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WPCNR MILESTONES. Reprinted from the WPCNR ARCHIVES. February 15, 2026:
February 22 Next Sunday is George Washington’s Birthday.
All week this week is President’s Week.
The time when we remember the first leader and why he is the best.
It is instructive to look at our first leader, George Washington, the father of our nation — America — that used to be.
One cannot help be reminded of the snowy winter at Valley Forge, when the bedraggled, poorly equipped rebel army suffered but held together.
They attacked the German troops in Trenton on Christmas Eve, 1776, crossing the Delaware River at night. What kind of man was he that George Washington could inspire his troops against all odds? What kind of men were they who would risk certain death if wounded (no med-evacs in 1776) for an idea: rights and freedom?
Washington was a man of tremendous character. Of principle. Where did he get this character?
He specialized in self-control at an early age. That congressmen, lobbyists, and pundits and yes, Presidents, means mind-control, reason and responsibility, and humanity.
According to the book, The American President, Washington, at sixteen, had formed a code of conduct. He had written a book of etiquette with 110 “maxims” to guide his conduct in matters. In this etiquette book he had written:
Every action done in company ought to be done with a sign of respect to those who are not present. Sleep not when others speak; sit not when others stand; speak not when you should hold your peace; walk not when others stop;…Let your countenance be pleasant but in serious matters somewhat grave…Undertake not what you cannot perform but be careful to keep your promise.
The character sketch provided by the authors of The American President, indicates this personal “rulebook” was a book that Washington wrote over the years and referred to it often, for, they write, for the following reasons:
“for self-control, to avoid temptation, to elude greed, to control his temper. Reputation was everything to him. It had to do with his strength, his size, his courage, his horsemanship, his precise dress, his thorough mind, his manners, his compassion. He protected that reputation at any cost.”
Earning respect by example. Quelling rebellion with a few words. He sets an example today for those who would take advantage of America’s weakness and seize power by opportunism. Washington inspired by example.
He lived with his troops. He shared hardships with them, and there was so much respect for him that he was able to talk them out of armed rebellion at the end of the American Revolution. Washington had been asked by the army to join them to overthrow the Continental Congress, and make himself King.
Washington had been asked by one of the officers of the rebels to join them, and he wrote them, You could not have found a person to whom your schemes are more disagreeable. Banish these thoughts from your mind. Hearing that the rebels who were planning insurrection (back in 1783, they knew what insurrection was) against the new country due to paid withheld by the Continental Congress, Washington rode to Newburgh, New York, (not far from White Plains, NY,USA) on March 15, 1783, to meet with the dissident insurgents. Washington spoke to the rebellious group, saying,
“Gentlemen, as I was among the first who embarked in the cause of our common Country; as I never left your side one moment, but when called from you on public duty; as I have been the constant companion and witness of your Distresses…it can scarcely be supposed …that I am indifferent to your interests. But…this dreadful alternative, of either deserting our Country in the extremest hour of her distress, or turning our Arms against it…has something so shocking in it that humanity revolts from the idea…I spurn it, as every Man who regards liberty…undoubtedly must.”
The would-be rebels fell silent, digesting what he had said. Then Washington withdrew a letter from Congress, but could not read the text, withdrawing some eyeglasses from his tunic, remarking,
“Gentlemen, you will permit me to put on my spectacles for I have not only grown gray but almost blind in the service of my country.”
The men present were reported to have tears in their eyes at this gesture of Washington’s and abandoned their plot out of respect for their leader.
Washington retired from the military, surprising the entire new country. His action surprised King George III of England, who was astonished that Washington had refused to hold on to his military authority and use it for political or financial gain. The defeated King of England, remarked, “If true, then he is the greatest man in the world.” Washington was.
Seeker of Diverse Views. How to pick a cabinet.
As President, George Washington invented the Presidential Cabinet, whom he referred to as “the first Characters,” persons who possessed the best reputations in fields and areas of the jobs he was filling. Washington said on political appointments: “My political conduct and nominations must be exceedingly circumspect. No slip into partiality will pass unnoticed…”
Washington tolerated the relentless clashes between Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of State, and Alexander Hamilton, Secretary of the Treasury, but lectured them on the necessity for tolerance and moving beyond partisanship:
“I believe the view of both of you are pure, and well meant. Why then, when some of the best Citizens in the United States, Men…who have no sinister view to promote, are to be found, some on one side, some on the other…should either of you be so tenacious of your opinions as to make no allowances for those of the other? I have great esteem for you both, and ardently wish that some line could be marked out by which both of you could walk.”
The Constitution Should be Protected
When George Washington left office after two terms, he made a farewell address which warned future generations of Americans about foreign entanglements and partisanship in the republic:
“I shall carry to my grave the hope that your Union and brotherly affection may be perpetual; that the Constitution may be sacredly maintained; and that free government…the ever favorite object of my heart…will be the happy reward of our mutual cares, labors and dangers.”
Washington died in 1800, three years after leaving office in 1797. He was saluted on the floor of congress as being “First in war, first in peace, first in the hearts of his countrymen.”
He was the first and best.
The ultimate role model for any leader, February 22, 2024 is a day that tries Americans’ souls. It is hoped that some of our “leaders” in Westchester, in Albany, in Washington might read the words I have quoted above and take them to heart in future deliberations.
Work a little.
It’s not all about you.
It’s about doing what is best for us all. George Washington’s vision of his country is being challenged by those who know not what they do. Or want to do to voices that disagree with them. But we who remember, and read these words must refocus.
I hear you, Mr. Washington, and we heed, so help us God.

