Posted in February 2010

Erdenheim photographer tests models’ English on German TV

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(2/10/2010)

In Germany, Mat McCabe is known as the nice photographer on supermodel Heidi Klum’s top-rated television show, “Germany’s Next Top Model.”

That’s what he learned from a fellow Erdenheim Elementary School parent, who heard it from a German friend, he said.

McCabe attributes his amicable reputation abroad to the way he works with his subjects. He tries to be a bit of a teacher, whether he’s featured as a celebrity guest photographer working with aspiring models on a foreign reality show or taking portraits of local families at his studio in Bridgeport.

“I always try to help and encourage,” said the photographer, who lives in Erdenheim with his wife, Kim, and children Lucas, 6, and Jake, 8.

The fashion and beauty editorial photographer was just selected to make his fifth appearance on “Germany’s Next Top Model.” He will participate in a day-long shoot on the West Coast in March.

He could not divulge the subject of his shoot, but a look at his portfolio might give some clues. His past shoots include models sitting on ice cubes in a sub-zero frozen food storage unit and models reacting to a car suddenly exploding in the background.

He remembers the ice cube shoot very well. The models came into the cold from the warmth outside, so they stuck to the ice cubes and the crew had to pull them off.

“Germany’s Next Top Model” is a reality show that follows young women as they compete in a series of challenges for the grand prize: a modeling career.

McCabe had been on the show for four years, but has been working with Klum the past 10.

“It started out just doing shoots, and it morphed into her asking me if I wanted to be on the show,” McCabe said. “She’s great, she’s funny, she’s smart. She’s just a really good person.”

His portfolio includes magazines like Cosmopolitan, for which he did a cover shoot with Klum.

As a guest photographer on a reality show, McCabe plays with lighting and directs the shots while a camera crew films him.

This means McCabe has to stay focused as about 100 people work behind him, plus any interesting events happening on set.

Sometimes, if the models aren’t “projecting” enough, Klum will make them scream with her to loosen up, which can be odd with the whole crew standing there, McCabe said.

“Often I’m so focused on what I’m doing that I don’t watch,” he said.

He will be taking photos of 13 models, 12 whittled down from 1,500 original hopefuls who came to a casting call, and the winner of a similar contest in Austria who was chosen for the show because Germany is a larger market.

McCabe isn’t German and doesn’t speak German, and the judges use this as an added element of competition, he said.

A German model needs to be able to speak English, so a contestant’s ability to follow McCabe’s directions is a strong indicator of her success in the challenge, he said.

The shoots normally last as long as McCabe feels it’s right.

“I got it, I saw something you did that was fantastic,” he said, describing the feeling.

By becoming a photographer, McCabe was carrying on the family tradition, as both of his parents have been professional photographers.

A photo his father, David McCabe, took in 1965 of a young Mick Jagger in Andy Warhol’s studio hangs in McCabe’s dining room. Another photo his father took of surrealist artist Salvador Dali in New York City’s Ritz Plaza hangs in a hallway.

McCabe, who grew up in New York City, loves photography partially because of the lifestyle he experienced in his youth — traveling and meeting interesting people.

But it’s also the process of creating a photograph that attracts him.

“I really enjoy thinking it through: How am I going to do it? What do I need to do it? How am I going to connect with the subject?” he said.

For now, McCabe looks forward to continuing photography, both fashion and at his new portrait studio, where he hopes to work with local families.

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Hatboro to vote on gun ordinance

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(2/9/2010)

Hatboro Mayor Norm Hawkes proposed a lost or stolen handgun ordinance to borough council Monday night that he said would help keep firearms out of the hands of criminals.

If adopted, the ordinance would require citizens to report their lost or stolen handguns to the police up to 72 hours after discovery.

Anyone who violates the ordinance would be subject to a fine of no more than $1,000, or imprisonment for not more than 90 days, or both, reads the draft ordinance.

Council will vote at its meeting Feb. 22 if it will advertise the ordinance for a future vote.

Officials will also vote whether to send a resolution to state legislators in support of a statewide adoption of the lost or stolen ordinance.

Hawkes has been a member of Mayors Against Illegal Guns, the group endorsing this ordinance, since July.

“Lost or stolen handgun reporting costs nothing and can only help save lives,” he said.

When a gun owner reports his lost or stolen firearm, the authorities can track it down before it ends up at a crime scene, he said.

Hatboro Solicitor Christen Pionzio told council she did not feel comfortable recommending it adopt the ordinance.

Whether or not the ordinance pre-empts the existing Pennsylvania Uniform Firearms Act has yet to be tested in court, she said.

Seventeen municipalities in Pennsylvania have already enacted this ordinance, including Philadelphia, Allentown, Erie and Lancaster.

Council Vice President Nancy Guenst and Councilwoman Aleta Ostrander said they were not in support of the ordinance.

