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Denise Foley

News, People

Pitch In!

Baseball season is just around the corner. Before you trade in that old glove, think about donating it so children in the US and around the world who can’t afford equipment can take their bases in style.

The McCollum Insurance Agency, 4109 Main Street, in the Manayunk section of Philadelphia, is collecting new and gently used youth baseball/softball gloves and new baseballs and softballs for Pitch In for Baseball (PIB), a nonprofit organization based in Harleysville founded by David Rhode, a businessman and avid sports coach. Some well known local folks serve on its board, among them Bill Piszek, vice president of the Copernicus Society founded by his late father, Ed Piszek, founder of Mrs. Paul’s Foods, and Bradley Korman, co-president of Korman Communities, Inc.

This past year, Pitch in for Baseball teamed with major league baseball to distribute equipment to more than 175 inner city baseball leagues in the US. PIB has sent gear to an orphanage in the Dominican Republic, a youth organization in Slovenia, and, thanks to a group of US soldiers in Iraq, to a new baseball team in Bagdad. In Philly, the group was able to help the Nelson Playground to increase the number of participants in its ball programs from 60 to 300 because of the donated equipment.

McCollum came across PIB while looking for an organization that needed sports equipment. “From day one when I started my business, I wanted to do something to help out the community,” he says. “There are drives for food and for clothing, and I wanted to try something different. And there they were on Google.”

Ideally, McCollum says, he’d love the equipment he collects to go to kids in Philly. “I really wanted to help out locally,” he says. And he was happy to see that the city’s parks department is a regular recipient of PIB’s largesse.

McCollum will be collecting baseball gear through March 15 at his Manayunk office. You can contact him at b.mccollum@verizon.net or 215-508-9000.

News

Learn How You Can Help Haiti

Roosevelt and Deirdre Maitre. Photo by Joy Moody.

Roosevelt and Deirdre Maitre. Photo by Joy Moody.

Philadelphia filmmaker Deirdre (Dede) Maitre, the granddaughter of Irish immigrants, will screen clips from the documentary work she has done over the years in Haiti on Friday night, January 29, at the Irish Center, 6815 Emlen Street, in the Mt. Airy section of Phladelphia.

Representatives from various Haitian aid groups will also be there to answer questions about the earthquake that has left an estimate 200,000 people dead and millions more homeless and without food, water, and medical care.

Maitre, who received her MFA from Temple University in 2005, has been the recipient of many grants and awards, including the Ben Lazaroff Writing Scholarship, a Philadelphia Independent Film and Video Association Subsidy Grant, and a Thesis project Completion Grant from the University Fellowship Committee of the Graduate Board of Temple University. Her husband, Roosevelt, was born in Port-au-Prince, Haiti.

She runs her own company, Maytree Multimedia, which provides digital video services to small organizations and businesses, and she freelances on independent film projects. Her own current project is “Is God Sleeping?”—a short documentary about a young Haitian painter struggling as an illegal immigrant in the United States. She recently completed a photoessay, Permission, which features personal portraits of the residents of Saint Marie, Port-au-Prince, Haiti. You can see some of her work on her website.

Irish charities, particularly Concern Worldwide, were on the ground in Haiti when the quake struck. Concern, founded in Ireland in 1968, has had a team in three areas of Haiti–La Gonave Central Plateau, and Port-au-Prince–since Hurricane Gordon hit the islands in 1994. The Irish American nonprofit, GOAL, USA, founded in Dublin in 1977, is also there. You can donate to Concern at www.concernUSA.org/HaitiAppeal and to Goal USA at www.goalusa.org.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

Remember last week when I told you to book early for the Blackthorn fundraiser for the Black Jack Kehoe AOH Division 4 in Springfield on Saturday? Remember how I said “sold out” was their middle name? Well, the event is sold out. No tickets will be available at the door because they can’t shoehorn in even one more person. Next time, listen to me.

There may still be time to book for Enter the Haggis at World Café Live on Saturday night. This Toronto-based band delights fans with its novel take on Celtic rhythms, matching it with rock, pop, and even funk.

On Wednesday, Kilkenny-born contemporary folksinger and songwriter Enda Keegan is on stage at Slainte at 30th and Market streets. Keegan is a recent Philly transplant who still performs mainly in New York City but is spreading his wings here. Next month he’ll be opening for John Byrne (late of Patrick’s Head) at Byrne’s CD release party at World Café Live.

Like a little Irish music with your gambling? Then head up to the Sands Casino in Bethlehem. Amadaun, a group that blends rock, bluegrass, and folk-rock with traditional Celtic sounds, is playing this week at the St. James Pub.

On Friday, January 29, at 7 PM, there will be an information session on the disaster in Haiti featuring filmmaker Dede Maitre (granddaughter of Irish immigrants) who will screen clips from the documentary work she has done over the years with various charities in Haiti. Representatives from Haitian aid organizations and members of the local Haitian community will be there.