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In observance of Presidents’ Day, all City offices will be closed on Monday, February 16 and there will be no garbage pick-up.
In addition, the Gedney Yard Recycling Facility will be closed.
There will be no paper recycling this week.
Paper recycling will resume on Wednesday, February 25.
If you live on a Monday-Thursday garbage collection route, your trash will be picked up on Tuesday and Thursday.
If you live on a Tuesday-Friday garbage collection route, your trash will be picked up on Wednesday and Friday.
Mixed recycling will be picked up as usual. Once again, there will be no paper pick up this week.
Thank you for your cooperation in keeping our city clean.
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THE BIG CHILL REPORT

BLACK ICE

THE FROZEN TUNDRA 20 INCHES 0F SNOW IN 3 WEEKS

LOWEST TEMP READINGS IN YEARS DOWN TO ZERO…SHELTER IN PLACE SNOWBIRDS

ASSEMBLYMAN CHRIS BURDICK:
JANUARY ELECTRIC BILL UP 44% IN UPPER WESTCHESTER
POWER COMPANIES BLAME HIGHER USAGE FOR SOARING SUPPLY CHARGES

JOHN BAILEY ON STATE FAILURE TO DETERMINE
FUTURE ELECTRIC DEMAND BEFORE RATE APPROVAL

JOHN BAILEY AND THE NEWS YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS WEEK EVERY WEEK ON WHITE PLAINS WEEK
FOR 25 YEARS
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JIMMY AND ROSALYN
Heard it in a love song. What’s Yours?
Valentine’s Day is today
To get in the mood for love, dispel the myths, fiction notions about love, I have compiled a list of songs written over the years from ragtime to swing to the rock and roll era.
Those who have never been in love yet can use these classics as guidelines to judge whether they have a real love going, and not merely the mock.
Those of you not still in love or who miss it, can play these songs for memories and faith in the future that another one and only will come along because they miss their one and only.
I may not have remembered your song here.
But, by all means, feel free to write me and suggest other songs I have left out. I include some iconic photos of celebrity couples of the silver screen that showed us what a couple in love look like.
Elvis and Ann-Margret
The best observers — authorities on what love feels like are the songwriters–poets with melody.
They write the feelings their minds and bodies and yes, their hearts felt, as
“down and down they go like a leaf that’s caught in the tide. That Old Black Magic you weave so well”
BY THE WAY DO A SEARCH ON LYRICS IF YOU WANT LISTEN TO THESE SONGS!
The first 115 Love Songs of All Time with signature lines in parentheses:
(Fly the Ocean in a Silver Plane)
(I didn’t Want to Do it)
(I was your Pretty, You were My Baby)
(I Remember that night in Maaaay, the stars were brightly shining)
(I Found My Thrill)
(Pretending You’re Still Around)
(That’s When I Miss You Most of All when Autumn Leaves Start to Fall)
GENE AUTRY THE SINGING COWBOY

