In Mississippi, a Bill to Protect Religious Liberty Gets the Green Light – National Review

In a victory for religious citizens in Mississippi and in a promising sign for all religious Americans the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled last Thursday in favor of a bill that protects religious-liberty and conscience rights in the realm of marriage.

The bill, the First Amendment Defense Act (FADA), allows religious organizations and businesses to operate in accord with their religions teaching on marriage and sexuality, forbids the government from silencing or firing its employees for expressing their religious beliefs, and protects employees from being forced to participate in activities that violate their consciences.

The courts ruling is also a positive sign for those hoping to enact such protections at the federal level. A federal version of FADA has been introduced in both the House and the Senate, and President Donald Trump has pledged to sign it if it crosses his desk.

The ruling means that Mississippis legislation can serve as a template for any state seeking to balance two interests: the conscience rights of those who believe that marriage is a union between one man and one woman, and the intrinsic dignity and civil rights of LGBT individuals.

The conflict between those two interests has intensified in the last two years, in the wake of the Supreme Courts decision in Obergefell v. Hodges, which saw five justices redefine marriage, for the entire country, as a union between two consenting adults regardless of gender. As a result, many Americans, religious and otherwise, who continue to hold the traditional definition of marriage have been marginalized and, in some cases, required by law to sanction same-sex marriages.

For example, in a number of recent, high-profile cases, religious business owners have been sued by customers or fined by state commissions for refusing to provide services for same-sex wedding ceremonies. So far, courts have uniformly sided against the owners, ruling that to deny service to any homosexual person is unlawful discrimination, regardless of religious belief.

Faithful Americans such as these business owners are routinely maligned by left-wing activists and politicians not to mention popular culture, as in this late-night comedy sketch that portrays religious-freedom laws as an expression of hatred many of whom argue that Christian are bigots who deny the humanity of LGBT people.

Such critiques either misunderstand or outright ignore the essential distinction between serving gay or lesbian clients and providing services for their wedding. For religious Americans, this is a crucial distinction, because the latter involves participation in an event that violates their faiths understanding of marriage.

Contrary to what most media reports suggest, the Mississippi bill would not permit anyone to deny service to individuals because of their sexual orientation. In fact, not a single religious-liberty bill has been proposed to allow such discrimination, at either the state or the federal level. To suggest otherwise is supremely dishonest, and it poisons any possibility of finding a reasonable compromise on this issue.

Whats more, bills such as FADA must be understood in the context of our post-Obergefell society, where people who hold the traditional view of marriage are often treated by popular culture as if they were no better than racists. In such a climate, it is essential that religious citizens be given legal protection, especially since the government itself has embraced a conception of marriage in contradiction to the view of a substantial plurality of the public.

The Fifth Circuits legal rationale in upholding FADA provides a helpful context for understanding the best way to balance the two sets of rights at stake in this debate. The court noted, in particular, the plaintiffs lack of standing, due to their failure to assert anything more than a general stigmatic injury or to demonstrate injury-in-fact.

With this explanation, the court seems to point to the fundamental distinction between material and dignitary harms, the first of which merits a higher level of legal protection. Dignitary harm is considered a lesser category: It can sometimes be permitted by law, for the sake of preserving other fundamental rights.

Applied to FADA, the plaintiffs failure to demonstrate injury-in-fact and instead simply stigmatic injury suggests that the right to religious freedom is fundamental enough that states can permit some dignitary harms for the sake of preserving the right. If FADA were to permit religious Americans to perpetrate material harms against LGBT individuals the court argued that the bill does not the ruling would probably have been different.

Regardless of ongoing contention over the definition of marriage, most Americans agree that we ought to be able to coexist peacefully even when we deeply disagree, and this bill works to that end. Progressives must be willing to admit that Mississippis FADA isnt a weapon of discrimination wielded by bigots against LGBT individuals. One can disagree with the bills specific policies and still acknowledge that some legal protection is needed for a minority group whose beliefs have fallen out of favor.

At the same time, those on the right who care about the future of religious freedom must continue to testify to the inherent dignity of LGBT individuals, regardless of ones view of marriage. That will enable more people to understand that religious Americans can fully respect their neighbor even as they are free to live out the tenets of their faith in daily life. Such an understanding, coupled with prudent legal defenses such as Mississippis FADA, is the best path forward for true compromise on this issue.

READ MORE: Obergefells Toxic Judicial Legacy Are Millennials Following the Success Sequence Hey Guys, Put a Ring on It: Married Men Are Healthier, Wealthier, and Happier

Alexandra DeSanctis is a William F. Buckley Fellow in Political Journalism at the National Review Institute.

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In Mississippi, a Bill to Protect Religious Liberty Gets the Green Light - National Review

TRAFFIC: Downed power line backs up West Liberty Avenue – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
TRAFFIC: Downed power line backs up West Liberty Avenue
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
A downed power line on West Liberty Avenue has travel blocked in the city just south of the Liberty Tunnel in the southbound lanes. The downed wire was near Dawn Avenue in the Beechview area, according to PennDOT. It was reported shortly before 11 ...

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TRAFFIC: Downed power line backs up West Liberty Avenue - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Liberty 14U nabs 10-9 win over EMC National – Liberty Vindicator

The Liberty 14U All-Star Team got a big 10-9 win over EMC National on a hot Saturday afternoon in Splendora in the opening round of the Ranger Baseball Invitational.

The win moves the Liberty bunch into the winners bracket of the six team field.

Blaze Drake got the win on the mound by pitching two innings and allowing only one hit and one run. Drake struck out two. Liberty used the help of four walks and a hit-by-pitch to plate four runs in the first inning in grabbing an early 4-0 lead.

