WHITE PLAINS WESTCHESTER DAILY NEWS SERVICE VISITS SINCE 2000 A.D. 25TH YEARl REPORTING THE NEWS YOU NEED TO KNOW News Service Since 2000 A.D. 2026 WILL BE OUR 26TH YEAR OF COVERING WHITE PLAINS NEW YORK USA . John F. Bailey, Editor (914) 997-1607 wpcnr@aol.com Cell: 914-673-4054. News Politics Personalities Neighborhoods Schools Finance Real Estate Commentary Reviews Policy Correspondence Poetry Philosophy Photojournalism Arts. The WHITE PLAINS CITIZENETREPORTER. TELEVISION: "White Plains Week" News Roundup, 7:30 EDT FRI, 7 EDT MON & the incisive "People to Be Heard" Interview Program 8PM EDT THURS, 7 PM EDT SAT on FIOS CH 45 THROUGHOUT WESTCHESTER AND, ALTICE OPTIMUM WHITE PLAINS CH 1300 Fighting for Truth, Justice and the American Way. TOP 10 VISITORS FROM AROUND THE WORLD :1. USA. 2.BRAZIL3.VIET NAM 4. CHINA 5. JAPAN 6.UK. 7.CANADA. 8.INDIA. 9.AUSTRALIA 10.IRELAND 11.GERMANY 12..ARGENTINA 13.BANGLADESH 14.RUSSIA. 15.NEWZEALAND. 16. FRANCE. 17.MEXICO. 18.UKRAINE. 19.SOUTH AFVRICA. 20. IRAQ.
4TH STRAIGHT WEEK OF DECLINE IN NEW CASES: FROM 25,294 JAN 2-9 TO 3,423 THE WEEK OF JAN 23-29. EXCELSIOR!
WPCNRCORONAVIRUS MONITOR. From the New York Covid Tracker. Commentary by John F. Bailey January 31, 2021:
The 321 new persons testing positive of 8,130 tested for covid Saturday throughout Westchester County brought the total new positives for the 7 days Sunday through Saturday to 3,423.
The combination of vaccine protection, extreme cold temperatures all week and the Friday-Saturday snow event all contributed to lowering the county daily positive case findings to an average of 489 new cases a day.
THE WPCNR COVID LOGBOOK: FOUR WEEKS OF COVID POSITIVE DECLINE
The ratio of the 16, 782 persons infected two weeks ago infecting other persons over 14 days was one person of those infected two weeks ago infecting .20 (point two zero) persons, well below the 1 to 1 sustained level of infections.
Westchester citizens with the misfortune of testing positive are not spreading it at a rate that increases the disease exponentially at this time.
The average percentage of Westchester residents testing positive daily for the week was 6.6%. The positive ratio of 3,423 positives found over 52,002 tests administered the 7 days from January 23 to 29 was 6.5%
The positives Saturday were the lowest levels since December 13, 2021 (292) , the beginning of the fourth wave or the start of the ‘Holiday Wave” from Thanksgiving through New Years Weekend, which began December 1, 2021 when there were 311.
The cases in the Mid-Hudson Region 7 Counties on Saturday were showing sustained decline in covid cases. New York City new positives (3,050) to the 9 Counties of Mid-Hudson and Long island Saturday Cases (1,864) was leading the 9 surrounding counties by little more than 1,000 cases.
The Old Polo Grounds, my brother-in-laws favorite ballpark
WPCNR THE SUNDAY BAILEY. News & Comment By John F. Bailey. January 30, 2021:
The best league of all is not any of the professional leagues.
It is the Hot Stove League, the league where every team and your team wins.
Because you talk about the coming season.
The Lords and Gods of Major League Baseball now are in lock out, arguing over money and tinkering with the rules of the greatest game, so the Old Hot Stove League has a limited schedule this year
The Hot Stove League refers to the decades when baseball was the National Pastime. It no longer is, you rarely see pickup games around town anymore. Now they play football and basketball, and if they play baseball they are in organized rec leagues, or little league which still places emphasis on playing the best players.
( Full Disclosure: I was 0 for 3 in Little League and struck out three times, and never caught a flyball in rightfield where I was played in the 1957 season. Why? Because the coaches never spent time to teach me how to catch a fly ball. Instruction is sadly lacking, still.)
But then neither is any professional sport really a national pastime.
They are television entertainment, and as we learn more and more they do not have the health and well-being of players or fans as one of their first concerns.
In America more people still see baseball games than any other sport. It is still the sport you do not have to be big or tall to play. You have to develop instincts and situational awareness. And if your’re a girl, you can play fast pitch softball a really lightning like game.
