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Concert to Benefit Fallen Delco Firefighters

Delaware County firefighters have had their share of tragedy this year. In August, two young Parkside volunteers, Dan Brees, 20, Chase Frost , 21, were seriously injured in a townhouse fire at the Village of Green Tree. Brees suffered second and third degree burns and was released from the hospital; Frost remains in critical condition at Crozer Chester Medical Center.

Then, on September 26, 19-year-old Ridley Township resident Michael Reagan of the Sharon Hill Fire Company died as the result of injuries he sustained when part of a building collapsed and pinned him underneath. He was the first firefighter in the 101-year-old unit to die in the line of duty. A fireman’s funeral with full company honors is planned.

And this is where you come in.

This Sunday, the local Celtic band Blackthorn will headline a benefit for these fallen firefighters and their families from 2 to 8 PM at the Springfield Country Club, 400 West Sproul Road, Springfield. Tickets are $50 and can be purchased at the door or by calling 610-723-1798.

News

U2’s Bono Receives Liberty Medal

U2 front man Bono, his arm around Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala of Nigeria, as they accept the Liberty Medal.

U2 front man Bono, his arm around Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala of Nigeria, as they accept the Liberty Medal.

If he were American, U2’s front man could have a shot at becoming the first one-named president of the United States. The speech he gave after receiving the prestigious Liberty Medal at the National Constitution Center in Philadelphia Thursday night, September 27, almost made Barack Obama’s 2004 Democratic convention oration sound inarticulate and lacking in patriotism.

“This is my country,” proclaimed the rocker, wearing his trademark sunglasses. Then he proceeded to rattle off everything good about America–from Ben Franklin to Bob Dylan, from teaching “the Irish their value” to the Declaration of Independance, the first few lines he read, then declared author Thomas Jefferson ” a great lyricist.”

“It’s a great opening riff,” he said, to laughter.

Bono (born Paul Hewson, of Dublin) was selected to receive the medal jointly with DATA (Debt, AIDS, Trade, Africa), an organization he co-founded to help end AIDS and extreme poverty in Africa. The $100,000 prize will go directly into DATA’s coffers. Dr. Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala, former finance minister of Nigera and vice president of the World Bank, accepted the award on behalf of DATA, on whose advisory board she sits.

The Irish singer joins a distinguished group of recipients, including former President George Bush, who placed the medal around his neck at Thursday night’s ceremony; former Presidents Bill Clinton and Jimmy Carter; South Africa’s Nelson Mandela and F. W. deKlerk; King Hussein and Shimon Peres; Hamid Karzai, president of Afghanistan; Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor, and former Secretary of State Colin Powell.

Among that group, even Bono expressed some surprise that the award was given to “an Irish punk rocker.”

But the awards committee had its reasons–and good ones.  While other artist-activists have raised funds for Africa with their music, Bono used his fame to take his message to the halls of power. He has lobbied US presidents, including the current one; congressional leaders, and heads of other G8 nations, first to convince them to forgive Africa’s debt (done) and to provide money to buy AIDS drugs for people in Africa who can’t afford them (done).

ONE, the organization he launched  in Philadelphia during Live 8 two years to “make poverty history,” has enrolled 2.4 million American activists in the fight against AIDS and conditions on the African continent. He and partner Bobby Shriver last year also launched Product (RED) to raise money from businesses to purchases AIDS drugs for Africans. Many of the audience on Thursday night were wearing “RED” t-shirts from the GAP, which donates part of the proceeds from the sale to the program. Only a year old, Product (RED) has already raised $45 million, $30 million of which has been distributed to AIDS programs in Ghana, Swaziland, and Rwanda.

Most important, said  Dr. Okonjo-Iweala, is that the singer and his group, DATA, don’t offer handouts. “They recognize the essential wish of Africans to help themselves. Africans want to support themselves. Africans do not want to be objects of pity or to be seen as victims,” she told the crowd.

 “We can’t fix every problem,” Bono said. “But the ones we can, we must.”

News

Having a Hot Time, Wish You Were Here

Not as long as we're around it doesn't.

Not as long as we're around it doesn't.

The unofficial theme of the annual Cape May AOH Irish Fall Festival in North Wildwood was global warming.

Well, actually, it was Wildwood warming.

It was so hot on Saturday, September 21, a crowd gathered and enviously watched a trainer give the Annheuser Busch Clydesdale horses their daily shower. “I wish he’d shoot some my way,” said one woman, sweat making rivulets from her hairline to her cheeks.

