editor of The New York Times. How long have you lived in Pleasantville? We caught up with the Pleasantville resident and founder of the Westchester Table Tennis Center, to fill in the blanks about his life in what may just be the most aptly named village in the county. Westchester is known as a place where a lot of smart people live, and it’s quite possible that our collective IQ as a county is just a tad higher because it is also the home of The New York Times’ legendary puzzle master, Will Shortz.
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