Freddy Mata led things off with a walk and then stole second base and later scored on a wild pitch to make it 1-0. C. J. Crump was then hit by a pitch and also stole second. After a steal of third, Crump scored on the error throw to third to run the lead to 2-0.

After the first out of the inning, Drake walked followed by a walk to Mathew Porche. Both Drake and Porche would score on passed balls to give Liberty a 4-0 lead after one.

EMC then responded with a one in the top of the second frame before Liberty responded with two runs of their own. Wyatt Tulley launched a nice double to get into scoring position and then scored on a wild pitch to make it 5-1. Joshua McCartney followed with a walk and used his speed to quickly steal second and third base. He then scored on another passed ball and it was a 6-1 score.

EMC National then had themselves an inning and scored six runs in the third inning to lead 7-6. The team from Liberty was not fazed and wasted little time in regaining the lead. Mata reached on a walk and stole second base. Mata then stole third and scored onan errand throw to third to tie the game at 7 apiece.

Crump followed with a walk, and after a steal of second base he scored on an RBI single by Ben Reidland to give the Liberty the lead again at 8-7. After Drake walked, both runners pulled a double steal and the throw to third to get Reidland was again aired into left field allowing Reidland to score and Drake to third. Drake then scored on an error by the EMC pitcher to give Liberty a 10-7 lead.

EMC made things close in the top of the fourth inning with a couple of runs before Tulley shut the door on the Liberty win.

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Liberty 14U nabs 10-9 win over EMC National - Liberty Vindicator

Liberty prepared to celebrate Fourth on the third – Chron.com

By David Taylor, dtaylor@hcnonline.com

The flags are already flying and Liberty residents are preparing to celebrate the nation's independence in style with barbecue and all the fixin's.

The holiday, which falls on a Tuesday this year, will be celebrated by the city of Liberty on Monday, July 3 - a Fourth tradition.

The festivities begin at the municipal park around 7 p.m., said City Manager Gary Broz.

"We'll have music playing in the park with some guest musicians," he said.

The toe-tapping music won't be the only thing.

Broz said there are all kinds of games and fun planned for families, including their children. Face painting is always a favorite along with various other novelties.

Broz said there will be vendors set up to sell food.

"We ask residents to bring a blanket to sit on or lawn chairs," he said.

Alcoholic beverages are prohibited, but sodas, tea, and water are allowed.

The big celebration begins at 9:15 p.m. with the fireworks show that typically lasts 15-20 minutes.

The fireworks can be viewed from the park and several other areas nearby.

Residents are encouraged to arrive early in order to park nearby.

For more information on the evening activities, call city hall at 936-336-3684.

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Liberty prepared to celebrate Fourth on the third - Chron.com

Program aims to make Liberty more competitive – Houston Chronicle

Athletic Director and Head Football Coach Chad Taylor is always thinking, trying to find a better route to success for his students.

Athletic Director and Head Football Coach Chad Taylor is always...

Every coach is looking for a competitive edge. Chad Taylor is no different.

The athletic director and head football coach at Liberty, following last year's successful year for most of the sports programs, has been brainstorming to find an additional edge. He's not satisfied.

At the Liberty ISD school board meeting, Taylor presented a program that should give Panther teams a step up on their competition and in some cases, at least bring them up to the same level.

The coach presented a pre-athletics program for students in the fifth and sixth grades that he hopes will change the way Panther programs are represented at both the middle and high schools.

"At the end of the day we're just trying to identify those kids who might be interested in athletics at an earlier age and begin teaching them ball skills," Taylor said.

"We're working with them two years in advance," he said, "and I'm hoping that will give us a distinct edge over our competition, and in some cases, bring us up to their same level of play."

The Panthers find themselves on the low end of the stick against rivals like Tarkington volleyball whose students participate in select ball - a great investment, but expensive for families who may not be able to make the financial sacrifice.

To read this article in one of Houston's most-spoken languages, click on the button below.

"That's where we get hammered from schools like Tarkington. Those girls in Tarkington, they start participating in select volleyball or the AAU program early. The same way with Hardin-Jefferson basketball," the coach said.

With his new program, Liberty students will get the same kind of attention, but without the expense of the travel involved with select ball.

"We'll find those kids who are extremely talented in those areas (volleyball, football, basketball) who can't really do select ball," Taylor said. "They won't play a single game for the Liberty Panthers for two years," the coach said since the program begins in the fifth grade and UIL competition for most athletics begins in the 7th grade, but, he said, they will be ready for a higher level of competition when they do reach that grade.

Casey Vaughn, one of the best athletes to ever come out of Liberty, wants to be a coach but she's a couple of years out from her degree, but that's not stopping Taylor from hiring her to assist.

"When we get to basketball, we can create an intramural league that will allow us to let the kids play against each other and get some real game experience," he said. Vaughn would help lead the intramural league.

The program doesn't violate UIL rules in that the coaching comes during regular physical education (PE) classes.

"I can coach any kid in Liberty ISD from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. while it's in the classroom or class time," Taylor said.

The way the program will operate is that all students in the fifth grade, for example, will attend agility drills during their physical education program on Mondays. Coaches available during the period of 12:45 p.m. and 2 p.m. will be present to work with the kids - including the regular classroom PE teacher and coaches from across the district.

Wednesdays will be regular PE class as scheduled prior by the elementary teachers.

"We want to keep that class social so that the kids all still get to intermingle with others in their regular classes," he said.

Fridays will be the actual pre-athletic day.

