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Paul O’Dwyer

Civil Rights Champion

By Niall O’Dowd
October / November 2000

October 1, 2000 by Leave a Comment

Since his childhood in Mayo during the worst of the Black and Tan atrocities, Paul O'Dwyer has been a fearless champion of human rights. During the Red Scare and the civil rights movement he stood up for the oppressed regardless of personal cost. He was an early ally of the State of Israel and helped persuade President Truman to recognize this nation's independence. His law … [Read more...] about Paul O’Dwyer

Civil Rights Champion

Leaves of Pain

By Jimmy Breslin
October / November 2000

October 1, 2000 by Leave a Comment

How too long a sacrifice can make a stone of the heart. At first, it seemed to be nothing. It was a curled-up dark brown leaf about the size of a good lock of hair and it was preserved in glass in a room in the Fairlow Herbarium in Cambridge, Massachusetts. A typewritten card alongside the leaf said that it was taken from an infected potato plant in Ireland during the … [Read more...] about Leaves of Pain

The Narrowback

By Bill Reilly
October / November 2000

October 1, 2000 by 3 Comments

I can't remember when I first heard it, but my mother told me I was called a "narrowback" because it was slang for an Irish person born in the United States. When asked why a "narrowback?" she said, "I guess because narrowbacks are not as big and strong as the Irish who come over." "Narrowback" is defined in Bernard Share's Slanguage – A Dictionary of Irish Slang (Gill & … [Read more...] about The Narrowback

Edward Kennedy

The Senior Senator

By Michael Scanlon, Contributor
October / November 2000

October 1, 2000 by Leave a Comment

If you ask his fellow senators – liberals or conservatives – who's on their list of the hardest-working and best senators, Edward Kennedy's name is always there. Throughout his tenure he has defended the poor, elderly, and handicapped of the country, and any significant legislation affecting these groups in the areas of education, jobs, housing, or healthcare is sure to have … [Read more...] about Edward Kennedy

The Senior Senator

Gene Kelly

The Ultimate Entertainer

By Michael Scanlon, Contributor
October / November 2000

October 1, 2000 by Leave a Comment

As dancer, singer, actor, director, and producer, Gene Kelly has provided audiences with some of the greatest moments in the history of show business. On the Irish in dance: The Irish really dominated the popular dance in 20th-century America, no doubt about it. I think it came from the fact that the dancing in Ireland for centuries has been clog dancing and reels, and … [Read more...] about Gene Kelly

The Ultimate Entertainer

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July 9, 1797

Political theorist Edmund Burke died at the age of 68 on this day in 1797. Born in Dublin to a successful solicitor who had converted from Catholicism to Anglicanism, Burke was raised in the same faith with similar moral values. He was educated at Trinity College Dublin and started a debate club. Thinking he wanted to go into law, he attended Middle Temple in England, but decided otherwise and left school in favor of a career in writing. He wrote several treatises, his most famous being “A Philosophical Enquiry into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful.” Eventually, Burke became a member of parliament.

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