Trinity Lutheran Church Youth to Perform Von Trump Family Musical

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. By Paul Riss. November 24, 2003: Trinity Lutheran Church will perform its first musical parody performed by the youth of the church on Saturday December 13th at 7:30 pm.  Everyone should come see our production of The Von Trump Family Christmas a parody of the Von Trapp family in the Sound of Music.


The musical was originally written by Paul Riss in 1994 and performed by a Sunday school class he was teaching.  We are performing it to raise money for a scholarship fund in memory of Paul’s wife, Nancy.  Tickets are being sold in advance at $10 each.  Playbill ads are also being sold to local businesses and whoever else would like to buy an ad.  We recommend that you make sure you have a seat and buy your tickets early.  You may contact Lynn Fargo or Paul Riss regarding the purchase of tickets.  For playbill ads you may also contact Paul Riss at 310-4724.


 This musical has a wide appeal to all age groups.  It starts with Mr. Von Trump, who is a businessman and widower, and runs his house like a business.  Along comes a new nanny named Julie Andrews, to take care of the 8 children, ages 6 to 16.  While Mr. Von Trump leaves on a business trip, Julie teaches the children many new songs and she takes the children to Trinity Lutheran Church, where they meet Pastor Hurst and Karen Turo  (who play themselves). 


 


 Naturally, the Von Trump family immediately takes a liking to the church, and they have to figure out a way to convince their father to go to church too.  They try to convince him to go to Trinity by asking him to attend a Saturday evening social function, where they plan to sing “So Long, Farewell.”  But Mr. Von Trump is too busy, and too many other problems have developed with the arrival of Julie Andrews. 


 


To make matters worse, his oldest daughter is off singing “I am 16 Going on 17” with an unapproved boy.  She later runs away.   As a single parent, he has to reach deep inside and decide what to do about his missing daughter.  Coincidently, he stumbles upon the parable of the lost sheep.  All these things are happening, as the Christmas season is upon them.


 


Cast of Characters


 


 


Mr. Von Trump….Paul Riss


Joe….Michael Smayda


Sonia Von Trump…  Sharon Binford


Rita Von Trump…Andrea Busch


Stephanie Von Trump…Helen Hess


Rose Von Trump…Becky Riss


Michael Von Trump…Josh Hurst


Julie Andrews…Debra Hess


Bobbie Von Trump…Mariana Hess


Helen Von Trump…Hanna Hurst


Becky Von Trump…Lauren Werner


Cousin Rebecca…Kirsten Smayda


Cousin Cameron….Keith Werner


Rev. William Hurst… Himself


Church member I….Karen Turo


Jack ….Jake Riss


Flash….Peter Turo


Stacey…Maggie Roache


Miss Teenage America….Katherine Smayda


Church Member II….Vicky Struss


 


 


Orchestra


 


Keyboards…….Mary Jan Almes


Trombone…..John Hollahane


Trumpet……Zack Glass


Tuba….Robert Hollahan


Keyboards….June Riss


Bell Choir….Vicky Struss


Sax…..Jeff Silver


Trombone…..Devon Williams


Clarinet, Sax….Kim Wood


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


 


Mary Jane Almes


Zack Glass


John Hollahan


Robert Hollahan


June Riss


Vicky Struss


Jeff Silver


Devon Williams


Kim Wood


 



 


 

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Pom Pom Playoffs! Cheerleader Championships Dec. 1,2,3, at The Center.

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. From Westchester County Department of Recreation & Parks, November 24: More than 700 cheerleaders representing high school and middle school squads from Westchester, Putnam, Rockland, Nassau and Bronx counties will show off their enthusiasm with jumps and shouts during the 55th Annual Westchester County Regional Cheerleading Invitational on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, December 1, 2 and 3, at the Westchester County Center in White Plains.

Middle school and junior varsity competition will begin at 4 p.m. and varsity will begin at 7 p.m. each day; there will be no middle school/junior varsity competition on Wednesday.


            Squads will be judged on the execution of their cheers, precision of their jumps, enthusiasm, group techniques and overall effect. Trophies will be awarded for first through fifth place finishes for varsity squads and first through third place for junior varsity.


            The “Grand Champions” trophy competition, in which the first-place varsity squads from each day face off against one another, will take place on Wednesday after the varsity competition.


The United States Marine Corps Recruiting Service Color Guard, the Marine Air Group-49 Color Guard and the Young Marines of Westchester will present the colors for the opening ceremony each evening.


