King Announces Abdication to Select Media

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS CONFIDENTIAL By John F. Bailey. March 5, 2003: Councilman William King announced his abdication of his Council Seat yesterday in an e-mail to Susan Elan of The Journal News and Susan Archerian Chang of The White Plains Watch. WPCNR has obtained a copy of that statement, and here are Mr. King’s reasons for leaving the council in his own words:
I wanted to give you a heads up that I have decided not to run for
re-election with the other Democratic incumbents. I feel that I have
held up my promise of “Doing the Right Thing” for White Plains. I
believe I have pushed issues out there like downtown revitalization and open space preservation that the mayor has embraced in his initiatives.

I feel I have gotten the mayor to implement most of my proposals and the proposals of residents that I have passed along that he is going to implement while he is mayor. For me to really push him on other
initiatives, I would need more like-minded people on the Council.

Obviously, I am very disappointed by mayor-led council votes, mostly on New York Hospital. I am also extremely against the mayor’s style of
“closed government” which has limited getting information from the
city’s commissioners or having intelligent discussions with them.

There are many things I wish White Plains residents could have in our
community soon and before my 9-year-old daughter goes off to college.

There are many initiatives I would still like to pursue but they take a
less political atmosphere and I need more progressive, open-minded people voting with me on initiatives. I will continue to work hard until the end of my current term and continue to pass along the good ideas, big and small, that residents continue to give me.

But, like I said, I believe the mayor has accepted most of what he is going to accept and I have lost faith in the rest of the current council to help steer the city in the direction I think it should be going and get it to
where it should be in the near future. White Plains is getting better, but it could be a lot better and without spending so much on parking
garages and by downtown commercial interests paying as much in property taxes, proportionally, as they used to.

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Commuting Thief: Police Arrest Suspect in Numerous Office Thefts in City

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WPCNR Morning Sun. From Police Reports. March 5, 2003 White Plains Police have announced the arrest of a Brooklyn “Commuting Thief” last Thursday after he was arrested with a handbag taken from a building on Water Street. The suspect, police say, allegedly commuted to White Plains, blended into office environments as if he worked there, to steal office workers’ belongings, cash and computer laptops from various locations. Police also consider him a suspect in eight similar thefts committed over the last month.

Captain Anne Fitzsimmons credited Stephen Demchuck and Harry Pino of the anti-crime unit and Detectives Walter Holubis and Michael Maffei for their work on the case.

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Council Extends Cappelli-Bland Scope; OK’s Intelligence Officer

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WPCNR COMMON COUNCIL CHRONICLE-EXAMINER. By John F. Bailey. March 3, 2003: After approving a byzantine set of zoning and urban renewal amendents to make the Cappelli-Bland Hotel Project feasible, the Common Council tonight amended a resolution setting the Cappelli-Bland Hotel project scoping session to run from March 13 to April 9, (instead of March 13-to 17, as the Mayor called for), against the wishes of Mayor Delfino.
Mayor Delfino declared the move “strictly political.” Rita Malmud introduced the amendment, expressing her concern that the people of White Plains be allowed enough time for the scoping session. No residents appeared at tonight’s hearing on the Cappelli Bland Hotel zoning and urban renewal plan amendments.

Robert Greer said there were a lot of issues and thought the council was simply being prudent. Benjamin Boykin, too, agreed that the council wanted to be thorough, though he himself had received no calls from anyone protesting the project. The additional three weeks of time for scoping (the process of determining issues to be addressed in an environmental review) delays the project one month, said Susan Habel, Commissioner of Planning, who said the earliest the Council could now have a final vote on the project was September. It had been planned for August.

The Common Council approved the Department of Public Safety request to hire a Special Intelligence Expert to analyze threats and intelligence information received by the city and to identify concerns the Department should be considering in the future to grow and adapt to new threats and security needs.

The Council also approved spending $800,000 to ready Liberty Park in Silver Lake for use by this summer, and approved expenditures of $5.5 to $5.9 Million for plans for a double deck parking structure behind the Rader’s–Dunkin Donuts trip on Mamaroneck Avenue. The cost would be bonded for twenty years at 4-3/4%, and is expected to begin to pay back in 15 years at which time the Parking Authority will have suffered a net loss of $130,000.

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Common Council Approves Anne Reasoner Budget Director.