(Though not a single word was spoken, I could tell you knew
That unfelt clasp of hands told me so well that you knew
I never lived at all until the thrill of that moment When my heart stood still.)

(With a smile that makes my temperature rise
Like a summer with a thousand Julys You intoxicate my soul with your eyes)
(They Say You Are Going)

(I Want to Rope and Ride Across the Great Divide)
GARY COOPER AND GRACE KELLY
(Wait Along, Wait Along)
(Far Over the Sea)
(I wanna remember you just like this…)

(It Brings Back a Night of Tropical Splendor)
FRANK SINATRA JILL ST. JOHN
(Come on Cutes, Put on Your Dancing Boots and Dance with Me)
(We Can Face the Music Together)
(Without it you’re in an awful fix. Once you’ve had it you never want to quit)
(down by the sea on a blanket with my baby that’s where I’ll Be))
(That’s All I want from you. Always Lived in the Twilight.. Never Done no Wrong))
(Don’t Kiss Me Once, Kiss Me Twice)

(You are the one)
(I Suddenly Turn and See…Your Fabulous Face)
(Set em up, Joe)
(You’re the Coliseum, You’re the Louvre Museum)
(Now)
(Nothing Thrills Me Half as Much as Dancing Cheek to Cheek)
(It’s a Phenomenon!)
CARY GRANT AND LARAINE DAY
(But if we call the whole thing off that will break my heart…)
(It didn’t turn out like I planned but if you smile and wave your hand
I’d go out and hire a band, and wait for one more chance
At the same old song and dance)
(When an irrepressible smile such as yours
Warms an old implacable heart such as mine
Don’t say no because I insist
Somewhere, somehow
Someone’s gotta be kissed)
BOGIE AND BACALL
(You haven’t changed a bit Lovely as ever, I must admit)
(I’m so hot and bothered that I don’t Know my elbow from my ear
I suffer something awful each time you go And much worse when you’re near)
(Deep in the Heart of Me)
(I felt a thrill when you caught my eye, my heart stood still)
CARY AND GRACE AGAIN
(Feel so good now you’re home)
( to set my soul on fire)
(The sweet used-to-be That was once you and me
Keeps coming back like an old melody)
LEE MARVIN
(I’ll be loving you always)
THE AVENGERS
(I’ve Tried forgetting you..)
(Everybody’s somebody’s plaything)
(Where can you be?)
(I will love you til I die)
(All because my heart can’t forget)
(Save me the first dance in your dreams)
STEHANIE ZIMBALIST AND PIERCE BROSNAN
(You with the Stars in Your Eyes)
(I’m a Lover, Everybody Loves Me)
(Sooner or later he’s gonna me mine, I hope it’s not later)
(Trying to Waltz to a Rock and Roll Song)
(Carry your books and hold your arm?)
(Why Not Take All of me?)
(Till I Overtake the Moon and You)
(My Baby is so Fine, Sends Those Chills Up and Down My Spine)
(Your chances are very Good)
(Too Much in Love)
( Of faults that you forgave, rainbows on a wave…Thank you so Much)
ROGER MOORE AND FRIEND
(A pretty girl is like a melody That haunts you night and day
Just like the strain Of a haunting refrain)
(Love’s a Hand-Me-Down Brew)
DARREN MCGAVIN AND LEGS
( When I saw you there on that ski trail)
DARREN MCGAVIN AND WIFE
(When I Lost my Baby)
(I was dancing with my darlin’…)
65. Laura (The laugh that floats on a summer night)
(Seen a lot I mean I lot But now I’m like sweet seventeen a lot
Bewitched, bothered and bewildered am I)
THE SILK STALKINGS TEAM
(Where did we go?)
(Honest you do)
(Someday Julie, I’ll Be the Apple of Your Eye)
( I Need You So)
(In All the Familiar Places)
CLARK GABLE AND CLAUDETTE COLBERT “iT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT” CLASSIC JOURNALISM MOVIE
(Without You)
(Stay with me, Diana)
(All my Dreams Fulfilled)
(Because I’m crazy ’bout, mad about, wild about Your fine brown frame)
(He didn’t come Monday.I kissed him Wednesday)
(Met a New Girl in the Neighborhood)
(You may see a Stranger Across a Crowded Room)