            To add to the excitement, more than $19,000 in scholarships will be awarded, based on candidates’ academic average, a written essay, school and community involvement, as well as cheerleading ability.


            At the conclusion of the competition, both varsity and junior varsity squads will be eligible for the Team Spirit Award sponsored by the Westchester County Police Benevolent Association.

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Foul “Odor Bank” Envelopes Ridgeway-Beverly Road area Near Greenway

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WPCNR WHITE PLAINS PATROL. November 22, 2003: An insinuating chemical stench enveloped the low slung valley area along The Greenway in White Plains Saturday evening. The odor, residents say originates from the city dump adjacent Gedney Field,and the Greenway in particular and is a steady “obnoxious neighbor.” Saturday evening it was particularly thick even when driving through the area in a motor vehicle with the windows rolled up about 10 P.M. 


Rather than being a pristine park, residents say, the Greenway consists of a bit of topsoil over ground that is contaminated, and many believe is toxic. Saturday night’s effluent damp air mass was rude evidence that the stench bank has gotten worse, considering that the temperature was 42 degrees, and no heat wave was involved.

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City Center’s First Restaurant Debuts Dec 9. It’s Applebee’s! Movies Dec. 12!

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WPCNR MAIN STREET JOURNAL. From Apple-Metro Communications. November 21, 2003: Apple-Metro, Inc., the New York area franchisee of Applebee’s Neighborhood Grill & Bar, the country’s most popular restaurant chain, will open White Plains City Center’s first restaurant on Tuesday, December 9th .


 


The 6,600 square-foot, 200-plus seat restaurant will be the first of three restaurants at City Center at White Plains.  A special neighborhood VIP reception and official ribbon-cutting ceremony with local dignitaries is scheduled to take place the following week.  “We are so excited to be the very first restaurant at City Center, and we look forward to continuing our policy of exceeding customers’ expectations,” said Zane Tankel, CEO of Apple-Metro.  “In doing so, I’m confident that this will be one of our most successful locations.”


 


Two days later, National Amusements will hold their Grand Opening Party December 11, with movies open to the public the following day, December 12, according to City Hall. The Last Samurai is one of the blockbusters being screened.


Apple-Metro, Inc. has experienced tremendous growth since its inception in 1994, and expects to reach $100 million in sales by the end of this year.  With this latest addition, the company will operate 25 restaurants in the New York metropolitan area.  In addition to the new White Plains restaurant, Apple-Metro’s suburban Applebee’s locations include Cortlandt, Greenburgh, Hawthorne, Mamaroneck, Mount Kisco, New Rochelle, and Yonkers in Westchester, as well as Airmont in Rockland County.


 


Apple-Metro, Inc. also owns and operates its own concept, Zanaro’s Italian Restaurant, at New Roc City in New Rochelle, and will open its flagship Zanaro’s at City Center in early 2004.    Located in a former bank building, the new Zanaro’s will maintain the existing landmark architecture in its original form, creating a casually elegant setting, reminiscent of an Old Italian villa.  The restaurant will offer 250 seats, in various rooms for private parties, including a special vault room for intimate gatherings and dinner parties.


 


Apple-Metro, Inc. enjoys exclusive franchise rights in the Bronx, Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, and Westchester and Rockland counties.  Apple-Metro proudly works to provide each guest with exemplary service, delicious food, and a fun and friendly atmosphere.


 

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Westco adds Frosty the Snowman Performance Dec. 13.

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WESTCO ADDS PERFORMANCE FOR HOLIDAY SHOW

Westco Productions announces that an additional performance of its annual holiday gala “Frosty The Snowman” at the Westchester Broadway Theatre has been scheduled for December 13th at 9:00 am. All other performances on December 6 and 13 are sold out. The production is recommended for children ages 2-8. To obtain tickets call the Westchester Broadway Theatre at 914-592-2222.

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King Komments: Remember the Greenway.

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King Komments. By White Plains Councilman William King. November 21, 2003: I went over to take a look at the as-yet fixed up part of the Greenway 2 weekends ago.  I dragged out a few tires and left them by Sam’s parking lot but I didn’t go crazy picking up litter or anything.  It wasn’t like there was that much junk lying around.  Besides, what’s the point?  If there isn’t a trail cut through like there was south of Gedney Way more than 6 years ago, nobody is going to use the old railroad right-of-way between Gedney Way up to behind the Dunkin Donuts
parking lot.