But that didn’t stop thousands of people from strolling up and down Old New Jersey Avenue in this small seaside town last weekend, looking for the best t-shirt slogan and bargain, buying curlicue mountains of butterfly fries (ruined with squirts of processed orange cheese liquid), green plastic glasses of Bud (a sponsor of the event), and ducking inside the music tent (which at least was opened on one side to entertain any wandering sea breezes) to hear some of the best Celtic bands on the east coast, including Paddy’s Well, the Bogside Rogues, Searson, Scythian, and Derek Warfield.

Local Celtic rockers Blackthorn hold a complementary event in Wildwood, the next town over and just a shuttle bus ride away, that kept the music rocking with electrifying fiddler Eileen Ivers, Albany, NY’s Jimmy Kelly Band, Black 47, Timlin and Kane, Raymond McGroary, 5 Quid, and Random Blond.

So what if all the performers left the stage looking like they’d just gotten out of the shower. So it was hot. No one really seemed to mind. It sure didn’t keep anybody home in the air conditioning, including the pipe and drum bands–one which came down from Binghamton, NY–to show their stuff (in those really warm costumes, hugging those bags of hot air) to honor the late piper Brian Riley, who died of a massive heart attack several years ago. On Saturday, his family donated a defibrillator in his name to the Wildwood Recreation Center.

Though one T-shirt promised, “What happens here, stays here,” www.irishphiladelphia.com  was there for the entire weekend. Since a picture is worth 1,000 words, check out the photographic evidence of what happened there, right here.

News

Was It Fun in Wildwood? Shore ‘Nuff!

Paul Moore pours it on.

Paul Moore pours it on.

Exactly how Irish are you?

In North Wildwood, it came down to a true test of loyalty.

On stage in the main music tent at the annual Cape May County AOH Irish Fall Festival, Paul Moore and Paddy’s Well were pounding out all the standards. As usual, they sounded pretty wonderful.

At the same time, the Eagles game  was playing on a big screen off in a corner. You know, the thrilling blowout in which the Birds smacked the Lions around and sent them mewling like cowed little kittens back to Detroit?

Paddy’s Well or the Eagles? Irish music or football? Hmmmmmmmmm ….

Seriously? It was no contest. I won’t pretend that some people weren’t paying attention to the on-field heroics of Donovan McNabb and company. (And what was with those nightmarish uniforms? They looked like Mr. Blackwell’s LSD nightmare.) But it was way too hard to resist Moore’s bunch. So hardly anyone bothered. Instead, they crowded ‘round the stage, slurped their beers, sang along, and danced. I seem to remember a lot of unrestrained smiling, too.

Sunday was also the day of the big festival parade, this year with young singer Timmy Kelly as the grand marshal, along with a visit by those imposing feathery-hooved Budweiser Clydesales. With temps in the mid-80s, a cool offshore breeze and a brilliant blue sky, it was pretty much perfect parade-watching weather. So Surf Avenue was lined with kids and grannies, all decked out in their neon green fuzzy hats and shamrock-shaped sunglasses, and all of them obviously enjoying the pipe bands, the multiple leprechauns, and one of the last, best days at the shore.

Weren’t there? (Watching the game??? What kind of Mick are you?)

Check out our photos.

  • Saturday action
  • Sunday’s finale
  • News

    Green Lane Scottish – Irish Festival 2007

    Genna Gillespie of Burning Bridget Cleary

    Genna Gillespie of Burning Bridget Cleary

    There was Nessie, or an apparently benign and far less camera-shy version of the legendary Loch Ness Monster, afloat on the appropriately greenish Green Lane Reservoir. In a grove just off the lake, Highland dancers and Irish dancers took turns on a makeshift stage. In a nearby field, kilt-clad athletes risked sunstroke and hernias as they attempted to toss the caber—something like a telephone pole. And from across the reservoir rose the sound of the pipes and, farther off, fiddles. (Oh yes, and the heavy, oily tang of frying fish and chips.)

    This was the last day of the Green Lane Scottish-Irish Festival, a perfect sun-drenched finish to three days of Celtic merry-making in Upper Montgomery County. It’s hard to imagine a better end to the annual gathering of the area’s many clans.

    If you missed it, no worries. We’ve got the photos:

    News

    Top 10 Things NOT to Do at an Irish Music Event

    As we approach the beginning of the 33rd Annual Philadelphia Ceili Group Irish Festival, we thought it might be helpful to explain some of the basic rules of Irish music etiquette for the uninitiated (with a tip of the hat to David Letterman).

