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Remembering a Voice for the Region

Stan Brooks, shown here in 2005, was a senior correspondent at all-news radio station, 1010 WINS, and was a dean among radio reporters in New York City.Richard Drew/Associated Press Stan Brooks, shown here in 2005, was a senior correspondent at all-news radio station, 1010 WINS, and was a dean among radio reporters in New York City.

One day during Edward I. Koch’s third term, when allegations of corruption were swirling around mayoral allies like Donald R. Manes, the Queens borough president, the radio reporter Stan Brooks stopped Mr. Koch at City Hall. Mr. Brooks, as always, had his microphone in his hand and his tape recorder running.

“Stan said, ‘Can I ask a few questions?’” recalled George Arzt, a press secretary to Mr. Koch. “He quickly added, ‘Mr. Mayor, I understand you would rather be someplace else right now.’ Koch smiled, nodded in agreement and said, ‘You bet.’ But Stan got his interview.”

“Every mayor from Lindsay to Bloomberg loved the guy, not because he didn’t ask tough questions â€" he did â€"but because of his empathy,” Mr. Arzt said on Tuesday. Sure enough, Mr. Arzt said, after the pleasant opening, Mr. Brooks asked a series of serious questions, including how Mr. Koch felt about having a friend like Mr. Manes implicated in a widening saga of crookedness.

“Betrayed,” Mr. Koch told Mr. Brooks, according to Mr. Arzt.

Mr. Brooks, who died of lung cancer on Monday at age 86, was polite to the people he covered and collegial to colleagues and competitors alike. He did not mind filling in a new reporter from another station or a newspaper who arrived just before a news conference began.

He was heard on 1010 WINS from the days of open-reel tape to the days of digital recording, from 1962 until a month ago. “Before ‘You Give Us 22 Minutes, We’ll Give You The World’ became a household slogan, Stan was doing a two-minute newscast at the top of the hour,” Ben Mevorach, the station’s director of news and programming, wrote on its website.

WINS, 1010 on the AM dial, was then a Top 40 powerhouse with personalities like Murray Kaufman, known as Murray the K. But two years later, when he was told to prepare for a round-the-clock news operation, Mr. Brooks’s reaction was: “All news? What’s that?”

What it was was a format that made him a mainstay in New York news. Larry Seary, a former director of field operations for WNBC-TV who is president of the New York Press Club, remembered listening to WINS, and to Mr. Brooks, during the blackout of 1965.

“It was the only station I could hear on my little battery-operated transistor radio,” Mr. Seary said. “This was just a few years after the Cuban missile crisis. When you’re a kid and you’ve lived through that, you think something far worse could be happening, far more ominous. You didn’t know if the blackout was just in New York or the world. It was reassuring to listen to Stan and know that this is going to end, and it’s not as bad as I thought it was.”

The years went by, and Mr. Brooks stayed on the job long after other reporters his age had retired. But Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said on Monday that after Mr. Brooks had a heart operation several years ago, he had his press secretary dial Mr. Brooks’s cellphone. They expected to reach Mr. Brooks’s wife or one of his sons at the hospital, but the voice that answered was the voice they knew: “Hello, Stan Brooks, 1010 WINS.”

Mr. Brooks did not always cover news. Station officials were concerned that Mr. Brooks might not recognize stars like Reggie Jackson or Thurman Munson when they sent him to Yankee Stadium for the World Series in the late 1970s. They assigned Scott Herman, a desk assistant at the station who was a baseball fan, to go with him.

“He covered everything, and obviously, he’d cover the World Series,” said Mr. Herman, now the executive vice president of operations for CBS Radio, which owns WINS. “Walking the field with Stan, going through the clubhouse with Stan, that was my first experience, and then he introduced me to somebody as his colleague. I was this 20-year-old kid who’d been in the business for less than six months, and he was introducing me as his colleague.”

Fifteen years later, Mr. Herman became general manager of WINS and thus Mr. Brooks’s boss. He gave Mr. Brooks a new title, senior correspondent, and tried to give him a raise.

“He said to me, ‘I don’t want to make to make more than anybody else,’” Mr. Herman recalled. “I said, ‘You’re not like anybody else, you have the history.’ He said, ‘I don’t want it.’ I said, ‘I’m going to put it in your paycheck.’ He said, ‘I’m not going to cash the check.’ That was Stan. As special as everyone thought he was, he didn’t want to be treated special.”

Mr. Herman said that he later told that story to Mr. Brooks’s wife, Lynn, who died earlier in the year. “His wife said, ‘Don’t ever talk to Stan about money. You call me. I have no problem with paying Stan more money,’” Mr. Herman said.