Sure it got swampy as I walked toward Stratford because the water has nowhere to drain.  Sure there was a little ‘encroachment’ by some of the adjoining neighbors into the city-owned right-of-way but, Big Deal.


They are not hurting anything and it’s nothing like the trash heap in the Bronx River Parkway Reservation next to some of the neighbors on Jones Place off of Chatterton Parkway.  Even with some of the neighbors extending their backyard a little, there is still plenty of room for trails (I would still like there to be an asphalt path parallel to a
wood chip path the whole length – can’t be that expensive).


Bud (Nicoletti) would have to install some kind of drainage system in there and it would really help to build a relatively inexpensive tunnel underneath Stratford so the trail would be continuous and grade-separated (so kids
wouldn’t have to cross the road).  The County’s  North County Trailway has a few tunnels for bicycles and pedestrians.  This would allow both drainage and a continuous, grade-separated pedestrian/bike right-of-way from Dunkin Donuts to Ridgeway (Ridgeway would need a bridge again, like when the railroad ran, which, while nice, would probably be expensive).



The pathway should use the existing right-of-way under the Gedney Way Bridge and then hook up with the existing pathway.  

This whole thing could have/should have been done 4 years ago.  What’s the big deal?
 


Councilman William King

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Great Theatre in White Plains: Ms. Harper Touches Truths, Hearts, History,Shines

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WPCNR STAGE DOOR. By John F. Bailey,  12th Row Centre. November 20, 2003:  Valerie Harper showed White Plains what “being in the theatre” is all about at the White Plains Performing Arts Center Thursday evening. The intimate Little Ingenue On City Place gave about 125 midweek theatre appreciators, young and old,  a day with the famous author, Pearl S. Buck at Ms. Buck’s Vermont home shortly before her death.



AWAITING VALERIE HARPER, Pearl Buck’s Study in Vermont just before the first dramatic performance ever at the White Plains Performing Arts Center began. Photo by WPCNR StageCam





 


 


This first-ever dramatic production at the WPPAC shows what theatre can be all about. Ms. Harper’s show, All Under Heaven  takes you through the emotions and the people of Ms. Buck’s life.  The audience meets a Valerie Harper who transforms herself into Pearl Buck’s Southern Belle mother, a Chinese servant, the author Sinclair Lewis, her former husband, Dick Walsh, Senator Joseph McCarthy, and The Dowager Empress (complete with believable “Dragon Lady” accent).


 


Ms. Harper treats Mr. and Mrs. White Plains to a view of what a real actress is all about, too. The only player — she flawlessly blends a complex and emotional script into changes of scenes and character using a cleverly segued script, using changes of lighting, and realistically mixed sound effects to whisk us around the world in her mind.


 


 


 


She takes us, believably, in this grand illusion from a rural Pennsylvania writer’s study to Nanking under siege, in a literal “flash” of battle; (this scene is perfectly staged, suggesting through sound the panic of a city under siege), from a living room in a school for the retarded (where haunting music says to the audience for Ms. Harper what her voice cannot bear to speak)  to the spotlight of a Senate hearing, where Ms. Harper does a chilling “Senator Joseph McCarthy.”


 


The old format of talking to the audience is pulled off by Ms. Harper effortlessly. While many shows of this nature fail due to talkiness,  this one succeeds on the strength of the staging, her delivery and her believability. She becomes the “interesting woman” Pearl Buck was. She treats the audience as her “guests.” Her Pearl Buck is so fascinating, we pull up a chair and decide to stay awhile.


 


We follow Ms. Buck’s reminisces as she chats with us. Ms. Harper turns Ms. Buck into a combination of a real life Katherine Hepburn/Claudette Colbert character who was not playing a part, but who actually lived her life with principles, courage, creativity, dedication to her talent.


 


Thanks to Ms. Harper’s onstage memoir,  Ms. Buck, perhaps the first intellectual female role model of the 20th Century, is introduced as a role model whose struggles, memories, and strong opinions impressed old and young alike in the audience. Young people I spoke with after Act One, had the look of discovery on their faces, not knowing quite what to make of theatre like this, that makes you think and reaches in and touches you.


 


The show’s script blends extensive material from an unpublished cultural biography, written by Peter Conn. Ms. Harper discovered this manuscript in galley form at Ms. Buck’s home in Pennsylvania when she followed WPPAC’s Tony Stimac’s suggestion to build a show around Ms. Buck’s life, and traveled out to meet Ms. Buck’s daughter. Ms. Harper has used her original material well.