"We will create a block schedule where those who want to be in pre-athletics can come in for extra instruction and ball skills," the coach said. That class will last 80 minutes, instead of the regular 45 minutes.

The board voted unanimously to approve the measure.

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Program aims to make Liberty more competitive - Houston Chronicle

Celebrate and reflect why we proclaim liberty – The Record-Courier

As we approach the day of celebration, reflection, thanksgiving, honor, and the proclamation of liberty we should take time to remember where our liberty received its source. The pilgrims who began this journey were seeking to find a place where freedom would be the primary focus. They were oppressed both religiously and politically. Freedom of worship, speech and many other liberties were denied them. The foundation upon which our liberty was built has produced the greatest nation ever to exist. We have enjoyed this liberty and sometimes taking it for granted we fail to preserve the freedom by eroding the foundation on which it stands. Let's look at a few statements of those who were around when this great experiment was born.

Noah Webster (1758-1843) was an American lexicographer, textbook author, spelling reformer, political writer, word enthusiast and editor. He has been called the father of American scholarship and education. In his public school textbook "History of the United States," published in 1832, he stated:

"Almost all the civil liberty now enjoyed in the world owes its origin to the principles of the Christian religion.

"It is the sincere desire of the writer that our citizens should early understand that the genuine source of correct republican principles in the Bible, particularly the New Testament or the Christian religion.

"The religion which has introduced civil liberty is the religion of Christ and His apostles, which enjoins humility, piety, and benevolence; which acknowledges in every person a brother, or sister, and a citizen with equal rights. This is genuine Christianity, and to this we owe our free constitutions of government.

"The moral principles and precepts contained in the Scriptures ought to form the basis of all of our civil constitutions and laws. All the miseries and evils which men suffer from vice, crime, ambition, injustice, oppression, slavery, and war, proceed from their despising or neglecting the precepts contained in the Bible."

On July 3, 1776, following the signing of the Declaration of Independence, John Adams wrote to his wife, reflecting on what he had shared in Congress concerning the importance of that day: "The second day of July 1776 will be the most memorable epoch in the history of America, I am apt to believe that it will be celebrated by succeeding generations as the great anniversary festival. It ought to be commemorated as the day of deliverance, by solemn acts of devotion to God Almighty. It ought to be solemnized with pomp and parade, with shows, games, sports, guns, bells, bonfires, and illuminations, from one end of the continent to the other, from this time forward forever.

"You will think me transported with enthusiasm, but I am not. I am well aware of the toil and blood and treasure that it will cost to maintain this Declaration and support and defend these States. Yet through all the gloom I can see the rays of ravishing light and glory. I can see that the end is worth more than all the means; that posterity will triumph in the day's transaction, even though we (may regret) it, which in God we shall not."

We must as citizens of this county remind ourselves that our liberties were established upon a moral foundation that is sure and solid. It is essential that this foundation be maintained or the structure built upon it will not stand. If moral erosion is not limited and prevented, the entire edifice will eventually collapse. I am reminded of the scripture in Proverbs 22:28, "Do not remove the ancient landmark Which your fathers have set."

This Fourth of July let us celebrate our great country, heritage, foundation and the One who made us the greatest.

God restore America, You have already blessed us!

Pastor Leo Kruger of Valley Christian Fellowship is a member of Carson Valley Ministers' Association.

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Celebrate and reflect why we proclaim liberty - The Record-Courier

Liberty Center family builds drive-in theater in their backyard – The … – Toledo Blade

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LIBERTY CENTER, Ohio What began on a nostalgic whim 10 years ago has become a much bigger story of family love.

Meet the Saunders, Rod and Donna, both 53 and owners of the Field of Dreams Drive-In theater in rural Henry County, near Liberty Center and its affiliated Field of Dreams Drive-In theater in Tiffin.

Are they sentimental about the vanishing era of drive-in movie theaters? Guilty as charged. The funny thing is, though, theyre finding out thousands of other people in northwest Ohio and southeast Michigan are, too.

A decade after they rolled the dice and went Kevin Costner on their Liberty Center farm plowing it under and putting up the first of two drive-in theater screens on that site the Saunders are turning a modest profit. Their improbable story is so close to that of fictional Iowa farmer Ray Kinsella, portrayed by Costner in the 1989 film Field of Dreams, that they have used the movie title in the name of both drive-ins.

Though their other drive-in the one in Tiffin doesnt have the same storyline, its also full of charm.

The Tiffin drive-in was originally built in 1948. The Saunders bought it in 2011, four years after they started showing movies on their Liberty Center farm, when they learned its previous owner was about to shut it down. It has capacity for 400 to 500 vehicles, while the Liberty Center site with its 250-vehicle capacity is Ohios smallest drive-in theater.

The couple now can sit back and laugh about the zany, learn-as-you-go experiences that began a decade ago at their Liberty Center homestead as they started chasing a dream they shared since they were youths in Fulton County.

We both went to drive-ins. We had our own memories of them growing up, Rod recalls.

Rod grew up in Wauseon. Donna grew up in nearby Delta. Like many people, both lamented the closing of Wauseons Star Drive-in, which shut down in 1999, whenever they drove along North Shoop Avenue and saw its abandoned screen.

Finally, after a couple of years of hearing her say that, I said somebody ought to open one, Rod says.

Tech-savvy Donna, an information systems professional for Owens-Corning, tracked down a guy in Texas who sold step-by-step instructions on building a drive-in theater from scratch. The plans cost them only $20.

The pages werent even numbered or in order, Rod says with a laugh.

Their first thought was to buy property in Napoleon. Then, after taking a closer look at costs, a friend of Rods came up with a different idea: Put it in your backyard.