Arctic Blast in Manhattan

Dear Diary:

The wind skims the metallic Hudson.
Riverine, it crests the West Side.
Ashore it rushes through concrete channels,
Freezing breath into angel hair.
Morning sunlight becomes shredded tinsel.
It hangs in the bone-chill air.

Read all recent entries and our updated submissions guidelines. Reach us via email diary@nytimes.com or follow @NYTMetro on Twitter using the hashtag #MetDiary.



New York Today: White Christmases Past

The magic of a New York City Christmas, 1966.Barton Silverman/The New York Times The magic of a New York City Christmas, 1966.

Good morning on this chilly Tuesday, Christmas Eve.

If you’re dreaming of a white Christmas, dream on.

Or you could just take a trip in our magical snow globe and visit the New York City of white Christmases past.

Depending on how you define it, there have been roughly half a dozen since 1883.

- 1902, 6.5 inches on Christmas Day: “There was a soft silence of the snow over everything, broken only by the church chimes, the tinkle of the sleigh bells, and the laughter and the shouting of the people in the streets,” The Times reported. “Among the merriest of those who went to the Park were the youngsters with their sleds. The snow plows were in use, and the drivers permitted the boys and their sisters to get ‘on behind.’”

- 1904, three inches: “The surface and some of the elevated car lines had troubles enough to vex any but a holiday crowd, but the Christmas passengers, many of whom carried gifts, were full of the spirit of the season, and the exasperation of blocks and delays was laughed away.”

- 1966, seven inches over 24 hours: “Attendance at eggnog parties and turkey dinners faltered. With the Belt Parkway in Brooklyn closed from 5 a.m. to 11:30 a.m., and other highways slippery and hazardous, many hostesses began receiving phone cancellations just as the last poinsettias and colored lights on the tree were being placed.”

- 2002, five inches: “’Yeah, snow â€" it’s perfect,’” said a man who moved to Manhattan from Miami six months before. ‘“I couldn’t have planned it any better. This is Christmas in New York, right? That’s what it’s all about.’”

Happy holiday!

Here’s what else is happening:

WEATHER

Decent for sleigh-flying. High clouds with a high of 39.

Clouding up with a chance of, yes, an evening flurry, but that’s about it, Rudolph.

Then colder â€" 19 overnight, 32 on Christmas Day.

Warmer on Thursday with a high of 42.

COMMUTE

Subways: Check latest status.

Rails: Check L.I.R.R., Metro-North or New Jersey Transit status.

Roads: Check traffic map or radio report on the 1s or the 8s.

Alternate-side parking is in effect today, suspended tomorrow, and returns Thursday and Friday.

DE BLASIO WATCH

From Javier C. Hernández of The Times:

- Bill de Blasio, sworn foe of Wall Street excess, named a Goldman Sachs executive deputy mayor for housing and economic development. “I don’t care about any stereotypes or assumptions,” Mr. de Blasio said. [New York Times]

- The mayor-elect has no public appearances the rest of the week.

- But he has some holiday homework: picking a schools chancellor. The search has stretched on for weeks, but Mr. de Blasio is likely to announce his choice next week.

COMING UP TODAY

- Mayor Bloomberg thanks volunteers at the annual lunch for the homeless at City Hall, a restaurant in TriBeCa. He attends midnight Mass at St. Patrick’s.

- Cardinal Dolan says Mass at Rikers Island at 11 a.m.

- Darlene Love sings “Christmas Baby (Please Come Home)” and rings the closing bell as the stock exchange closes early at 1 p.m.

- Caroling opportunities: the Washington Square arch at 5 p.m. Stuyvesant Square (Second Avenue and 16th Street) at 5 p.m. Gramercy Park at 6 p.m. [Free]

- For your listening pleasure, WKCR is in the midst of its 10-day all-Bach festival. 89.9 FM or listen online.

- For more events, see The New York Times Arts & Entertainment guide.

IN THE NEWS

- The city is settling hundreds of federal civil rights claims filed by people who were arrested during the 2004 Republican convention. [New York Times]

- Interfaith Medical Center in Brooklyn is not closing next month after all. Governor Cuomo threw it a lifeline. [Capital New York]

- The City Council’s Republican ranks, soon to be down to three, face a tough road. [New York Times]

- Macy’s has a black Santa, but it doesn’t don’t make him easy to find. [Animal New York]

- Scoreboard: Knicks snuff Magic, 103-98. Pacers lap Nets, 103-86. Rangers bag Maple Leafs in a shootout, 2-1. Islanders beat Red Wings, 3-0. Blackhawks over Devils, 5-2.

Joseph Burgess contributed reporting.

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