When I was a kid we listened to the World Series on the radio in the afternoons during school. Sympathetic teachers occasionally announced the score. It was what you talked about if you were a boy.
We’d race home in Pleasntville (we walked to school then) to catch the last few innings on tv if we had one. Games started at.1 PM or sometimes 12 noon.
Now there are so many playoff games leading in to the World Series that the series is played at night in cold weather and the games end late in the evening when we kids in our 70s have to go to bed.
When I was growing up in the 1950s, baseball’s World Series concluded the first week of October (in glorious autumn had low sun and fantastic endings.
Brooklyn’s sinker baller, Johnny Podres, 7th Game October 4, 1955, shutting out the Yankees. The day Brooklyn will never forget.
Podres shutting out the Yankees in Game 7 in 1955; the Don Larsen no-hitter, saved by Mickey Mantle’s one-hand backhand robbery of a Gil Hodges drive in the left center gap, saving the no-hitter.
Mantle Fifth Game 1956, coming from right centerfield in full stride catching up and backhanding Gil Hodges line drive o preserve Don Larsen’s perfect game.
Lew Burdette winning three games in 1957; the White Sox playing the Dodgers in 1959; Willie Mays” Over-the-Shoulder robbery of Vic Wertz in 1954; If you saw those moments, or “saw them on the radio,” as Terry Cashman sang, you remembered them always.
‘Willie” robs Vic Wertz in the 8th– 450 feet from home plate to save Game One–1954
When it is 10 degrees like it is right now on the 30th of January, old-timers would gather around a hot stove in small town general stores across the great continent and talk baseball about the coming season.
Arguments would ensue on who was the best Mantle or Mays or The Duke (at least in NY). In Chicago the lament was the long-suffering Cubs who never had winning season. Until 1969 when the Mets overtook them.
The ‘Hot Stove League”is in lock-down too.
You aren’t having those discussions this year because nobody is making moves because of the lockout.
Baseball today, like baseball has always been does not care about the fans. The old owners would build teams and sell off their good players as Connie Mack did when he built three championship teams 1911 Philadelphia Athletics, the 1930s Philadelphia Athletics and the Philadelphia Athletics of the late 40s, poised to win, they even had a batting champion, Ferris Fain, but Mr. Mack disbanded that team.
Calvin Grifith did that too with the Washington Senators of the mid-20s, and early 30s, they never contended after the mid-1930s.
Then we have the modern examples the owner of the Montreal Expos, who moved them to Miami. Nowadays in free agency days you never have a great player play a long time for team, or hardly ever. Fans hated it when the Mets traded away Tom Seaver and Nolan Ryan.
The Red Sox traded away Babe Ruth for cash and did not win again until 1946.
Are you getting the idea? This is what fans talked about in the cold dead of winter, the shoveling of snow.
At this time of year we could hardly wait for spring training which should start in three weeks. I loved listening to exhibition games on the radio hearing the Yankee play-by-plqy from St. Petersburg and eagerly hearing about Gordon Windhorn who was just tearing the Grapefruit League in Florida apart in 1959. He hit something like 400 in spring training. He made the team and went 0 for 11 in his first two weeks of games and the Yankees traded him. But Gordon gave young fans hope. He had, though a Topps baseball card.
The Hot Stove League warmed us until the ritual of the baseball season would return.
I was reminded of this when the best brother-in-law in America called me last week while I was trying to put together this week’s White Plains Week.
He is a Giants fan, and he called to tell me about a website devoted to the Polo Grounds, the old home of the New York Giants before they moved to San Francisco, he called to share with me the views of the ghost ballpark, and how the pictures stirred his memory.
In the lee of Coogan’s Bluff. The Polo Grounds“Willie’s” Rookie Topps Card 1951
He recalled Willie Mays the Giants centerfielder, whom he mused could have become the all time home run leader had he not only played 34 games in 1952 and all of 1953 in military service. Larry surmised that Willie could have hit 40 to 50 homers in those years of service, giving him 760 possible homers for his career, best Henry Aaron and possibly Barry Bonds, the current homerun all-time leader (762), despite his use of steroids.
I remembered that Mickey Mantle, the Yankee young star did not lose any years to military service. Larry was surprised by that.
Mickey Mantle’s Rookie Card, 1951.
According to Major League Baseball and I quote, “ While playing high school football, Mantle was kicked in the left ankle. An infection developed which resulted in chronic osteomyelitis. Mantle was classified 4-F the first time he was examined, but his draft board decided to re-examine him and disqualifed him twice more. We mused that Mays may have very well hit over two hundred homers naturally. Based on his record.
This led Larry to remember the winningest left-hander of all-time—Spahnie, Warren Spahn who won 363 games.