(And still have danced Some More)
(Oh, the Towering Feeling)
(You set my soul on fire, and I’ve Really Had my Fun)
83 Just for a Thrill (You’re still the only one Cause you made my heart stand still)
84. Stardust (Of love’s sweet refrain)
85.Smoke Gets In Your Eyes (When a lovely flame dies)
86. Blues In the Night (A two-face, a worrisome thing
Who’ll leave ya to sing the blues in the night)
87. Love Letters In the Sand
(You laughed when I cried when the tide would take our Love Letters from the Sand)
88. Born To Be With You (By your Side)
89. I Can’t Stop Loving You (I’ve made up my mind to Live in Memory)
90. First Name Initial (It Makes it Official)
91. When A Man Loves A Woman
(Can’t Keep His Mind on Anything Else)
92. Ci Ci Rider
(The Moon Is Shining Bright, If I Could Just Walk with You
Everything would Be All right)
93. Eddie My Love (Don’t Make Me Wait Too LongOngOng)
94 .Wonderland By Night
95. In the Mood
96. Moonlight Serenade
97. Young Blood
(I Can’t Get You off of My Mind)
98. Memories Are made of This
99.Once Upon A Time (A Girl with Moonlight in Her Eyes Told Me She Loved Me So, But that Was Once Upon a Time, long long ago)
100. VAYA CON DIOS (My Love, May God Be With you til we meet again)
101—Pinacoladas(I never knew)
102. Magaritaville(Wastin’ away again in Margaritaville, somewhere’s There’s a Woman to Blame)
103. Just One of Those Things(One of those Bells that Now and Then Ring)
104:Rags to Riches (From a Pauper to a King of Your Heart)
105. Fly Me to the Moon(Let me play among the stars
And let me see what spring is like
In other words, hold my hand
In other words, baby, kiss me)
106. We’ll Meet Again(Some Sunny Day)
107.Let’s Do It!(Let’s fall in love!)
108. My Old Flame( I can’t even think of his name
But I’ll never be the same
Until I discover what became of my old flame)
109. SEARCHIN’(Well, Sherlock Holmes
Sam Spade got nothin’, child, on me
Sergeant Friday, Charlie Chan
And Boston Blackie
Gonna walk right down that street
Like Bulldog Drummond
‘Cause I’ve been searchin’
Ooh, Lord, searchin’, mm child
Searchin’ every which a-way
Yeah, yeah
But I’m like the Northwest Mounties
You know I’ll bring her in some day
(Gonna find her)
110. Puppy Love(This is Not a Puppy Love)
111. YOU ARE MY DESTINY(You share my reverie
You’re more than life to me
That’s what you are)
112. DIANA(Oh, please stay by me, Diana)
113. KISS(You don’t have to be rich to be my girl
You don’t have to be cool to rule my world
Ain’t no particular sign I’m more compatible with
I just want your extra time and your kiss)
114.SOMEDAY SOON(Goin’ With Him)
115. STILL THE ONE(that I love
The only one I dream of
You’re still the one I kiss good night)
116. DON’T LET THE STARS GET IN YOUR EYES
(Don’t let the moon steal your heart)
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GET READY FOR SPRING TRAINING STARTING NEXT WEEK FOR ALL 30 MAJOR LEAGUE TEAMS
WPTV’S “BULL” ALLEN, VOICE OF BASEBALL’S PAST AND FUTURE PREVIEWS THE SEASON
THE STATE OF BASEBALL IN 2026
THE METS AND THE YANKEES
THE NEW RULES (THE PLAYERS HAVE TURNED THEM TO THEIR ADVANTAGE)
BASEBALL EXPANSION 32 TO 36 TEAMS (HOW HE THINKS THEY WOULD WORK)
THE EXPANSION DRAFT– A LOT OF ISSUES
SALARY CAP ARE THE OWNERS KIDDING?
WHAT WOULD THE PLAYOFFS BE LIKE: BASEBALL 24/7 FOR A MONTH
18 TEAMS MAKING THE PLAYOFFS?
HEAR “BULL” READ THE POEM
“WHAT IS A BASEBALL GLOVE”
YOU’LL WANT TO GO OUT AND PLAY CATCH IN THE SNOW AFTER YOU HEAR IT!
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Editor’s Note: Stephen R. Rolandi, a frequent contributor to WPCNR.com and White Plains Week published this article in a r American Society for Public Administration. The views expressed are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of ASPA as an organization. Republished here with permission of the author. (c) 2021, Stephen R. Rolandi By Stephen R. Rolandi
Taken together, along with other policy initiatives, many historians consider Lincoln’s Presidency to be the foundation of the modern administrative state. Indeed, it was Leonard D. White who said that, “Administrative history was primarily the record of war and military government.”
If I had to recommend a single book on Lincoln, it would probably be Doris Kearn’s work on Lincoln, how he won the Republican party Presidential nomination against more prominent contenders, and how he led his cabinet—consisting nearly of all the Presidential contenders he faced in 1860—during the Civil War.