 


Ms. Harper convincingly portrays the aging Ms. Buck, whom I must admit reminded me very much of my mother, still carrying on her opinions about things which she will not change in that voice that all we children know our mothers have.


 


Ms. Harper is living through a typical Pear Buck writer’s day as the play opens, in lighting depicting a Chinese dawn.  She is expecting a visa to go back to China in the 70s. She talks to a Canadian Chinese Consulate, upbraids him for a delay, humorously terrorizes her housekeeper, as she acts frustrated over a portion of a book she is writing.


 


In this portion of the play we get an insight into the writer’s craft, and the loneliness and compelling nature of the creative life. Many indiosyncracies, this writer can tell you are very real. Ms. Harper’s whimsical delivery of the line when she finds an important list in a drawer, mutters, “How many times have I told her not to put things in drawers?” (Real Writers like everything stored on top of their desks.)


 


As the next lines in her novel do not come to her, she remembers her mother and how her marriage was to a man not suited for her, and that leads to the memory of her mother supervising the arrival of an organ from the states. (Ms. Harper’s “organ-syncing” is very theatrical). That triggers another memory, her old Chinese nanny, whom we immediately meet, and we first see Ms. Harper transform to nail the first emotional wallop of the evening in the nanny’s story of how she was taken in by her mother.


 


The stories Ms. Buck’s characters tell are not for the faint of heart because they are real and Ms. Harper delivers these powerfully, sometimes amusing, but always “on the money” emotionally.


 


The most moving part of the play is Ms. Harper’s portrayal of Ms. Buck’s first learning of the affliction of her daughter in a doctor’s office. When this child is revisited again later in Ms. Buck’s life, Ms. Harper’s interaction with her imaginary child will bring tears and love at the same time to any parent’s eyes. Ms. Harper  touches the parent in you. These two scenes are worth seeing, my friends, because Ms. Harper and her playwright collobaroter have gotten a parent’s love and feelings towards a damaged child, absolutely, achingly right.


 


A group of young people from local high schools attended the show, and they saw a portfolio of what being a great actress is all about, too: not being yourself playing a part, but delivering the raw emotional truth in a few measuredly spoken, body language compatible moments. Ms. Harper did this for every character she played throughout the evening.


 


Act One ends with a tense scene at the siege of Nanking. The blood red defusion of light on the cyclorama used to create this scene is splendidly mixed  with the sounds of siege to conjure the winds of war.


 


The dialogue Ms. Harper delivers depicting Ms. Buck’s  waiting with her sister’s children as Mao-Tse-Tung’s soldiers search house-to-house and the actions she contemplates is ripped right out of today’s Baghdad.


 


In a few short minutes the scene delivers more, says more, and tells more about gut reaction and fear and inspires it in the audience with Ms. Harper’s acting than the first 30 minutes of Private Ryan. As the Act fades out, it is so cleverly abruptly ended, audiences do not know if the play is over or not, it is that effective. You have to see how Ms. Harper is so believable in this sequence, the audience “sees” her sister and the two children in the scene with her.


 


Act Two, takes Ms. Buck through her Pulitzer Prize winning, her accepting the prize, her testimony in front of Senator McCarthy’s committee, and explores the viciousness of critics, and her efforts to found an adoption agency for Chinese-American orphans in China, an agency still operating today. It also contains the touching scene with her older, ill child I referred to earlier.


 


All Under Heaven has not been accurately portrayed in previous reviews as to the kind of play it is. This is not a vanity show in any sense. It is a not a comedy, but rather it is a play about the “human comedy.” The way, as this writer recalls the play being described by previous reviewers, is as a showcase for Ms. Harper and for Valerie Harper fans. That is an insult to Ms. Harper’s considerable effort and talent she delivers in this show.


 


Not just Valerie Harper fans should go to see All Under Heaven. If you love strong drama, the magic illusionability of theatre, the uplift of feeling and acting better after seeing a play, to discover more about ourselves than we did before we entered the theatre, you should see this play. Isn’t that what a “performing arts center” is supposed to do? Admirably, All Under Heaven fulfills Tony Stimac’s words of Gala Night, “theatre is a place where we share emotional truths.” The audience did with Valerie Harper tonight.