Spahnie–Baseball’s Winningest Southpaw
I said yeah, I saw him pitch in 1958 in the World Series shutting out the Yankees, 3-0, and then again in 1965, losing 2-1 in a game I think against the Giants in Shea Stadium. Even in his 40s, he went 8 innings. And he pitched every 4th day. He was crafty, had a sweeping curve ball that sunk and was unafraid to use it. Spahn served in the Navy in World War II losing 4 seasons serving his country in the Pacific.
He returned to the Boston Braves in 1946 and in his first six years back from the Navy he won 21, 15,21,21,22 and 23 games with the old Braves.
If he had been pitching in his service years he possible could have won at least 15 or 20 a year in those 4 years giving him 423 wins lifetime. We talked about his pitching motion, the high leg kick, and his pitching deep into games. (He went 10 innings against the Yankees in the sixth game of the 1958 World Series.)
In the cold 36 degree day Larry was experiencing that day last week in the south, and I was experiencing at 17 degrees in White Plains, the Hot Stove League of our own was keeping us warm, feeling the sunshine on our faces of early spring.
Larry remembered the first game he ever saw, in Yankee Stadium no less.
“I remember the thing most was how green the grass was as we walked into the lower box seats.’ I agreed with a huge smile over the miles of phone line, “Absolutely it hit me with its emerald majesty, the blasts of color from the billboards in the farflung bleacher adds “FYING A,’ “BALLENTINE BEER & ALE” ”. Images of the Big ball Park were real again in our recall of our shared experience in a ballpark.
We warmed to the task. Talk turned to the Giants-Dodgers Playoff of 1951, and he wondered who had pitched for the Dodgers. I said I could not understand why Charlie Dressen the Dodger manager at the time called in Ralph Branca to face Bobby Thompson, who had homered off Branca earlier in the series.
Then I remembered Willie Mays was on deck. However I had to leave the phone to see what pitcher had Branca relieved. I was shocked to discover it was “Big Newk,” who had entered the 9th inning after going 8 innings, handcuffing the Giants.
Dressen figured Newcombe was done after he coughed up three hits and Dressen took him out.
But Branca was not a regular reliever. He won 1, lost 2, and saved 3 in relief in 1951. He came in fired two fastballs to Thompson and the second fastball landed in the left field stands winning the pennant. If Thompson knew the second fastball was coming he still had to hit it.
Just talking with Larry about that game brought me back from my January bad news-17 degrees- covid funk.
This faded into conversation about pitching and baseball memories came rushing back.
Larry recalled when Juan Marichal , then 24 years old the great Giant righthander was locked in a late inning pitching duel with Warren Spahn. Alvin Dark, the Giant Manager, Larry remembered asked Marichal whether he wanted to come out. Marichal, “I ain’t coming out. As long as that old man is pitching. I’m pitching.’
Usually in the Hot Stove League, we’d be talking about the coming season, and in the Hot Stove League every team had made changes which would have them be contenders. Just anticipating the lazy atmosphere of spring training made you impatient if you were a fan in the ‘50s.
I loved that old ball park, the Polo Grounds. It had soul. I loved the old Yankee Stadium with its grand stand to the sky with original façade with a rake in the upper deck stands that hung over the box seats giving you God’s view of the game.
In my last moments of life I will be thinking baseball, my daughter and my wife, my parents, the day in 1961 when my father took me to a Yankee-Tiger night game in sweltering 95 degree heat. (My Dad hated the heat, especially humid heat).
The game goes 9 innings, 3 hours, with the Tigers putting ducks on the pond every inning. Casey changing pitchers every inning. Then the Yankees string 3 singles together in the bottom of the ninth with 2 out to win it. My father never even mentioned leaving the game early.
There was the first game he took me to in Yankee Stadium in 1956 when I was 11. It was Indians and the Yankees in a Wednesday afternoon game. The Yanks won 3-2 when Billy Martin kicked the ball out of the thirdbaseman’s bare hand as the third sacker was trying to tag him out. Martin was a dead duck, but he kicked the ball out of his hand and scored. My father in the only burst of fan interest I ever saw from him, said “Did you see that? He kicked the ball out of his hand.”
I see that play in my replay of memory perfectly to this day.
I miss that Hot Stove League, where there’s never a losing season, you can taste the crisp refresher and stretch in the middle of the 7th, and the great plays, the greats play and cavort on the endless green once more.
So thanks Larry for that call. It was like old times.
JOIN ALEX PHILIPPIDIS, JOHN BAILEY AND JIM BENEROFE UNITED ONCE MORE, REPORTING ON THE WHITE PLAINS OF 20 YEARS AGO THE WAY IT WAS–FROM THE WHITE PLAINS TV ARCHIVES.
