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Hibernia

The Apple of Molly’s Eye

By Irish America Staff
December / January 2005

December 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

Molly Shannon, husband Fritz Chestnut, and one-year-old daughter Stella pose at the Big Apple Fest exhibit ar the Orchard Gallery in New York City in October. The first annual Fest planted 300 fiberglass apples around the city. After two months on the streets, the apples, painted by artists from around the world, were sold at auction with proceeds benefiting the Police Athletic … [Read more...] about The Apple of Molly’s Eye

Farewell, Ms. Bluebell

By Michele Barber-Perry, Contributor
December / January 2005

December 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

Dance-world icon Margaret Kelly passed away on September 11 at the age of 94. Kelly was best known for her dance troupe, The Bluebell Girls, which originated in Paris in 1932, and went on to gain notoriety for its tall, beautiful dancers who enchanted cabaret audiences throughout the world with their risqué cancan routines and elaborate costumes. Kelly's life story is one of … [Read more...] about Farewell, Ms. Bluebell

Irish Eye on Hollywood

By Tom Deignan, Contributor
December / January 2005

December 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

It seemed like it was St. Patrick's Day in November -- at least when it came to Hollywood. Three of Ireland's biggest stars appeared in blockbuster movies as tinseltown prepared to head into the holiday season. Meanwhile, a new crop of Irish cinematic talent is poised to make 2005 another busy year for the Irish in Hollywood. First up in recent weeks, Colin Farrell's much … [Read more...] about Irish Eye on Hollywood

The Future of the
Ambassador Hotel

By Michele Barber-Perry, Contributor
December / January 2005

December 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

The battle over what to do with the Ambassador Hotel in Los Angeles may finally be coming to a close. Once a mecca for movie stars, European royalty and American presidents, the hotel, built on 23 acres on Wilshire Blvd., closed its doors in 1988. Its days of Hollywood glamour had been eclipsed by the 1968 assassination of Robert F. Kennedy. Kennedy was shot while making his … [Read more...] about The Future of the
Ambassador Hotel

St. Mary of Sorrows

By Marian Betancourt, Contributor
December / January 2005

December 1, 2004 by Leave a Comment

When you walk among the headstones of the hilltop graveyard of St. Mary of Sorrows, the first Catholic Church built in Fairfax Station,Virginia, you can't help but notice all the Irish names and the counties in Ireland where the deceased were born. Among the many, there's John Cashion (d. 1882) from Co. Clare, and Patrick Crowell (d. 1891) of Co. Roscommon. Each Memorial Day, … [Read more...] about St. Mary of Sorrows

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June 23, 1985

329 passengers were killed in a plane crash off the coast of Ireland. Air India flight 182 was en route from Montreal to Dehli, when it was blown up in Irish airspace by a bomb. Investigation into the flight led Canadian officials to believe that a Sikh militant group called Babbar Khalsa was responsible for the bombing. 280 Canadian citizens, 27 British citizens and 22 Indian citizens were lost, resulting in the largest mass murder in modern Canadian history. A monument remembering the event was unveiled in 1986 in Ahakista, Cork.

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