 


For one night, Ms. Harper delivers the truths Pearl Buck, a real life “Lady of Liberty,”  fought for and holds them out to the audience like torches lighting up the night, with the torch of her talent.


 


As Pearl Buck says through her alter ego, Ms. Harper, in act II, about her book All Under Heaven that she is writing in the play, a message is left for those who love theatre in White Plains: 


 


“Yes, the title is incomplete. It doesn’t say “are one.” Not yet. I leave it incomplete because it is the way it is. I am only a solitary source sitting lonely at a desk. I can but give you this book. It is for you to complete the title.” (c)


 


(c) 2003, All Under Heaven. Used with permission.


 



FIRST HOT TICKET: You can enjoy the torchlight performance of Ms. Harper Friday and Saturday evenings at 8 PM, and Sunday at 2 PM at the White Plains Performing Arts Center. Tickets may be ordered by telephone at 1-888-977-2250, and picked up at the box office just before the performance. Photo by WPCNR StageCam


 



AFTER TWO OVATIONS, Ms Harper spoke to White Plains and Stepinac High School students about the theatre, how the play was written, how she prepared for the part, and shared some “inside theatre stuff” about the start of her career, the preparation of All Under Heaven and she acted the age we would all like to be: forever young and enthusiastic about her work, her career, her theatre. She is a star in all that word means, and all the class of the great stars. Photo by WPCNR StageCam.


 



TAKING QUESTIONS FROM LOCAL INGENUES, a trim, svelte, considerably younger than the character she plays (Pearl Buck) Valerie Harper  let local teens in attendance in on secrets of the theatre (hard work, doing everything you can, because you never know when you’ll get seen), and spoke enthusiastically for 45 minutes after doing a 2-hour solo performance. Here she is doing her Tallulah Bankhead role she was doing in a Little Theatre production which landed her her first Broadway acting role. Photo by WPCNR StageCam.



ONE CLASSY LADY: Valerie Harper saying goodnight, as Tony Stimac closes the talkback with the students. Photo by WPCNR StageCam.


 


This first dramatic production was a very good first serious entertainment to be staged by the WPPAC. The student talkback session with Ms. Harper was a wonderful thing for Ms. Harper to do, and we hope to see more of that in future productions.


 


The theatre is being hurt by the National Amusements Theatres not opening on schedule. A steady stream of  movie goers would easily have meant more opportunity to showcase future WPPAC shows and get the word out to possible patrons. 


 


The National Amusements Theatres insisted on controlling the concessions for the WPPAC, and pocketing 80% of the revenues, but since the 15 movie theatres are not open, there are not concessions being sold yet at WPPAC. Hopefully, National Amusements will set up concessions within the theatre lobby and not force theatre goers to go into the theatre lounges.


 


The entrance to the White Plains Performing Arts Center leading from the parking garage across the City Place Bridge should have a carpet, and not the concrete slab on the walkway that now exists. It would lead immeasurably to the grandness of the WPPAC. I like that Mr. Stimac and Mr. Rosentock are available to greet and talk with theatre-goers personally. The Theatre still needs many things.


 


However they need point-of-purchase promotion dearly, right now. They should not be constrained by National Amusements in their ability to promote the theatre’s identity and upcoming attractions in its little space, by this I mean some signs on the street level plugging the evening’s show; some stand up signs in the lower lobbies promoting coming events, and please some signs in Mr. Cappelli’s garage saying “Theatre Parking–5th Level.”


 


There should be three brightly lighted, tasteful, permanent marquee displays on three sides of the City Center announcing the presence of the theatre at City Center, reading: White Plains Performing Arts Center: Valerie Harper in All Under Heaven Tonight Through Sunday. Dec 6: Louis Armstrong Lives in Ambassador Satch. TIX 1-888-977-2250.” The theatre needs it for walk-in traffic, impulse-buying, and genuine cache. Any restrictions on such signage should be swept aside because the theatre needs it.  (Calling Susan Habel).


 


WPPAC does not have programs with advertising yet, because it is a fledgling operation. Kinkos obviously has been getting a lot of business. The All Under Heaven program contained no local advertising (of restaurants, post theatre specials, or whatever), which should come in time, and it cannot be too soon. Any restauranteur should call the theatre today and offer to print future programs and help the management with this important piece of theatre memorabilia. They do not know everyone in town yet, but I suspect they will soon. The importance of a program in obvious: it sets the scene, you know whether there is an intermission, or not, and many of the audience were confused at the end of Act I, not knowing if the show was over.  