They did, somehow navigating their way through a maze of regulations and past zoning board officials who were entering uncharted territory themselves. Along the way, they received untold hours of labor donated by friends and relatives, many of them nearby farmers.

After all of the sweat and money they poured into getting the Liberty Center drive-in ready to open, they had a lot of people pulling for them. But they also said they had a few who called them complete fools, destined to fail.

We got a letter two days before we opened saying how stupid we were, Rod recalls.

Rewind to when they opened in 2007. Among other things, the couple had to learn on the fly how to thread 35 mm movie film projectors to avoid breaks in movies they were showing. Now, of course, its all digitized. Movies are beamed in via satellite, and there isnt nearly as much left to chance in the projector room.

Think its hard enough carving a drive-in theater out of a cornfield? Try doing that as the movie industry is about to go from analog to digital, requiring you to buy four digital projectors two in Liberty Center and two in Tiffin that each cost $80,000 to $90,000.

But, somehow, the Saunders are paying their bills. They even managed to get through the 2008 global financial crisis, which came only a year after they opened.

Theyre not getting rich but say they love what they do, especially the family aspect of their business.

Their son, Denton, 27, a Fremont Middle School special education teacher nine months of the year, runs the Tiffin drive-in throughout the summer. Rod, a Toledo Technology Academy physical education and health teacher, runs the Liberty Center drive-in, along with Donna.

The drive-ins helped put Denton through undergraduate and masters programs at Bowling Green State University and their daughter, Callan, 25, through her Eastern Michigan University program in athletic training. Callan worked two years as a sports trainer at Notre Dame Academy before landing her new job as the director of the Anytime Fitness salon in Wauseon.

One of the biggest ancillary benefits has been the socialization opportunities the Liberty Center drive-in has given their other son, Rockne, 23, who has cerebral palsy.

He started out in the box office and has done everything down to offering friendly waves to drivers.

He likes hanging out around the girls, Donna says, explaining how he likes people-watching of all kinds and has a soft spot in his heart for babies. We laugh and call him our unofficial popcorn-taster. He does entertain customers.

Little things like that give the Liberty Center drive-in its own special charm. Its a throwback to yesteryear and a refreshing break from anything resembling a stiff corporate atmosphere.

Part of the fun is trying to find the site in the first place. Tucked away on quiet, two-lane Township Road 6, the Liberty Center drive-in is barely in Henry County, a quarter mile from the Fulton County line. It should be noted, too, that in calling Township Road 6 a two-lane road, the county engineer apparently had a generous definition for width. It feels more like a wide, one-lane road. Large tractors and other farm machinery can slow down traffic. The theater has been known to fool more than one GPS or cell phone, and when corns about ready to be harvested its easy to drive by the site without knowing it.

For directions, go to fieldofdreamsdrivein.com/liberty_directions.html. On that page is this generous offer, a sign of the familys hospitality: If you get lost, please call Donna at 419-966-2988 and tell her what road you are on.

Between the two drive-ins, the Saunders employ about 44 part-time workers. Many are kids saving up for college, but some also are schoolteachers who want a pleasant summer job.

The Saunders said theyre especially proud of the relationships theyve built with other families. The Ross family, for example, has had three different girls Leah, Meagan, and, now, Brie work for them. They said they enjoy seeing kids grow and mature as employees. Rod calls their youthful workers our kids.

It gets back to the Golden Rule: Do unto others as you have them do unto you, he said. We treat the kids in our workforce like our own kids.

Has it been a well-oiled machine? Not always, the couple laughs.

Like any business, they learn what works and what doesnt over time. But above all, its important to them to maintain that down-home charm.

The fun doesnt begin when the first movie starts. The Saunders have installed a volleyball court, putt-putt golf, and corn hole games. People arrive early to engage in friendly competition and play until showtime.

Theres also a fire pit where older adults are known to hold court and enjoy a cold beverage while kids are off having fun.

Food concessions include freshly grilled burgers and homemade pizza, the latter of which is hand-delivered to people guest who place special flags on their car windows.

Weve learned that being the smallest drive-in in Ohio, we need to listen to our customers, Rod says.

Donna says the drive-ins have been a perfect business for us with Rod being a teacher and having the summers off.

Dentons not the only one whos followed in his fathers footsteps as a teacher. His wife, Olivia, 27, whom he married May 20, teaches sixth grade at Oak Harbor Middle School.

And theres the stars.

Not the movie stars the skyward ones. The Liberty Center drive-in is in such a rural location, far removed from urban light pollution, that visitors cant help but occasionally let their minds wander as they gaze upward.

This is the 84th year for drive-ins. The first one opened in Camden, N.J. in June, 1933, according to the website drive-ins.com. The number of drive-in theaters peaked in 1958 at 4,063. This year, there are 321 left in operation.

Their decline has been accelerated not just by technological changes and the advent of megaplex indoor theaters but also by urban sprawl. As cities sprawled out in the country, prices for rural land shot up. Even many profitable drive-ins were enticed to sell.

Contact Tom Henry at: thenry@theblade.com, 419-724-6079, or via Twitter @ecowriterohio.

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Liberty Center family builds drive-in theater in their backyard - The ... - Toledo Blade

Liberty to have a float in New York pride parade – News & Observer


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Liberty to have a float in New York pride parade
News & Observer
Shavonte Zellous is thrilled that the New York Liberty will have a float in Sunday's pride parade, the first for a sports franchise in the city. "I'm excited. I haven't been in a pride parade before, so I think I'm more excited than most," said Zellous ...
Liberty vs. SunNewsday
Sun blow 21-point lead before beating Liberty, 94-89Norwich Bulletin
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Liberty to have a float in New York pride parade - News & Observer

Liberty suffers five overflow instances on June 20 – Asheboro Courier Tribune

LIBERTY Liberty experienced several wastewater overflows following a storm on June 20.