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WPCNR Common Council Chronicle-Examiner. By John F. Bailey. March 3, 2003: The Common Council today officially made Anne Reasoner the Budget Director for the City of White Plains. Ms. Reasoner was approved by a unanimous vote and said her immediate plans were to concentrate on getting out the city budget which she said is due to be presented to the Council April 7.



ANNE REASONER
New Budget Director

Photo by WPCNR News

Ms. Reasoner succeeds Eileen Earl who resigned effective February 7.

Ms. Reasoner joined the city as Deputy Budget Director in July, 2001, coming from Deputy Comptroller of the Town of Stamford. Prior to this she served 17 years with the Town of Greenwich as Budget Director there where she designed the budget for both the city government and the city school district.

She remarked that she applied for the White Plains job in 2001 at the suggestion of a coworker in Stamford who was from White Plains. Reasoner said she took the Deputy Budget Director position, “kind of hoping” that Ms. Earl would retire in a few years. She said the two towns, Greenwich and White Plains, were very similar in that each was a combination of city and residential neighborhoods. Of the budgets of the two cities, the Greenwich budget was slightly larger because it covered the schools, too.

Ms. Reasoner said she did not plan any immediate changes in operations until the budget process was completed. She said she was looking for a new Deputy Budget Director, and that position has been advertised.

Asked about the budget situation, she remarked that the sales tax receipts were still running $2 Million behind expectations as they were one month ago.

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County Legislators Approve $500,000 for Fountain/Theater in City

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From The Mayor’s Office. March 3, 2003: Mayor Joseph Delfino announced Monday evening that the County Board of Legislators approved the expenditure of $500,000 aid to the City of White Plains towards the construction of the Main Street Fountain Plaza and the Community Theater. The vote was 13 to 1, the Mayor announced at the close of the Common Council meeting.



THE LAST PIECE OF THE PUZZLE: After Executive Director George Gretsas returned from the Michaelian Office Building where he had been observing the vote, he flashed the Mayor a thumbs up signal and a piece of paper announcing the result was delivered to his Honor. Mayor Delfino is shown thanking the council for their phone calls to legislators and for their efforts in influencing the the legislators.
Photo by WPCNR News

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Executive Spano Explores Feasibility of New Electric Line for Region Under RR

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WPCNR WESTCHESTER COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Department of Communications and John Bailey reporting. (EDITED) March 3, 2003 UPDATED: County Executive Andy Spano will hold a symposium Tuesday monring at 9:30 in the “D” Room in the Westchester County Center to explore a new electronic transmission line proposal to bring 2,000 Megawatts of power to the region, with an eye towards replacing the electricity supplied by Indian Point, should Indian Point be closed.

Presently, according to the New York Independent Systems Operator press office spokesman, Steve Sullivan, speaking to WPCNR Friday, there are not enough existing transmission lines to bring the full 2,000 replacement megawatts to the region. According to the NYISO office, Friday, transmission lines presently in place can only handle 1,600 megawatts, leaving Westchester 400 megawatts short no matter how much electricity NYISO can import from New England or upstate. Mr. Spano has moved to find ways to address this capacity problem. He has not taken a position on whether or not he supports the line.
Officials throughout Westchester County will have a chance tomorrow to learn about the proposal to bring inexpensive clean electric power from upstate New York and parts of Canada to Westchester County and the surrounding region.

County Executive Andy Spano has sent out letters inviting more than 100 federal, state, and local officials to an informational meeting on the project at 9:30 a.m. Tuesday, March 4. A presentation will be given in Room D at the Westchester County Center in White Plains.

“We want everyone who is interested in energy, Indian Point and the environment to hear the presentation and be able to ask questions,” said Spano, who has not taken a position on the proposal. “It’s important to show everyone that there are possible alternatives to Indian Point.”

Representatives of the company making the proposal – Conjunction LLC – will give a presentation on the “Empire Connection” project. The speakers will be Steve Mitnick, chief executive officer; Jeanine Hull, the company’s general counsel; and Roger Clayton, new senior vice president for electrical engineering (also the former chairman of the New York Reliability Council).

Mitnik noted that the project would dramatically reduce electrical costs for the entire downstate area.

“Electric bills would fall significantly in Westchester, Putnam and Dutchess counties. Families and businesses in New York City would save more than $100 million a year,” he said. “The power would be cheaper than any other power source down here – save the limited amount provided by upstate hydroelectric plants and the output from the Indian Point nuclear power plant.”