 


In conclusion, the Little Ingenue on City Place performed well in her acting debut. Ms. Harper seemed to be genuinely delighted with audience reaction at the conclusion of her show. The theatre naturally bonds the audience to the action on stage, because of the intimacy of the venue.The theatre creates a focusing environment that rivets attention on the big stage, and the views are just terrific from anywhere in the house. Instead of being on the edge of a big saucer looking at a wee bit of action as in some Broadway house, and certain other performing arts centers in the area, the viewer is on the “edge of the play” fully involved. You forget you are seeing a great show in White Plains.


 


I took All Under Heaven with me when I left the theatre last night. You will too.

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Adam In Albany: Supports Identity Theft Receipt Info Law

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WPCNR’S ADAM IN ALBANY. By Assemblyman Adam T. Bradley of the 89th. November 20, 2003: According to the Federal Trade Commission, in the past five years over 27 million Americans have become victims of identity theft. Last year, close to 10 million identity theft victims paid $5 billion in out-of-pocket expenses. Businesses and financial institutions were confronted with $48 billion in expenses. With the number of Americans facing this violation increasing every year, it is essential that we do more to protect people from the devastation of this crime.


 


That’s why I supported a new law which requires merchants to remove expiration dates of debit and credit cards from electronically created printed receipts (Ch. 499 of 2003). It also requires that no more than the last five digits of the account number appear on the receipt. The simple change will make receipts more secure and protect consumers.


 


Consumers have increasingly used debit and credit cards to make purchases. These transactions are convenient, but the receipts contain confidential personal information which is easily lost or discarded. This makes it easy for thieves to obtain the information and steal merchandise with someone else’s credit card, and to steal people’s identities.  


 


All new credit and debit-card machines must comply with the new law if they are placed into service on or after January 1, 2004. Machines in use before then have a January 1, 2007 deadline to comply. Violators face a $4,500 penalty.


 


This is just one of many ways of protecting consumers from identity theft. We must do everything possible to protect debit and credit card users from people who are lurking around for a chance to take our hard earned money. 

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Captain Evan McGuire Named New York State Scholar Athlete of the Year

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WPCNR PRESS BOX. From White Plains Football Coach Mark Santa-Donato. November 20, 2003: Evan McGuire – a WPHS Senior and Captain of the White Plains HS Football Team has been selected as the New York State AA Football Scholar-Athlete of The Year along with one other player from New York.  He will be honored at the State Finals in Syracuse this weekend.   He has started on Varsity as TE and LB for 4 years and is an All-Section and All-League player.  He has applied to Harvard, Yale, Holy Cross, Penn, Cornell, & Princeton.  


EVAN MCGUIRE, New York State Football Scholar  Athlete of the Year 2003. Evan is shown with Leonard Devere (left) after last year’s Riddell Bowl in which Evan caught several key 3rd down passes. Archive Photo by WPCNR Sports

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GOTCHA! County Catches 63 Unlicensed Contractors.

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WPCNR COUNTY CLARION-LEDGER. From Westchester County Department of Communications.November 20, 2003:  County Executive Andy Spano today announced that the latest sting by the Department of Consumer Protection has caught 63 unlicensed home improvement contractors operating in the county.


            Westchester’s law requires that home improvement contractors have a county license,” said Spano. “We are again cracking down on those home improvement contractors who are violating our law.”


The sting took place over the last month, with inspectors from the department going into neighborhoods to see if the trucks of contractors properly displayed a bumper sticker issued by the department that stated that the person was licensed and included an expiration date. Inspectors checked 204 contractors and found 63 of those not licensed.


 


“I’m happy to say that most home improvement contractors who were spotted were working with a license. Our licensing procedure protects both the public and the contractors,” Spano said. 


            Contractors who operate in Westchester without a license must apply for a license and  can be fined up to $1,000. All of those found without licenses have been ticketed, with hearings scheduled for December. 


Elaine Price, director of Consumer Protection, said, “The licensing law protects consumers from ‘fly-by-nights’ who may take their money and run, and helps consumers by ensuring licensed contractors carry proper insurance. Those contractors who are licensed have certain rights under state and local law that unlicensed contractors do not.”

Consumer tips as well as information about licensing  can be found on  the Consumer Protection website:  www.westchestergov.com/consumer , or by calling 995-2211. A full list of the approximately 5, 600 licensed contractors is also available on this website.                                                        

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