Due to the heavy rain, overflows occurred:

* At approximately 2 a.m. on Kinro Road manhole #500B in Liberty. Approximately 3,300 gallons of wastewater was released with up to 3,300 gallons reaching a tributary to Rocky River.

* At approximately 2:05 a.m. at East Lowe Avenue manhole #506A in Liberty. Approximately 2,700 gallons of wastewater was released with up to 2,700 gallons reaching a tributary to Rocky River.

* At approximately 2:10 a.m. on West Kime Avenue manhole #401 in Liberty. Approximately 3,600 gallons of wastewater was released with up to 3,600 gallons reaching a tributary to Rocky River.

* At approximately 2:15 a.m. at Johnson Lift Station manhole #301 in Liberty. Approximately 9,000 gallons of wastewater was released with up to 9,000 gallons reaching a tributary to Sandy Creek.

* At approximately 2:20 a.m. on Starmount Avenue Outfall Line manhole #601 in Liberty. Approximately 1,800 gallons of wastewater was released with up to 1,800 gallons reaching a tributary to Sandy Creek.

All areas were cleaned with no environmental impact or harm to drinking water.

For more information or to express concerns, contact the Town of Liberty Public Works Department at 336-622-4276.

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Liberty suffers five overflow instances on June 20 - Asheboro Courier Tribune

Harman happy to be living his dream at Liberty – The Exponent Telegram (press release) (registration)

CLARKSBURG Someone at Liberty should thank whoever made A.J. Harmans schedule his senior year.

It was in a role as a teachers assistant in a physical education class that Harman first learned he had a knack for teaching youth. Couple that with a dream to be the head football coach at Liberty that he said began when he took his pads off for the last time, and you have the formula that produced Libertys current head football coach.

After graduating high school, he spent time volunteering at Liberty as an assistant, and then worked at both RCB (under coaches Bryan Fisher and Bruce Carey) and Liberty (under coach Robert Shields). He also credited the impact of some of his own high school coaches, including Randy Gorby, Phil Cunningham and Tom Hilton. The biggest influence for Harman, though, was his father.

Growing up, my dad was a coach, too, he said. I learned so much from him about tough love and high expectations, and little things like how much confidence can mean in an athlete. He was very good at correcting my mistakes, but also at patting me on the back at the end of the day.

With the knowledge of a plethora of coaches and the influence of his father, then, Harman was ready when he heard of the opening at Liberty while coaching under Carey at RCB.

But it wouldnt be easy.

When I got the job, Harman said, this was a program that hadnt had a lot of success recently.

Though the Mountaineers were a playoff team in 2010, they fell quickly. In 2014, Harman inherited a squad that had gone 0-9-1 the year before and was outscored by an average of 25.5 points per game.

And yet somehow, he turned them into a 5-5 team in one year.

I had some kids that maybe werent the most talented, but they were so hungry to win, he said. They made it easy to have a culture of unselfishness, team play and family.

Harman also cited the importance of the weight room, something his assistant coach and Liberty boys basketball coach Ryan Lantz said was instrumental in the turnaround.

One of coach Harmans strengths, maybe his biggest strength, is as a weight and conditioning coach, he said. When you get a group of boys that wants to sacrifice and work in the weight room, that always carries over to the field. Thats been a big strength for him in getting the program moved in the right direction.

And the community and the group of kids were hungry for it. They wanted to succeed, and they were looking for someone to lead them in that way.

The Mountaineers have entered a new phase in their rebuild, making the playoffs last season for the first time since 2010. Now, Harman said complacency is the biggest obstacle he and his team will face.

In my fourth year now, this senior class has never had a losing record, he said. So the challenge is getting them to be as hungry as they were that first year.

Perhaps the answer to that puzzle comes from another of Harmans strengths.

The kids know and appreciate how much he cares about them and the program, Lantz said. He really creates a family atmosphere that the kids want to be a part of. He gives all of his coaches the opportunity and everything they need to succeed.

That lines up well with why Harman loves football so much in the first place.

I always loved the physicality of the game, Harman said. But I also loved the brotherhood and family style. This is a game that requires 11 moving parts to be working together at the same time, and if one of those parts breaks down, the whole machine does.

To have a coach that understands that and loves his alma mater as much as Harman does is special, indeed, in Lantzs opinion.

Coach Harman just loves the program, loves the community, he said, and there isnt a more perfect coach for a community than coach Harman with Liberty.

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Harman happy to be living his dream at Liberty - The Exponent Telegram (press release) (registration)

Teen charged in West Liberty school shootings enters insanity plea – The Columbus Dispatch

Holly Zachariah The Columbus Dispatch @hollyzachariah

The teenager charged with 13 felonies in connection with a school shooting in Champaign County in January has pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity.

The attorney for Ely Serna, who faces charges that include two counts of attempted murder and three counts of felonious assault, filed the paperwork in Champaign County Common Pleas Court earlier this week.

Serna's case was recently transferred from juvenile to adult court and, at his arraignment on June 15, defense attorney Dennis Lieberman hinted an insanity defense was his plan. Lieberman also is asking that statements Serna made to authorities which the prosecutor has called a confession immediately following the Jan. 20 shooting at West Liberty-Salem High School be thrown out.

