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GREEN DAY

GREEN DAY
The Brooklyn Papers / Tom Callan

Irish eyes will be smiling in Dreier-Offerman
Park as the 23rd Annual Great Irish Fair gets underway this weekend.



The two-day festival – from 10 am to 7 pm on Saturday, Sept.
6, and Sunday, Sept. 7 – will feature an array of traditional
crafts, dance, games, food and Irish pipe bands.



The festival, which benefits Catholic Charities of Brooklyn
and Queens, is considered among the largest Irish festivals in
the world.



Traditionally, a "Chief Brehon" and "Colleen
Queen" are selected to preside over the fair. This year,
those honors are going to Frank Comerford, of Bay Ridge, president
and general manager of WNBC-TV, and Kimberly Muldoon, of Sheepshead
Bay, a graduate student in psychology at Hunter College.



"Irish culture and fun are fairly synonymous, and I can’t
think of a better way to spend a weekend than with a bunch of
Brooklyn Irishmen," said Comerford, who recently moved back
to his childhood home in Bay Ridge after a 30-year sojourn from
the county of kings.



The Timothy Stackpole Memorial Award, a new citation for bravery
and dedication to public service, established in honor of Fire
Department Capt. Timothy Stackpole, will be given to Dennis McDermott,
of Gravesend, alumni director at St. Francis College.



Stackpole, who died in rescue efforts at the World Trade Center,
was presented with the Irishman of the Year award just weeks
before at the 2001 Great Irish Fair.



Stackpole, of Midwood, was honored for his heroism and heroic
recovery from severe burns he received while aiding in rescue
efforts in a 1998 East New York fire that killed two other firefighters.
He spent 66 days in a burn unit. His physical rehabilitation
required dozens of surgeries and painful skin grafts. But Stackpole
returned to duty and was serving out of a firehouse in Downtown
Brooklyn on Sept. 11, 2001.



This year’s Irishman of the Year award will be presented to
Police Department Detective Edward Connolly, of Dyker Heights,
who is assigned to the Manhattan district attorney’s squad and
is president of the NYPD Emerald Society.



Dreier-Offerman Park is located off Shore Parkway between Cropsey
Avenue and Bay 44th Street in Gravesend. A free shuttle bus will
run between the park and the W line subway station at Stillwell
Avenue between 9:30 am and 8 pm. Free parking is also available.



Admission is $10, free for children ages 12 and younger. For
more information, call (718) 330-1234, or visit the Catholic
Charities Web site at www.ccbq.org.