Following the meeting, stay for the January Rambling House entertainment evening, featuring music by The Malones and whoever else wants to get up and do their party piece. There’s a bar there for the shy, free refreshments, prizes, and it all costs only $5. You can’t even see a movie for that little.

Music

A Cinderella Story

If his mother hadn’t been visiting from Ireland and sitting right there right next to me, sipping tea at Starbucks in Chestnut Hill, I’m not sure I would have believed Enda Keegan’s Cinderella story.

“Oh it’s true,” Mavis Keegan assured me.

And it starts like this: Once upon a time, a young high school dropout who picked cabbage on a farm during the day and played music in bars at night was asked by his mother’s employers to come to their home and perform for their American guests. “My mother was a chef at Castleton House, a private house in Kilkenny, where I worked as a waiter sometimes from the time I was 12 or 13,” explains Keegan, a contemporary folksinger and songwriter who recently moved from New York to Philadelphia. Mavis nods.

He was 17 at the time. The guests, James Vankennen and his wife, Gloria Ozbourne, were in their 70s. Everyone was having a brilliant time when Vankennen suddenly asked the young man if he’d like to go to college in the States. “I said ‘sure, send me a ticket,’” recalls Keegan with a grin. He’d thought it was just an offhand comment, made in the cheer of the moment.

But the next morning, Vankennen reiterated the offer. Keegan would be the second total stranger that the Vankennens would send to college. But there was a hitch. Keegan hadn’t finished high school—to the consternation of his parents—so he assumed no college would have him. A few months passed, then 10 days after Christmas, Keegan got a letter from the Shenandoah Conservatory of Music in Virginia. He was to report to classes the following Monday.

“So I was literally working on a farm picking cabbages on a Thursday and going to college on Monday,” says Keegan. “It changed my life overnight.” Today, Keegan, who performs regularly in New York, is working on a second CD to follow his first, The Bridge, a polished mix of contemporary folk-rock tunes he composed and traditional tunes including “The Water is Wide” and “Mary and the Soldier.” He moved to Philadelphia in November so his wife, Anitra, didn’t have to commute so far to her job—she’s a dancer with BalletX which performs at the Wilma Theater in Center City.

Keegan’s life had started to change when he was 10. His father, Peter, a fine baritone singer, bought him a guitar and the young Enda, the youngest of six children, taught himself to play. By the time he reached his teens, he was playing regularly in pubs and performing with the Carrick on Suir Operatic Society. But school. . .well, that was another matter.

His mother takes over the telling of that story. “I blame the Christian Brothers,” she tells me. And no, it’s not what you think. “They wouldn’t put him in the music class,” she says. “I think he would have studied everything else if he had been allowed to take music. They had a talent show for the students and guess who won it?” She nods toward her son, who appears a little alarmed at what she might say next. “He won 20 pounds, but I went back to the brother and told him to keep it. Why would they give him money for his music when they wouldn’t allow him in the class?”

“You did that?” asks Enda, clearly surprised.

“I did,” she says with a nod.

It all worked out in the end, with the help of Keegan’s fairy godparents. Of course, there were some detours. His first job out of college, where he earned a bachelor of fine arts and studied musical theater, was as a Christmas elf at Macy’s in New York City. He followed that with a stint as a “spray boy”—cologne terrorist, if you will—for Ralph Lauren. Then he worked for BMG Records in the department “on those annoying ads, ‘buy one CD, get 700 free’,” he says. (The young woman trying to work at the next table at Starbucks is shaking her head. “I’m never going to get anything done because you’re making me laugh,” she tells him.)

Eventually, he became lead singer of a group called SurreyLane, which toured the US, had a top 100 hit on the adult contemporary charts and got airplay for a 9/11 tribute song, “Love Must Grow.” In 2005, Keegan left the group to go solo. “If you’re going to be a performer, and it’s not always easy, you gotta love it, and I wasn’t loving it,” he explains.
He’s still commuting to New York to perform several nights a week at three different venues. A couple of years ago, he was hired by “American Idol” to play during the coast-to-coast audition tour during which they winnow out the thousands of hopefuls not talented or terrible enough to make the cut. Last year, he opened for Finbar Furey at O’Hurley’s in New York and produced a benefit for the NYPD Widows and Children fund featuring the Bagatelles, the Irish band headed by Liam Reilly that influenced Keegan and that other Irish singer, Bono, and whose tunes, like “Summer in Dublin” and “Second Violin,” fill the play lists of most Irish groups even 30 years after they debuted.

Keegan would like to become that established in his new city too. “I love the challenge of taking it on,” he says.