Serna, 17, is accused of sneaking a shotgun into the school that morning and shooting fellow student Logan Cole twice, critically wounding him. Detectives said Cole was not the intended target but apparently surprised Serna in the bathroom just after Serna had pulled on a mask and was preparing to exit with his gun. Authorities have never publicly detailed Serna's plan or motive.

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Another student suffered a minor wound from a ricocheting pellet when Serna fired into the hallway and into two classrooms.

One of the attempted murder charges is for Cole's injuries. The second is for teacher Greg Thomas who heard the gunshots in the bathroom and ran to see what was happening. Authorities say Serna fired at him but missed.

The insanity plea now kick-starts a series of mental evaluations.

Champaign County Common Pleas Judge Nick A. Selvaggio has set a trial date for Aug. 21. The judge said he wanted the trial finished before the new school year begins so that the district can put the incident behind it.

hzachariah@dispatch.com

@hollyzachariah

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Teen charged in West Liberty school shootings enters insanity plea - The Columbus Dispatch

Rocking At The Liberty Block Party [VIDEO] – WJON News

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ST. CLOUD The Liberty Block Party took center stage at St. Clouds Granite City Days.

Robin Gohmanis one of the organizers of the event. She says they have great entertainment lined up for the event.

Our opening act is Tonic Sol-Fa followed shortly by Tommy James and The Shondells.

The 29th annual event happened at Whitney Park on Friday evening. Musical hits like Crimson and Clover as well as Hanky Pankycould be heard from blocks away as Tommy James & The Shondells headlined the block party.

Even though the event is on itss 29th year, Gohnman says they continue to gain popularity.

Our crowd seems to get bigger and bigger every year. It is hard to know but estimates are somewhere in excess of 10,000 people.

The event was free to attend, butproceeds made from t-shirt and food sales went to district 742s LEAF program.

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Rocking At The Liberty Block Party [VIDEO] - WJON News

Middletown-based Liberty Bank launches person-to-person … – New Haven Register

Middletown-based Liberty Bank later this year will join the growing trend of financial institutions enabling customers to make payments to others using mobile devices.

The bank announced this week it will introduce the person-to-person payment capability some time during the fourth quarter of this year. Liberty Bank is working with a Rocky Hill-based company, Payveris, to launch the mobile payment system.

Patricia Jatkevicius, the banks executive vice president and chief marketing officer, said the relationship with Payveris will deliver a consistent service experience for our customers.

Todays consumers are discerning and they know they have choices, Jatkevicius said. To be competitive, we must offer our customers the very best products available.

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The launch of person-to-person payment capability is the product of a three-year strategic planning process at Liberty Bank, which has 55 banking offices around the state, including 18 in the New Haven area.

As part of the process, bank officials identified the need to expand and improve Libertys digital offerings, starting with the banks website and incorporating all elements of digital banking.

Payveris was selected by bank officials after they spent 18 months evaluating vendors.

The person-to-person payment system will allow Liberty Bank customers to make payments using mobile devices even if the individuals they are paying are customers of another bank, according to Wanda Gorges, a Payveris spokeswoman.

Payveris provides similar mobile banking technology to almost 200 banks and financial institutions, Gorges said.

John Carusone, president of the Bank Analysis Center, a Hartford-based industry consulting firm, said Libertys foray into person-to-person payment capability is consistent with the banking industrys continuing evolution into digital mobile banking.

Transactions between individuals are a key element of the financial payments mechanism, which has historically been the exclusive purview of banks, Carusone said. But incursions into this space by third party providers such as PayPal, credit card merchants and others have caused banks to become defensive. This is causing them to put into place their own proprietary systems.

Liberty and Bridgeport-based Peoples United Bank are among the few Connecticut-headquartered institutions currently offering this capability, he said.

But look for other banks large and small to follow suit, Carusone said. This capability is largely a defensive posture to defend market share. Those institutions not having this capability will be vulnerable to others that do and who will seek to draw market share away.

A recent Bank of America survey found that baby boomers are becoming increasingly comfortable using mobile devices to make person-to-person payments.

Call Luther Turmelle at 203-680-9388.

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Liberty schools chief Silver faces ouster vote – Times Herald-Record

Pauline Liu Times Herald-Record @PaulineLiu845

LIBERTY A special meetingwill beheld Tuesday so the Liberty Board of Education can vote on whether to terminate the contract of Superintendent Bill Silver.

"There is substantial support for this among the board members," school board member Marta Illing said Friday. "It is not being done lightly. But you'll need to come to the meeting to get the real story directly from the board. It is a public meeting, so we're going to vote in your presence."

The meeting will be held at 7 p.m. in the high school's media center.

The nine-member board will need a quorum and majority in order for the proposal to pass. Do board members expect there will be enough votes?

"I hope not," school board member and former board President Philip Olsen said. "I can't talk about a lot of it because it was discussed in executive session, but they didn't like the way that three incidents were handled in the middle school recently."

The three separate incidents, which all took place in May, involved a bomb threat against the school, a student who brought in a BB gun and a girl who came to school with a pocket knife, according to an informed source.

Silver, 66, was hired by the school board in January 2013. He previously served as superintendent in Killingly, Conn., and has 44 years of experience in education. He was given a three-year contract with a starting salary of $154,000, which was extended twice. His current salary is $164,655, and he has about a year left on his contract.

The school board has talked about offering Silver a buyout, which could run in the ballpark of $200,000. If an interim needs to be hired, it could cost the district as much as $750 per day until a permanent replacement is found.

"So we'll be paying two salaries and I'm not happy about that," Olsen said."Fiscally, Dr. Silver is wonderful and educationally he's been a very good superintendent."

Silversaid Friday he feels that under his leadership the Liberty district is now "in a pretty good place."