As proposed, the plan would move 2,000 megawatts of power from upstate to downstate – equivalent to almost a quarter of New York City’s average electric usage, Mitnick said.

Unlike the transmission lines that make up the current grids, built between 1950 and 1975, the new line would have cables following the tracks of an old rail route, going underground as necessary, to avoid
unnecessary environmental impact. It also uses a modern solid cable that can not leak, combust, electrify or explode, according to company officials.

When above ground, in remote areas, Empire Connection would replace the rail communication poles that currently line the rail route. When underground, two five-inch cables will be buried five feet below the surface.

The line would start in Albany – 140 miles north of New York City – and follow the old Hudson River Railroad along the Hudson River to Manhattan. Railroads currently using the rails – including Amtrak and Metro-North – would receive substantial annual payments which could be used to improve service between Albany and New York City.

To carry out the project, Conjunction must get approval from the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission and the New York Independent System Operator. Those applications have already been filed. An application to the New York Public Service Commission will be filed this spring.

The project is proposed to start construction in late 2004 and be complete in late 2005. During installation, Conjunction intends to fund selective projects to enhance the beauty of the east bank of the Hudson River and increase New Yorkers’ access to the river.

The company has been meeting with the counties involved as well as environmental groups, and will hold regional meetings where members of the public will be invited to participate.

“Even at this early stage we want to hear from people,” Mitnick said. “If they want details or drawings or have questions about how it will affect them – we want to hear that. We know that if we’re open and answer their questions honestly, they’ll feel better about the project.”

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Like Shakespeare? Shaw? Brush Up Your Stoppard! The Real Thing Premiers

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS VARIETY. By John F. Bailey. At The Rochambeau. March 3, 2003: “If you like Shakespeare, if you like Shaw, you’re going to like Stoppard,” says Producer Joan Charischak, of the Fort Hill Players, “he plays so many word games. It’s a comedy of language.” WPCNR’s Mr. Broadway dropped by to meet the White Plains theatre troupe rehearsing Saturday for their Friday opening of Tom Stoppard’s I>The Real Thing at The Rochambeau School Andrew L. Morzello Auditorium, 228 Fischer Avenue.



THE REAL THING IN REHEARSAL finds Stanley Wexler, left, Bernadette McComish, center, taking direction from Carin Zakes on the set. The Real Thing will run for the next three weekends, Fridays, March 7, 14, and 21 with curtains at 8, with Saturday performances on March 8, 15, and 22 with matinee and evening showtimes at 2 and 8. Admission is $14, $12 for seniors and high school students, $6 for children. For tickets call 421-0008.
Photo by WPCNR StageCam


Charischak said the actors and actresses in the 7-person cast are “having a lot of fun with it. They love the English accents. It is an intellectual comedy, a love affair with words.”

She said there are numerous scene changes in the play which takes place in the 1980s in London with action shifts between various apartment venues. When WPCNR dropped in, the elegant set featuring intriguing furniture and portraits already appeared to be creating a world we’d like to step into. Charischak said the original Tony Winning play had its various apartments installed on a turntable. The Fort Hill Players troupe of 27 of which only 7 are acting, will transform the traditional set in blackout.



THE DIRECTOR TALKS ABOUT THE REAL THING: Carin Zakes, Director, is directing her first show with the Fort Hill Players. She said last week’s complete sound check and actor run-through was very good, and she felt very encouraged about how the show was developing. Asked why people should come and see this play, Zakes said, “If you want to be reminded of those messy bits of life and the passion in life, come to see this play.”
Photo by WPCNR StageCam


Ms.Zakes said the show was about a writer who writes a play about adultery, then commits it himself. “It shifts back and forth between the play he’s creating and his real life.”

Zakes brought the cast together in small groups to coach them to create the dynamics needed between the characters, in January before going to full scenes. The cast has been rehearsing since the beginning of January, but only on full scenes for a month. “The play shifts from scenes in a play to real life, and the audience is left with the question, so what is the real thing?,” Zake said. “The writing is very good. It’s very challenging. Witty, intellectual and insightful. A lot (of the effect) depends on how the dialogue is delivered. It’s about relationships and love. The cast is really working hard to find the truth in the relationships. You need a gin and tonic after this play.”

