Decorated New York City Cop Named“Mustached American of
the Year”
Known as “The Stache,” he’s now the 2008 Goulet award winner,
sponsored by Just For Men® Haircolor
ST. LOUIS (Oct. 27, 2008) - Tim Galvin, a retired New York City
policeman who was known along his beat simply as “The ‘Stache,” was voted the
2008 winner of the American
Mustache Institute’s “Robert Goulet Memorial Mustached American of the
Year,” sponsored by Just For Men® Haircolor. The award recognizes the most
impactful Mustached American of the past year.
Galvin was
honored Saturday, Oct. 25, in St.
Louis at ‘Stache Bash
2008, the American Mustache Institute’s (AMI) annual benefit for Challenger Baseball, a baseball
league for children and adults with developmental disabilities.
“We are
proud to name Tim Galvin as the first ‘Robert Goulet Memorial Mustached
American of the Year’ award winner,” said Joy Robinson of Just For Men®
Haircolor, which also announced a $5,000 contribution to Challenger Baseball
before placing a purple and gold crown on Galvin’s head.
Galvin, a
modest Suffern, N.Y. resident, was honored to have been
voted the first “Goulet” award winner.
“I accept
this honor for Mustached Americans everywhere,” he told an overflow crowd of
nearly 1,000. “After 34 years of proudly wearing a mustache, I am humbled to be
recognized by an organization that values and honors it.”
Galvin won
the “Goulet” award in an online
poll, and competed against an all-star roster of fifteen distinguished
Mustached Americans, including sports greats Jason Giambi, Art Monk, Goose
Gossage and Keith Hernandez; Libertarian Party presidential candidate Bob Barr;
and Cleveland Brown of FOX’s “Family Guy’ – the only animated American nominated for the
award.
“We’ve
heard a lot of talk about ’Main Street’ during this presidential election
season, and Tim’s victory is a tribute to the everyday Mustached American – a
breed of men and women who serve as this nation’s backbone,” said Dr. Aaron
Perlut, AMI’s chairman and outgoing executive director. “As acceptance of furry
upper lips increases, our organization is growing in numbers, strength, good
looks, average weight and IQ.
“It is
especially fitting that the award was won by a member of the law enforcement
community, a profession that has understood the power of the mustache through
the lean years when growing and maintaining one was looked down upon by the
clean-shaven under-belly of society.”
Who is Tim Galvin?
Typical of
loyal Mustached Americans, Galvin is a soft-spoken man – yet tough – who has
let his deeds and mustache do his talking. In the nomination application for
the “Goulet” award, his son Michael described his father’s mustache as
“respect-demanding.”
Galvin was
a New York City
policeman for more than 20 years, receiving three medals of valor and retiring
as a captain after being shot twice – in the face and leg – while working
undercover. As a patrolman, he was limited to having a “chevron”
mustache, but when he became a plain clothes officer, he was able grow a
large “horseshoe” mustache to fit in on the streets, creating a persona with
informants throughout the city.
“Clearly,
a man who's been shot twice is confident enough about his looks that he doesn't
have time for fashion niceties like whether his belt matches his socks,” added
AMI’s Perlut. “Like the clean-shaven
metrosexual populous, a man like Tim doesn’t sit around pondering whether his
mustache is in fashion this season – it’s always mustache season to Tim.”
Showing the
bizarre attention to his lip sweater befitting a “Mustached American of the
Year,” Galvin knows the day he started growing his mustache – July 1, 1974.
“That was
the day I graduated from Catholic high school and could finally grow one,” he
said. “I wanted one to look like Ben Davidson, the great Oakland Raider.”
Galvin has
not shaved it since.
The Goulet
award, given for the first time this year, is named for the legendary performer
Robert Goulet, whose voice,
trademark mustache, sense of humor, and black leather jackets represented a
quadruple-threat of talent the American Mustache Institute is proud to salute.
‘Stache
Bash 2008, held at Lumiere Casino in downtown St. Louis, was a resounding success raising more
than $15,000 for and awareness of
Challenger Baseball.
“We cannot accurately express our appreciation to the
American Mustache Institute for its support of Challenger Baseball,” said Buck
Smith, who runs St. Louis Challenger Baseball. “The funds AMI has raised has
allowed us to add new teams each year, providing more kids and adults with
developmental disabilities the opportunity to play baseball.”
About AMI
The
American Mustache Institute, the bravest organization in the history of mankind
behind only the U.S. Military and the post-Jim Henson Muppets, is the world’s
only facial hair advocacy and research organization, with more than 600
chapters around globally. AMI battles negative stereotypes and discrimination
against the Mustached American race. Based in St. Louis due to the presence of the world’s
largest mustache – the Gateway Arch – the organization is committed to
recapturing the mustache’s glory years of the 1970s, when there existed a
climate of acceptance, understanding, and flavor saving for Mustached
Americans.
About Challenger
Baseball
Challenger
Baseball is a baseball league for youngsters and adults with developmental
disabilities. The fundamental goal of Challenger Baseball is to give every
player the chance to play. To realize that goal, Challenger has two basic
rules: every player bats each inning, and every player plays the field. The
league does not count strikes, and does not count outs. Every player scores and
every player wins. Challenger Baseball participants learn not only the
fundamentals of baseball, but also experience teamwork, being cheered on by a
crowd, and being encouraged by peers. All players are named all-stars and all
receive trophies.
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