Author: Stephen R. Rolandi “retired” in 2015 after serving with the State and City of New York. He holds BA and MPA degrees from New York University, and studied law at Brooklyn Law School. He teaches public finance and management as an Adjunct Professor of Public Administration at John Jay College of Criminal Justice (CUNY) and Pace University. Professor Rolandi is a Trustee of NECoPA; President-emeritus of ASPA’s New York Metropolitan Chapter and was Senior National Council Representative. He has also served on many other association boards in New York City, Westchester County (New York State) and Washington, DC. You can reach him at: srolandi@jjay.cuny.edu or srolandi@pace.edu or at 914.536.5942.
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WPCNR PERSPECTIVES 2026. nEWS & COMMENT By John F. Bailey. February 10, 2026:
Reading the findings discovered in the American Jewish Committee report, State of Antisemitism in America released Monday, is troubling.
What is motivating indivuduals to take persons they do not even know, single them out to haze or attack them, kill them with what only can be described as thrill attacks for the fun of it with as much reason as fraternity and sorority hazing which recently have killed persons being hazed in this this “movement,” a “fad”, a crusade, an inquisition (a religion-led motivated policy aimed at acquiring the wealth of citzens).
Whatever motivates these attacks, a President, a politician, self-promoting “influencers,” website-runners today using their platforms with the aim of raising one religion as superior to another and blame those “non-believers” for the failings of others and incite those to disqualify them as real Americans who must go or be deported, or made to feel unwanted, well it is so anti-American Way, it is a failure of conscience.
Whether it is directed at Jewish people, Latinos, immigrants here illegally or otherwise, refugees despised because of their race or origin, it is a hate crime.
When will the legal authorities wake up and smell the stench of the people promoting hatred to achieve personal power?
Attacks on persons because of who they are are crimes. They recall the lynchings, the murders of persons of color in the 1960s the 1920s, the Jim Crow era.
The attacks on Jewish people are attacks on us all. Ambushes. It takes no talent. Just the element of surprise. They are terrorism itself and should be prosecuted with heavy penalties.
This morning the American Jewish Committee report concludes “the rise of Antisemitism isn having a profound impact on how American Jews live.
I would like to amplify and expand that conclusion to remark flat-out that this “rise” has a profound impact on how ALL AMERICANS live.
To quote the American Jewish Committee report:
The pain and destruction and death to a Jewish person, is the same pain, destruction and death inflicted on any victim.
The same irrevocable loss and message to the immigrant mother whose child is wrenched away to be deported; the same searing ripped-away-forever-reality pain a family anywhere in America has forever when when someone commits a mass shooting at a neighborhood school, or when a spouse shoots their husband or wife and kills their children, or law enforcement authorities kill a protestor or a someone’s child or wife because they can if “justified.”