Dirk Marks, veteran of Harmony on the Sea of last year, and a diplomat for the Dutch mission to the United Nations in real world time, plays Max. His wife leaves him in the first act. He said, “It’s such a cleverly written show. A lot of things are repeating themselves throughout the show. There’s a lot of psychology going on in this play. It’s extremely funny. It’s clever.”

Lorna Whittemore, an advertising space salesperson for The Record-Review, said that getting her character, the female lead, Annie, “has been a roller coaster ride of a process. She’s a very complex woman, and I had problems with my justifying her behavior, and finding myself unable to justify her behavior.”

Stanley Wexler, an investment banker in real life, former professional opera singer in San Francisco, plays the playwright, Henry. The soliloquies his character gives in which he introspects about his life and his play are a challenge, Wexler said,

“He has some long speeches that are really instructive to do to hold and keep the audience’s attention. The writing is spectacular,” Wexler enthused, “You can learn from Tom Stoppard, every time you do it. He’s (Henry) a pompous intellectual guy. He likes to hear himself talk.”

“I play a catty bitch,and that’s a stretch for me” says self styled domestic goddess, Syl Farrell, of Mahopac, who has some of the funniest lines in the play in the role of a wife who decides to leave her husband. Whittemore says she enjoys comic roles: “I come in and have fun. It’s a lesser role but it’s fun for me but the person’s awful. I throw my zingers and go home.”

Bernadette McComish, an interior lighting designer and sales representative with Balinger Lighting, plays Charlotte, the daughter of the playwright: “I play an 80s chick who is running away with a man her father hasn’t met. In many ways she is a lot like him (her father), and he understands that. The play holds up after twenty years.”

Ms. McComish says she love the theatre, but could not do it professionally, and this is an outlet for her love for theatre. She also writes fiction, and finds her acting helps her writing.

The actors and actresses have been rehearsing six times a week for the last month, are all very enthusiastic about the play.



THE SET AWAITS: Stan Wexler says, “The fun of the play is in listening to the language, it explores questions about love, life and relationships that make up things. I hope they like us.”
Photo by WPCNR StageCam

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Music County, USA: All-County Elementary, Intermediate Bands Showcase Flawlessly

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS BATON & DOWNBEAT. Review By John F. Bailey. March 2, 2003: Close to one thousand proud parents and relatives from around the county heard two grand reasons why Westchester County is the leading county in the state in quality musical education at the 46th Annual Elementary & Intermediate All-County Band Musical Festival Saturday afternoon.



INTERMEDIATE BAND ALL-STARS TAKE A BOW, lead by their Conductor, Robert Dalpiaz, after their flawless performance at Purchase Performing Arts Center Saturday afternoon. The 7th, 8th and 9th Graders represented 41 Middle & High Schools in Westchester County.
Photo by WPCNR Arts


After only three rehearsals, both the elementary and intermediate school band all-stars representing 96 schools in the county, navigated their way with precision, passion, and power. They blended as if they had been playing together for years performing a series of musical tour de forces that showed off the the abilities of every instrumental discipline in the bands.

Judy O’Savio, President of the Westchester County School Music Association introduced the program and encouraged parents in the audience to write their legislators in Albany and make a strong case for the music programs in the schools, and to restore budgeted cuts.

She introduced Warren Arbiter, Chairperson of the Elementary Band who noted that the value of the county band experience for his 139 musicians and elementary music at large is that it introduces them to “the aestheticism of live music” creating the future generation of concertgoers, performers and supporters of the arts.

With that, Mr. Arbiter introduced the 139-musician Elementary Band lead off the program under the baton of Chris Melito, Director of the Middle School Bands in Briarcliff Manor. Melito lead them in a crisp, tight, and refreshing performance of Sousa’s “Washington Post March.” This perennial marching band favorite had a mellow surging roll to it with the flutes outstanding on their solo, with just the right blending of take over trombones in the middle section of the piece with trumpets taking charge with crystalclear uplifting tone on their solo turn.

From Sousa the band moved into “Hillcrest Pageant,” which found the musicians creating waves of musical circus scenes, section by section. Again on “Pageant” the trumpets simply dazzled.