He’s gotten some help from John Byrne, a Dublin native and former helmsman of the popular local Celtic-folk group, Patrick’s Head, with whom he performed at Fergie’s Pub in the city. He’ll be fronting when Byrne, now lead singer for the John Byrne Group, holds his CD release party at World Café Live next month. “John’s an extremely talented musician and he’s been very good to me,” says Keegan. In fact, he owes next Wednesday’s gig at Slainte at 30th and Market to Byrne, who anchors the session there.

Keegan’s also working on his second CD with LA music producer Peter Stengaard, who has produced and worked with artists as varied as Ashanti, Billy Ray Cyrus, Peabo Bryson, and Joss Stone as well as songwriters Diane Warren and Carol Bayer Sager. About Keegan, Stengaard says, “Enda is a rare talent, one of those unpolished diamonds you quickly realize you need not polish because it’s already shining.”

You can hear how he shines at his website. And you can see him in person on Wednesday, starting at 9 PM, at Slainte, at 30th and Market, across the street from 30th Street Station.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How To Be Irish in Philly This Week

Some fine Celtic doings this weekend. First off, Paddy’s Well headlines AOH Div. 87’s annual Beef and Beer Night at that Irish playground, Finnigan’s Wake, at Third and Spring Garden Streets on Saturday afternoon. You get to kill many birds with one stone here: Have a good time, listen to a great band, support AOH charities as well as Mike Driscoll, owner of Finnigan’s and a generous supporter of all things Philly and Irish.

Also on Saturday, three remarkable musicians will converge on Coatesville from Baltimore to present an evening of virtuoso traditional music: singer-guitarist Pat Egan, his wife, flutist Laura Byrne, and accordian player Bill McComiskey. You get to do a good deed here too—support the Coatesville Traditional Irish Music Series, whose founder, Frank Dalton, has been bringing the best in traditional music to a beautiful venue (the Coatesville Cultural Society) for many years. It only costs $15, there are no bad seats, the acoustics are great, and you can even have a light supper or dessert at the snack bar.

On Thurday, Con Murphy’s Pub on the Parkway in Center City is featuring County Tyrone’s Raymond Coleman, and acoustic performer with an eclectic play list (Shane McGowan to David Gray). You can use the opportunity to scout out Con Murphy’s Pub for your post-St. Paddy’s Day tall one. Or check out how much the parade you can see from your barstool. Whatever.

Next weekend looks like a big one too: Enter the Haggis, the sensational Toronto-based band, will be at World Café Live on Saturday. Their concerts are always sold out at Sellersville, so call now for tickets.

And Blackthorn will be playing a benefit next Saturday for the AOH Black Jack Kehoe Division at the Knights of Columbus Hall in Springfield. If Blackthorn had a middle name it would be “sold out,” so get there early while there’s still dancing room.

Just a couple of reminders: The Sunday WTMR radio shows are running out of dough, so if you can send a donation their way, it would be a good thing. And if you haven’t already done so, fill out the Irish Immigration Center’s Irish Community Survey. We thank you.

News

What’s The Immigration Bill All About?

By Stephen M. Dunne, Esq.

On December 15, 2009, Congressman Luis V. Gutierrez (D-IL) introduced legislation (HR 4321) to reform our immigration laws. To date, the bill has 92 co-sponsors, all of them Democrats.

The Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America’s Security and Prosperity Act of 2009 (CIR ASAP) represents an important step in getting Congress to repair our broken immigration system.

The CIR ASAP bill is the first comprehensive immigration reform bill that aims to rectify some of the egregious immigration practices set in place since 1996 while simultaneously establishing a 21st century approach to protect and secure our nation’s borders.

Below is a thumbnail sketch of the contents of the bill:

Border Security: The bill creates a Southern Border Security Task Force that is composed of federal, state, and local law enforcement officers with oversight and accountability provided by the Department of Homeland Security. The enforcement provision of the bill ensures that the Customs and Border Protection have sufficient assets such as helicopters, power boats, motor vehicles and other advanced aerial surveillance equipment to properly secure the U.S. – Mexico border.

Enforcement: The bill repeals the controversial 287(g) program, a provision of immigration law relating to cooperation between state and local enforcement agencies and ICE (misused by some agencies bent on harassing immigrants) and clarifies that the authority to enforce the federal immigration law lies solely with the federal government.

Judicial Review: The bill would restore provisions providing for judicial review of immigration proceedings that were stripped from the law by 1996 legislation. The federal courts would be free to review the decisions and practices of the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) thereby restoring the historic role that the courts play in reviewing agency actions.

Legalization: The bill would create a program providing conditional nonimmigrant status for undocumented immigrants (and their spouses and children) in the U.S., which is valid for six years. An undocumented immigrant must establish his/her presence on or before December 15, 2009, pass a criminal background check, learn English and U.S. civics and pay a $500 fine (plus necessary application fees) in order to obtain a six-year visa. After the six-year term has expired, the undocumented immigrant is also eligible to adjust their status from conditional nonimmigrant to lawful permanent resident status (green card) and eventual citizenship.