Liberty is one of the few districts in the region where the enrollment has continued to grow. It's now over 1,700.

"We have seen the graduation rate increase from 70 percent to 78 percent in the last three years and the last four budgets had a zero tax levy increase," Silver said. "There's still a lot of work to be done here, but we're in the right trajectory."

pliu@th-record.com

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Liberty schools chief Silver faces ouster vote - Times Herald-Record

Review: ‘Harbored’ Spins Immigrants’ Tales, With Liberty in View … – New York Times

The writer and director, Jimmy Maize, tried to weave together three plot lines, each more earnest than the other. One is about Marion (Molly McAdoo), whos researching Annie Moore, the first passenger to be processed at Ellis Island, for a PBS documentary. Another is about Wes (Esa Mora), a neurotic gay man, plagued by dreams about Lewis and Clark, who embarks on a road trip with his boyfriend (Renaldy Smith); his meltdown in the Rockies feels like a Woody Allen movie scene about a city guys freaking out at the sight of nature.

Finally, we follow Cather (Luke Zimmerman), dressed like a pioneer in a Thom Browne catalog, and Antonia (Ayana Workman) nods to Willa Cather and her novel My ntonia, with a dash of gender-bending on the prairie as the writer interacts with his creation.

The three strands appear to interconnect, albeit in mysterious ways. At one point, Marion and Antonia engage in a romantic-looking pas de deux (the choreography is by Wendy Seyb), but we were so far from the action that I could barely see the dance. By that time the audience, which roams as much as the cast, was sitting on the amphitheater-like steps, atop a grand staircase, while the ensemble was all the way down in the atrium. This at least made for some occasionally striking abstract visuals.

Most frustrating, however, was the inability to hear the choir, made up of members of the Downtown Voices and the Mama Foundations Wednesday Sings choirs. With any luck, the sound issues will be fixed in subsequent performances, but on Thursday evening, the singers were barely audible, making it hard to weigh in on Heather Christians gentle score; you can get a better sense of it from the productions teaser video on YouTube.

At times, though, the very faintness of the voices had an oddly beautiful ghostly effect. Perhaps in an unintentional nod to our hardscrabble predecessors, the show works best if you make the most of a tough situation.

Winter Garden at Brookfield Place

230 Vesey St.

website

Category Off Off Broadway, Play

Credits Written and directed by Jimmy Maize; Music by Heather Christian; Choreography by Wendy Seyb

Cast JeVon Blackwell, Molly McAdoo, Esa Mora, Renaldy Smith, Ayana Workman, Luke Zimmerman, Victoria Ernst, Thomas Jaeger, Rachael Worthington. Dancers: Marika Abe, Elaine Baez, Summer Gan, Emily Garrison, Kory Geller, Arlene Howell, Rachel Jarvis, Nicholas Johnson, Lucile Jorba Y Campo, Liberty Laferriere, Kelsey Leland, Angela Morgan, Scott Shedenhelm, Tara Lynn Steele, Fiona Tsang, Leanne Velednitsky, Katie Wilson, Emily Wong and Elizabeth Yako; Also Trinity Church's Downtown Voices Choir and Mama Foundation's Wednesday Sings! Choir

Opened June 22, 2017

Closing Date June 25, 2017

This information was last updated: June 23, 2017

Harbored Through June 25 at the Winter Garden at Brookfield Place, Manhattan; rivertorivernyc.com. Running time: 1 hour.

A version of this review appears in print on June 24, 2017, on Page C5 of the New York edition with the headline: You Can See Ellis Island From This Play.

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Review: 'Harbored' Spins Immigrants' Tales, With Liberty in View ... - New York Times

Shane Stewart wins first World of Outlaws race at West Liberty – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Jun 24, 2017 at 12:16 am | Print View

WEST LIBERTY Shane Stewarts race could have been won or lost in the first turn of the first lap of Friday nights World of Outlaws Sprint Cars main event at West Liberty Raceway.

Of course, races arent actually decided on the first lap, but with the way the racing surface took rubber and who he was racing meant the way the race got started had a ton of sway over the outcome.

On the initial start, Stewart, starting on the pole, didnt get going as well as outside pole sitter Jason Johnson, nor third place starter Brad Sweet. Both got by him through Turns 1 and 2, and he was scrambling. Fortunately for him, the racing gods were smiling on the No. 2 car.

A caution before the first lap was complete reset the field. With a second shot at it, Stewart didnt let it get away. The Larson-Marks Racing driver led flag-to-flag in the first World of Outlaws race at West Liberty and grabbed a much-needed win.

That was my race, honestly, Stewart said. I wouldve never passed those guys back if that caution hadnt come out. I honestly dont know what the heck happened. I just spun my tires really bad. I took off the exact same way the second time.

Sometimes these races work out that way. We were able to put ourselves in this position to take advantage of that restart.

Stewart won ahead of Sweet, Johnson, Daryn Pittman and Donny Schatz.

Sweet, who won one of the two races at Knoxville Raceway earlier in June, actually was able to chase Stewart down in lapped traffic and even got alongside him at one point on what ended up a rubbered down racing surface.

In lapped traffic, Stewart had to change his line and so too changed the handling of his car. But again, he was the beneficiary of a caution that put Sweet back in line and gave Stewart a clear track again. From there, with seven to go, it was smooth sailing.

The problem here when it gets rubbered down, when you get behind lapped traffic your car acts different, the track gets really dirty and you lose traction, Stewart said. Once the caution flew and the track was clean, my car was fast again. Its a huge win for us.