    From the home office in Horseleap, County Offaly, the official Irish Philadelphia Top 10 Things Not to Do at an Irish Music Event:

    1. Flick your lighter and yell “Free Bird!”
    2. Sing “di-dee-di-dee-di-dee-di” just like the guys on “Whose Line Is It, Anyway?”
    3. Ask, “Is that a tin whistle in your pocket, or are you just glad to see me?
    4. Yodel along to everything
    5. The wave
    6. To everyone you run into, say, “Top o’ the marnin’ to ye” just like Barry Fitzgerald
    7. After every verse of “Si Bheag Si Mhor,” sigh loudly, look at your watch and ask: Is it over yet?”
    8. The Electric Slide
    9. When singing “She Moved through the Fair,” croon “ohhhhh, baby, baby” in a Barry White voice
    10. Play the bodhran

    News

    She’ll Walk More Miles In Her Shoes

    That's Team Ratty Shoes Captain Patti Byrd sandwiched between Blackthorn's Michael Callahan and John Boyce in the center.

    That's Team Ratty Shoes Captain Patti Byrd sandwiched between Blackthorn's Michael Callahan and John Boyce in the center.

    With a successful fundraiser behind her, the captain of Team Ratty Shoes, Patti Byrd, promised to walk an additional 20 miles at the next Multiple Sclerosis Society Challenge Walk (October 13-14, 2007, weaving its way through the Brandywine Valley with stops in Longwood Gardens and Winterthur) if the team raises $11,000 by September. Co-captain Christopher Burden will accompany her, stretching their 30-mile walk to a 50-mile hike.

    “With the outpouring of help from the community and the sponsorship of Blackthorn, we can surely meet and maybe exceed this goal,” said Byrd, who founded the team four years ago and named it for one of her favorite CDs by the local Celtic rock band, Blackthorn. “One dollar for every person in the Delaware Valley living with multiple sclerosis is our new goal for Team Ratty Shoes.”

    The volunteers held a fundraiser on July 15 at Brittingham’s Irish Pub and Restaurant in Lafayette Hill, featuring musical performances by Random Blonde, Allison Barber, Raymond McGroary, and Mike Brill. Blackthorn surprised the crowd with a performance (that’s right, singing “Ratty Shoes.”)

    And the Delaware County-based group is contributing another way. They’re sponsoring a raffle whose grand prize is an Irish Weekend Getaway package – hotel accommodations and festival passes for four for the 2007 festival, September 21-23, in Wildwood, NJ. First prize is a Blackthorn Prize Package containing CDs and other merchandise. Raffle tickets will be available at the benefit, as well as at all Blackthorn shows from July 11 through August 11, 2007, when the drawing will be held at The Bolero in Wildwood, NJ.

    All proceeds from the event benefit the National Multiple Sclerosis Society of the Greater Delaware Valley. For more information about the MS Challenge Walk, visit www.walk4ms.org. For more information about Team Ratty Shoes, contact team captain, Patti Byrd at Teamrattyshoes@gmail.com or 215-442-0131.

    News

    Helping the Hungry

    By Tom Slattery

    On Saturday, July 14 over 80 people including about 20 under 16 years of age turned out at Conwell-Egan High School in Lower Bucks County to pack dinners as part of the Hibernian Hunger Project (www.hibernianhungerproject.org), a proggram established and supported by the Ancient Order of Hibernians.

    In a 3 ½ hour session over 6,000 dinner trays were filled, covered, labeled, packed and loaded into a refrigerated truck donated by the Teamsters. These were then sent to the lockers of Aid for Friends for distribution to those in need.

    I have noticed over the past two or three years, that these “packing sessions” in Philadelphia and Bucks Counties are drawing more and more youngsters. It is very rewarding to see these kids working along with not only their parents, but also their grandparents. They are learning the pleasures derived from helping those less fortunate, as well as getting a “taste” of their heritage. In addition to earning the respect of their elders, they are also learning that volunteer work and learning can be fun. At Saturday’s session, the Bucks County spokesman called a “timeout” to tell the kids about those unfortunates who would be the benefactors of their work.

    The “work force” included two politicians, who were not there for photo ops, but who put in a days work. Congressman Pat Murphy worked one of the packing tables, while Bucks County Commissioner Jim Cawley was out in the kitchen cleaning trays.

    The final lesson the kids learned was “clean up after”. Yes, it was impressive to watch the “cleanup operation, which restored the Conwell-Egan cafeteria to its pristine state.

    Congratulations to Bucks County AOH Division 1, the Teamsters, and all the volunteers who spent a summer Saturday helping those less fortunate.