Visa Reforms: The bill would reduce the existing backlog by permitting “recapture” of unused employment-based visas and family sponsored visas from fiscal years 1992-2008 and allows future unused visa numbers to roll over to the next fiscal year. It is estimated that these recaptured visas would number in the hundreds of thousands. The bill would increase the number of employment-based green cards from 140,000 to 290,000 per year. To promote family unity, the bill reclassifies the spouse and children of Legal Permanent Residents and treats them the same as the spouses and children of citizens, exempting them from the annual immigration cap. Furthermore, immigration judges are given great discretionary authority to waive unlawful presence bars to reunite families upon a demonstration of hardship for applicant’s U.S. citizen or lawful permanent resident family members.

Our current immigration system has failed by all accounts and we desperately need to begin the comprehensive immigration reform dialogue in Congress in order to solve the current crisis. President Obama has indicated that he wants Congress to pass an immigration bill in 2010 and (HR 4321) may be that bill. It certainly would be a brilliant way to start the New Year.

Stephen Dunne is a Center City attorney who was born in Dublin. He graduated from Penn State, got his law degree from New England Law, and has served in the Pennsylvania Army National Guard. He volunteers at the Philadelphia Irish Immigration Center, the Pennsylvania Senior Law Center and the Immigrant Migration Center in Philadelphia, among others.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

An eclectic—one might even day “odd”–mix of events this week, from a Celtic worship service to an immigration reform “happy hour” to a performance by The Band of the Irish Guards. We’re going to peek into next week a little because there’s a fabulous music event coming up that you trad fans won’t want to miss.

First up: Tune in to 800AM between 11 AM and 1 PM on Sunday to learn how you can support the WTMR Irish radio shows. Fundraisers last year kept the shows going for seven months, but that money has run out. You can make a donation to the shows by sending a check made out to WTMR Radio (that’s important–it has to be made out to the station) to WTMR Radio-Sunday Irish Radio Shows, 2775 Mount Ephraim Ave, Camden, NJ 08104. Mark the envelope “ATTN: Vince Gallagher and Marianne MacDonald.”

St. Thomas Church in Whitemarsh is holding its monthly Celtic worship service on Sunday at 5:30 PM. Read our story explaining what it’s all about.

On Tuesday, join representatives from the Philadelphia Irish Immigration Center at Tir na nOg pub and restaurant in Center City to learn about how the new immigration reform bill could affect Irish immigrants. There will be “happy hour” specials for those who attend. There are other immigration meetings going on throughout the city next week, but I believe this one will be the most fun along with being informative. Way to go, Irish!

Pipe and drum aficionados, listen up: The Band of the Irish Guards will be performing at the Stabler Arena in Bethlehem on Thursday night. Also featured: the Pipes, Drums and Highland dancers of the Royal Regiment of Scotland and the Argyll and Sutherland Highlanders. What a sound!

If you’re marching in the St. Patrick’s Day Parade this year, you have a meeting on Thursday night at the Doubletree in Philadelphia at 8 PM to pay up and pick up your badges. That apparently means that there will be a parade this year. Yay!

Frank McCourt’s “The Irish and How They Got That Way” is playing through April at the Kimmel Center. If you mention the word “special” you get 20 percent off your ticket price. It’s the Irish discount.

Peeking into the following week: AOH Div. 87 is holding its annual beef and beer fundraiser at Finnigan’s Wake in Philadelphia on Sunday, January 17. Paddy’s Well is playing. As always, money raised at AOH events goes to charities large and small.

Later on Sunday night, three incredible trad musicians will be playing at the Coatesville Cultural Society. Singer-guitarist Pat Egan, his wife, flutist Laura Byrne Egan, and Brooklyn-born accordian player Bill McComiskey not only play together regularly, but teach others to play at the Baltimore Irish Arts Center. The Egans were recently in Philadelphia with Jim Eagan for an Ed Reavy tribute at the Irish Center.

As always, there’s a session just about every night of the week in the Philly area. One of our new year’s resolutions is to get to every one of them. Maybe you should add that to your list too!
Check the calendar for details.

Columns, How to Be Irish in Philly

How to Be Irish in Philly This Week

You can ring in the New Year with music and dancing at the Irish Center on Thursday night, then start the new year off right on January 2 with Barleyjuice at the Sellersville Theatre. And there are plenty of sessions all week to keep your Irish up.

But the real treat starts on Thursday with the return of “The Irish and How They Got That Way,” a play by Pulitzer Prize-winning author Frank McCourt, who also gave us “Angela’s Ashes.” “Tis,” and “Teacher Man,” before he died in 2009 from melanoma.

The play, at the Kimmel Center, mixes songs and stories, sentiment and humor, irony and sweetness, as only McCourt could do it.

Check our calendar for details.