THE ELEMENTARY ALL COUNTY BAND ALL-STARS, being conducted by Chris Melito of Briarcliff Manor Schools Saturday afternoon. On “Carnaval De Brasil,” the elementaries impressed this reporter with the percussion section abilities at Grade 4, 5, and 6 level to create the sultry marimba-samba beat of “Carnaval De Brasil.”
Photo by WPCNR Arts


Their Latin rhythm with whistles, bells, and maracas simply fascinated, transporting and engaging the audience to Rio. Considering that many of the young people have probably never heard a samba, their ability to get it just right is a tribute to Mr. Melito’s ability. The French Horns and trumpets answered each other flawlessly, weaved together by the trade winds of the percussion section. Unlike a march, the samba features a lot of solo work on “Carnaval”, section by section, and all the young musicians came in right on the beat.

The elementaries wrapped with the Glenn Miller standard, “In the Mood,” arranged in a stately, slow, swinging tempo that you could tell the children really enjoyed playing. The audience was highly impressed with sharp, loud applause for the variety of the program, and the simply amazing musicianship.

Elliot Semel, Intermediate Band Chair introduced the Intermediate All-County Band under the baton of Robert Dalpiaz, Director of the Brentwood (L.I.) High School Concert Band. Semel said the 118 young artists had “become an ensemble,” over the last three days, and had learned “the art of teamwork,” crediting much of this to Conductor Dalpiaz. The musicians (both bands) practice together as a group once in January, once on the Friday before the concert, and once on the day of the concert. The performances the audience heard Saturday are testimony to how good the young players are and how skilled their conductors are at conveying the intricacies of the selections.

The Intermediate Band began with Sousa’s “El Capitan,” where the trombones were mellow, the clarinets crisp in holding the light airiness of this famous march, that the brasses filled out with majesty, elegance. Baritones and French Horns cast a golden horizon as the march wound up to a smart punchy conclusion.

The grand “Gathering of the Ranks at Hebron” with its varying tempos and vistas created by the various sections was painted with dignity and grandeur by the band. You could visualize the regiments marching onto the grounds each with a different character, elegantly precisely rendered.

The Intermediates even produced a friendly “Bach Prelude and Fugue in Bb Major,” that featured impressive solo work, section by section. But, in this reporter’s opinion Bach does not belong in a band program. In fact, it lulled the audience, who could not wait for it to be over, clapping at the natural breaks. The band played it well, but next, year, let’s forget about Bach for band. Save it for the orchestra.

The concluding piece of the afternoon, “Variation Overture” turned the band loose to create more precise impressions. It became a band of vistas, horizons, and colors painting musical impressionistic paintings that allowed the pictures in the mind to perform. The percussion section in the Intermediates really shown in this one, producing a variation of stirring percussionistic effects and tones that delivered impeccable strong foundations for the various sections’ artists rendering the musical canvases. The young man with the bells was especially timely and authoritative.

Having seen two of these All-County Band Concerts now, I have to say and listeners agreed in my section this was a solid performance by both bands. The Intermediate had an edge in sound and artistry, while the Elementary had much more interesting repertoire and nailed it.

The All-County Band program is a tremendous undertaking and quite a miracle really. Saturday’s performances were a tribute to the talent of Conductors Melito and Dalpiaz for their ability to marshall “the young professionals” into bands that appeared to have been playing together for years not just three days. The youngsters seemed to enjoy it, too. This is achieved by the individual sections rehearsed separately on their parts, then joining the bands for full “sound checks” at the end of the rehearsals. It works based on Saturday’s marvelous and inspiring perfomrance. You forgot these students were mostly under 13 years old, and as young as 9.

The only phenomena that I noticed was that despite a “rainbow coalition” of caucasian, hispanic and asian nationalities in both bands, the groups were sadly missing a basic color, black. There were no African-American representatives. Hopefully, the Westchester County School Music Association might address ways to make it more possible to encourage young black musicians in the future years of this wonderful venture.



Photo by WPCNR Arts

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Knights End Tigers Season, 82-59 at County Center

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. March 1, 2003: The Mount Vernon Knights defeated the White Plains Tigers t for the Class A Championship today at the County Center in White Plains, winning 82-59 by the largest margin they have beaten The Tigers in three meetings this season. The Purple Knights move on into the Sectionals next Saturday. White Plains season is over.

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View From The Upper Deck: Give Us a Break, Reggie!