“It’s making the legal gun owners feel like criminals,” Guenst said.

She added it felt like an infringement of the Second Amendment rights of legal gun owners.

Councilwoman Patricia Fleming said a councilman and police officer she met at a meeting described the ordinance as “feel good legislation.”

Ostrander said the court costs if the ordinance is challenged could be “astronomical.”

She added an ordinance could be the beginning of more limiting laws for gun owners.

Maxwell Nacheman, the Pennsylvania Coordinator for Mayors Against Illegal Guns, who attended the meeting, said the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence dispatches lawyers pro bono for such cases.

Hawkes and Councilmen Bill Tompkins and John Zygmont said the ordinance does not target responsible gun owners, who will report their lost or stolen handguns, rather it targets those who will not report them.

If everyone was responsible then there wouldn’t be a need for a police department, Tompkins said.

He also added an ordinance is meant to guide residents into acting responsibly.

“Any ordinance — any law — is not designed to punish people,” he said.

It would be the police department’s job to enforce this ordinance, Borough Manager and police Chief Jim Gardner said.

Currently, when someone reports a stolen gun in Hatboro, the police department will enter pertinent information into a national database of stolen articles, he said. Stolen guns are never purged from this system, he added.

The ordinance would not limit hunters in any way, it would not affect legal purchase or ownership of guns and does not penalize people who are unaware their guns have been lost or stolen, according to information from CeaseFirePA that Hawkes distributed to council.

“It makes it safer for everyone, that’s all it does,” Hawkes said.

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Parents ask school board to help fund playground

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(2/5/10)

Parent volunteers of the Springfield Township School District have been fundraising for the last year so students who attend the new Erdenheim Elementary School in September will have a nice, new playground.

But with just a few months left to raise funds before the summer, the parent volunteers of the playground committee are feeling an urgency in their situation.

They have collected a little more than $45,000 of the projected $130,000 cost of the playground they want, and they have approached the school board for a $50,000 contribution to the fund.

“This is a bunch of parents that are going out and fundraising for a large sum of money,” Nancy McDonald, chairwoman of the playground committee and member of the Erdenheim PTO, said Monday. “I think the board understood the urgency.”

A pledge from the school district would “re-energize the parent base to fill the gap,” she added.

At its meeting Tuesday, the school board decided to hold a special interim property committee meeting to determine how much the district could contribute and where the money would come from.

Members would make a recommendation to the rest of the board for a vote at its meeting Feb. 16.

“We’re very supportive, and we want to be able to help them as much as we can,” Gail Inderwies, chairwoman of the property committee, said after the meeting.

The approximate costs of the project are $95,000 for equipment and $35,000 for installation, according to the playground committee’s projections.

What they need now is for the school to commit to an amount so volunteers can plan how they will close the gap, McDonald said.

McDonald and Erdenheim Principal Christine Bradley presented their designs for a second- through fifth-grade playground at the meeting.

The design, a collaborative concept of parents and teachers, includes slides, climbing apparatus and swings. One of the swings is meant for students with special needs, and physical and occupational therapists can use it with students throughout the day, they said.

The plan also includes fitness stations, such as a balance beam and parallel bars.

The committee is working with PlayWorld Systems, a Pennsylvania company that uses only recycled Pennsylvania steel and does not use polyvinyl chloride, McDonald told the board.

The district has received a bid of a little more than $35,600 for the complete installation, more than 20 percent less than the market price, district Facilities Director Roy Johnson said.

This proposal was “a very pleasant surprise,” he told the board.

If the district commits to funds later this month, it would give a much-needed boost to the fundraising efforts, which have felt the brunt of a down economy, McDonald said.

When the fundraising began, the parents were told that the funds the district used to finance construction work were ineligible for noncurricular projects, she said.

Due to some miscommunication, the parents understood they had to fund the entire playground, McDonald said, adding she is not blaming anyone.

A playground committee within the Erdenheim PTO mobilized, and parents talked to grant agencies and professional fundraisers in hopes of securing donations from the community and businesses large and small.

But there were two main problems.

Research showed that grants would be difficult to receive because the township does not fit the more underprivileged demographic typically preferred of applicants, McDonald said.

The other problem was the down economy, which made businesses freeze their donations.

The $45,000 raised so far is from the community, mostly from the same groups of people, she said.

Another hurdle was the changes that came from the district restructuring, as changes needed to be made to accommodate the new group at Erdenheim, she said. This was when the cost of the project rose to about $130,000.

The committee is happy with the change, it just wasn’t in the original plan, McDonald said.

The collaboration of Erdenheim and Enfield parents has benefited the project, she said.

“There’s lots of new energy around it by having a whole new community to work with,” she said.

The parents recently held a movie night at Erdenheim that brought in $2,000 for the fund.

The public property committee meeting to discuss playground funding will take place Feb. 12 at 8:30 a.m. in the administration building.

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