WPCNR POLICE GAZETTE.From the Westchester County Department of Communications. January 27, 2021:
More than 100 weapons were seized and 11 persons were arrested this week following a six-month multi-agency investigation into “ghost guns” and other illegal firearms in Westchester and Putnam Counties.
Search warrants were executed Tuesday at eight locations in Westchester and Putnam by investigators from County, local and federal law enforcement agencies.
Rifles, handguns, “ghost guns” and high-capacity drum magazines were seized. Some of the weapons lacked a serial number – making them so-called ghost guns – and other weapons had defaced serial numbers.
Several silencers, ballistic vests, counterfeit police shields and quantities of ammunition were also seized in the probe, dubbed Operation Casper by investigators.
The high-capacity drum magazines that were seized are of a similar type to the one used in the murders of two New York City police officers last week.
“As we prepare to pay our final respects to Officer Jason Rivera tomorrow and his partner Officer Wilbert Mora next week, we are reminded of the dangers of illegal guns, not just in New York City,” County Executive George Latimer said.
“This proactive, collaborative effort brings together law enforcement and prosecutorial leaders beyond Westchester to combat the distribution and purchase of illegal guns. It is our moral responsibility to work together to reduce the availability of these weapons and keep our communities safe.”
Public Safety Commissioner Thomas A. Gleason thanked all the agencies with personnel assigned to the Real Time Crime center for their roles in the successsful investigation.
“Working collaboratively with our law enforcement partners is a critical way we keep Westchester safe,” Gleason said.
The investigation was launched in June 2021 when police departments in Westchester, along with the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, created a task force to address an influx of ghost guns and other illegal firearms into the Westchester County region.
Detectives in the multi-agency Real Time Crime Center (RTC) were tasked with finding innovative ways to reduce gun crimes and prevent violence.
These detectives were assisted by the FBI Safe Streets Task Force, New York City Police Department, Putnam County Sheriff’s Office and the Rockland County DA’s office. Prosecutors from Westchester County District Attorney’s Office and the Southern District of New York provided guidance and case support as specific targets and locations were identified.
The following is a list of the persons arrested and the agency lodging the charges, which are felonies:
North Castle PD
Theodore Brois, 67, of 3 Tallwoods Road, North Castle.
– Criminal Possession of a Weapon 1st Degree (Ten or More Weapons)
Helene Brois, 61, of 3 Tallwoods Road, North Castle
– Criminal Possession of a Firearm
Brandon Brois, 24, of 3 Tallwoods Road, North Castle
– Criminal Possession of a Weapon 2nd Degree
– Criminal Possession of a Weapon 3rd Degree
New Rochelle PD
Juan Sanchez, 28, of 81 Highland Avenue, New Rochelle
– 3 Counts Criminal Possession of a Weapon 2nd Degree- Loaded Firearm
– 3 Counts Criminal Possession of a Weapon 2nd Degree – Disguised Gun
Tuesday, after Supreme Court Justice Stephen Breyer announced his retirement, Congressman Mondaire Jones (D-NY), the first member of Congress to call for his retirement,released the following statement:
“Justice Breyer has served our nation and our judiciary honorably for nearly three decades. I’m grateful for his work and dedication to protecting our democracy.
But the fact is the far-right will stop at nothing to maintain its grip on the Supreme Court, something Republicans made clear when they refused to hold a single hearing on Merrick Garland’s nomination for more than a year, only to push through Amy Coney Barrett’s nomination as voting was already underway in the 2020 presidential election.
We can’t risk losing yet another seat on the high court to the radical, anti-democracy right, which is why I was the first Member of Congress to call on Justice Breyer to retire nearly a year ago, and why I commend his decision to do so today.
Now, President Biden can fill his seat with a nominee who will carry on Justice Breyer’s legacy of advancing equity and justice from the bench. That means nominating someone who is not hostile to the fundamental right to vote, who respects precedents like Roe v. Wade, who believes in the science of vaccines, and who respects the constitutional prerogatives of Congress.
While Justice Breyer’s decision has saved our Court from even further peril, the far-right Supreme Court continues to present an urgent crisis for our country and our democracy.
Critically, we also must act to restore balance and integrity to a judicial system that has been dominated by the increasingly fascist far-right for years, and that starts with expanding the Supreme Court.”
In April 2021, Jones, with Senator Ed Markey (D-MA) and Reps. Jerry Nadler (D-NY) and Hank Johnson (D-GA), introduced the Judiciary Act of 2021, legislation to expand the Supreme Court by adding four seats. Days after introducing this bill, Jones became the first member of Congress to call on Justice Breyer to retire, prompting several of his colleagues to echo his call. Jones has been a leader on court expansion for over a year, even before coming to Congress.