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. By John “Baseball” Bailey. February 27, 2003: Poor Reggie Jackson. He’s only pulling down $1MM a year in salary and endorsements, and he’s unhappy, and he’s had to sell off 35 of his antique cars. We must be in a depression.

Not only that, but Reggie is unhappy with his role with the New York Yankees as minor league reporter, and evaluator. He would like a bigger role with the Bombers.



BASEBALL BAILEY’S VIEW FROM THE UPPER DECK. Wrigley Field, Chicago.
Photo by WPCNR Sports

Reggie, you have a job. You get paid $150G’s a year. Stop whining. This was always Reggie’s trouble when he was a player. He was always whining about not being appreciated. Thurman Munson didn’t whine. Roy White didn’t whine. Stick Michael didn’t whine. But Reggie did.
In this day and age, Reggie is what’s wrong with baseball. A handful of the players live in a dream world. They are babies. They have worked very hard, made the show…and still that’s not enough. They want to be stroked, too. Instead of contributing they want to be contributed to.

Well, I have news for you Reggie, you never could come up with the big hit when the chips were really down. The Mr. October nickname is such a misnomer. When the Yanks won in 1977 in your first year with them, it was not you that did the job it was Roy White and Paul Blair with their scratch hits in the ninth to ease past Kansas City when the Yanks were down to their last ups in the final game. It was not you who beat the Red Sox in 1978, it was Bucky Dent, and Lou Piniella’s heads-up deak.

You excelled at creating team tension when the focus was not on you. I vividly remember your “I’m the straw that stirs the drink” remark that precipitated the Munson feud.

Now twenty-five years later, you’re still a baby with the fragile ego. I have had enough of glorification of overrated power hitters with big egos.

Speaking of personalities I do not need, it’s sportswriters who go down to Spring Training every year on the dole, soak up the sun and have to find something to write about every day. They write about anything but baseball.

Can we please stop tearing up the pea patch, guys and gals?

Can we stop reporting on Derek Jeter and The Boss having a falling out over Derek’s party hours? You guys are just jealous that Derek’s single and a swinger, can stay out to 3 AM with two ladies on his arm and still do the job.

What does that have to do with baseball? It’s spring training! It does not matter what Derek does.

Derek did not cost the Yankees a Championship last year, the scouts did. Blame the scouts for not getting the inside stuff on Anaheim. The pitchers lost that Championship, because they did not know how to pitch smart to the Angels, because the scouts did not develop a strategy to pitch the Angels that was effective, not Derek J.

As a former minor league player said to me this week, the flap over “The Jet” is ridiculous: “He’s got five rings,” our player who wished he could have made the show says.

Performance counts. “The Jet,” my name for Derek Jeter, is the best shortstop the Yankees have ever had. He plays every day. He hits over .300, has great range and gets a lot of big hits. His .298 last year? So what. That’s still solid. His teammates like him, and Reggie Jackson was not the most liked player among his teammates when he played for the Yankees. Thurman Munson disliked him intensely because it was all about Reggie, never about the team, with Reggie.

While we are at it:

Sportswriting has to be the refuge of the news reporter who could not make it, because they report on everything except the game. But miss the big story: the drugs in the game, the betting spreads in the NFL, the womanizing. Had that poor Baltimore pitcher not died, there would have been no stories on that lethal diet drug, ephaedra. Somebody had to die before a sportswriter would have the nerve to write about it.

Pete Rose gambling? Another story no sportswriter ever touched before Pete got banned.

Has a sportswriter ever gone to a game and paid for it? Let them sit in the stands and pay for a major league game: It’s a $150 night for the average family of four. Do the Sportswriters ever write about that from a quality of entertainment standpoint. Do they ever write how many boring games there are in a series because of the lousy pitching. No. Far be it from them to criticise management.

Do the sportswriters every cover fastpitch softball and baseball’s disgrace of not supporting it like the NBA does the WNBA? No.

Do the sportwriters ever write about the deterioration of the baseball telecast and radiocast? No.

A sportswriter would not know a story if it ran him or her over.

No nose for news. Just controversy that will get people to read the sports section.

Steinbrenner should fire Reggie and let him go to work for the Montreal Expos for his next job. Reggie’s whining last week was one of the most absurd public venting I’ve noted in a long time.

The story written in the Times actually taking Steinbrenner to task for not recognizing poor Reggie’s plight sets a new low in news nobody needs to know about.

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