Every American of all ages across this nation now lives with this daily possibility in parking lots at big supermarkets, in restaurants, in bars, at sport events, and on highways when irresponsible drivers play NASCAR ace on the Sprain, I-684, the Taconic, and on college campus demonstrations.
We are all nervous, We watch for a person to pull a gun. We scan the interior of a restaurant.
I hate attending a performance on Broadway because the theatres are firetraps especially most of the 40 theatres built decades ago.
Who is responsible for this fear?
The persons mostly in offices who feel the phrase “Our hearts and prayers go out to them for their loss,” They just mocks the victims’ sorrows.
This phrase which has become a cliché of the rich and powerful and leaderless actually is saying something completely different.
What does it really mean when people say that?
It means: “Get over it. You were in the wrong place at the wrong time. It couldn’t be helped. You shouldn’t have been there in the first place. If you had not protested, you would not be dead. We need to move on.
Most of all it means coming from politicians that
“This is too bad, but we are not going to anything to stop it (so get over it)
I would like to hear one politician (wherever the next hate act against Jews, Latinos, African Americans, poor people, homeless people, illegal immigrants, asylum seekers, muslims, Somolis happens do something like this:
Introduce legislation to make a hate crime, an killing, a shooting, a hate speech, resulting in deaths (like January 6) resulting in injury illegal with an automatic jail sentence without parole in effect throughout the town or city where it was committed.
Please, Free Speech that incites and results in violence is a crime by the person who calls for action against another group or party is not allowed.
This is always defended by those who use the “I didn’t mean anyone to do that. I was just supporting the policy….blah blah”
I have been hearing preposterous apologies from politicos saying this “I didn’t mean that.”
This shows the rather low intellectual caliber of those who say things like that.
But you see politicians, when you say a threat, You do mean it. You say what you want to do when you say that.
It also deserves a companion report, from the American Jewish Committee, which they are very qualified to do.
The State of Acceptance of Equality of People in America:
I applaud the American Jewish Committee for their eye-opening report and hope they will expand it to document other groups in the crosshairs of hate in this country and I mean politicians, businesses, Captains of Industry, political groups, activist organizations and what they are saying ripped from the headlines, teir policies they are quoted on by the dutiful media.
The State of Acceptance of Equality of People in America — A dossier of documentation of what the sowers of hate say, what groups and policies they attack and what they are advocating on their attitudes on equality.
It is long overdue.
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WHITE PLAINS SIDEWALKS, WALKS PATHS TO HOMES, APARTMENTS HAVE A COVER OF THIN SOLID ICE THIS MORNING

A LIGHT RAIN OVERNIGHT COATED PATHWAYS WITH ICE THAT YOU CANNOT SEE BEFORE YOU LOSE YOUR FOOTING.
CITY SPREAD ICE MELT TREATMENTS ON ROADS OVERNIGHT.
BE CAREFUL GOING OUT TO DRIVEWAYS, CAR AND WALKING!

BLACK ICE MIDDLE OF PICTURE INDICATES THE DRIVEWAY IS A GLADE OF ICE. THE HAZARD: YOU CANNOT SEE IT BEFORE YOU GO FLYING WHEN YOU SLIP AND LOSE YOUR FOOTING.