Sweet wasnt too frustrated with the circumstances after the race, even if he agreed with Stewart that the Turn 1 reset on the initial start essentially decided the race.

His win at Knoxville on June 9 was in similar fashion to Stewarts on Friday, where the track took rubber and circumstances fell in his favor. That give and take is just racing, Sweet said.

Sometimes it works for you, sometimes it doesnt. It worked for Stewart on Friday.

I was pretty mad because I knew that was probably the race, and Im a little disappointed but sometimes these are the track conditions youre dealt with, Sweet said. Once we all got in line, there wasnt much we could do and Shane hit his marks. We had a chance there in lapped traffic, but he held me off there. Were happy with second. Weve had a lot of good runs lately.

Stewarts third win this season came in the first with a new crew chief, Lee Stauffer, after Stewarts previous crew chief left the team Friday morning.

The Oklahoma native lamented the fact that hes not really in the points chase this season and that his equipment is better than hed been running. Friday nights win, though, is one he hopes is the start of a better second half to 2017 which still has the Knoxville Nationals and Kings Royal left to run.

He also said he enjoyed West Liberty Raceway, but that everyone wouldve enjoyed it more if the track hadnt rubbered down.

We deserve to be here, we work hard to be here and Justin (Marks) and Kyle (Larson) give us the resources to be here, Stewart said. Hopefully we can keep this ball rolling and win as many big races as we can.

I think this is a unique place. I wish theyd had a few more pieces of equipment to make the track a little better. If we had the little disc thing (behind a tractor) to tear the track up and some water I think the race wouldve been really, really good.

l Comments: (319) 368-8884; jeremiah.davis@thegazette.com

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Liberty Chamber of Commerce seeking vendors and parade participants for July 4 Celebration – Times Herald-Record

LIBERTY The Greater Liberty Chamber of Commerce, in cooperation with the Village and Town of Liberty, will be hosting its annual Fourth of July Celebration on July 4. A rain date is set for July 8.

The Chamber is inviting retail, food and craft vendors as well as community organizations to participate in the annual Street Fair and Parade. The street fair runs from 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m, with the parade kicking off at 12:05 p.m. across from the Elks Lodge on Oberferst Street. North Main Street will be closed to vehicle traffic to accommodate the festivities.

The day also includes: A Classic Car and Truck Show beginning at 10:30 a.m. (preview 9 a.m.) behind the Liberty Public Library; a special performance of the Star Spangled Banner at noon on the Main Street stage; a variety of food, craft and retail vendors; bouncy houses and kids activities by Party Master; and musical guest The Other Band on the Main Street stage starting at 12:30 p.m.

Vendor applications can be found at LibertyNYChamber.com. For more information about the Chamber, or to participate in the parade or volunteer on the day of the event, contact the Chamber at 292-9797 or email info@LibertyNYChamber.com. Information can also be found on the Greater Liberty Chamber of Commerce Facebook page.

All local service organizations, volunteer groups, businesses, classic car and tractor owners, etc. are encouraged and welcomed to show their pride and participate in this years parade. Lineup begins at 11 a.m. Parade kicks off at 12:05 p.m. sharp.

For more information or for other upcoming Liberty Chamber events, as well as to join, or to volunteer call 292-9797 or email info@LibertyNYChamber.com. Information can also be found on the Greater Liberty Chamber of Commerce Facebook page or go to LibertyNYChamber.com.

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Liberty Chamber of Commerce seeking vendors and parade participants for July 4 Celebration - Times Herald-Record

Bishops address religious liberty, health care, worship – St.Louis Review

Bishop Kevin C. Rhoades of Fort Wayne-South Bend, Ind., left, and Bishop Shelton J. Fabre of Houma-Thibodaux, La., prayed June 14 during the opening session of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops annual spring assembly in Indianapolis.

Sean Gallagher | The Criterion

INDIANAPOLIS Reflecting their concern that religious liberty at home and abroad remains a top priority, the U.S. bishops during their spring general assembly in Indianapolis voted to make permanent their Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty.

Voting 132-53 with five abstentions June 15, the second day of the assembly, the bishops' action came less than a week before the start of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' fifth annual Fortnight for Freedom June 21-July 4. The observance is a two-week period of prayer, advocacy and education on religious freedom.

The bishops also reiterated that their efforts are focused on "ensuring the fundamental right of medical care" for all people as the U.S. Senate worked in mid-June on a plan to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act after the U.S. House of Representatives had passed its own measure, the American Health Care Act.

The chairman of the National Review Board, which works to respond to and prevent sexual abuse by clergy and other church personnel, updated the bishops June 14 on the board's work and presented key points of the recently issued 14th annual report on diocesan compliance with the U.S. Catholic Church's "Charter for the Protection of Children and Young People."

In a related event, the bishops celebrated a liturgy in response to a call from Pope Francis to episcopal conferences around the world to observe a "Day of Prayer and Penance" for survivors of sexual abuse within the Church.

The bishops also heard reports from the chairman of the Committee on International Justice and Peace about international persecution and human rights violations; final plans for the July 1-4 "Convocation of Catholic Leaders: The Joy of the Gospel in America" in Orlando, Florida; and the progress of a working group on migrants and refugees.

Before the vote on making the Committee on Religious Liberty permanent, Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori, committee chairman, said the need for the body stretches beyond the specific legal and public policy issues challenging religious freedom that continue to emerge.

Archbishop Lori expressed hope that the committee's work would help "plant the seeds of a movement for religious freedom, which will take years of watering and weeding in order for it to grow, to grow strong and to bear fruit."

Worldwide, Bishop Oscar Cantu of Las Cruces, New Mexico, international policy committee chairman, said in a June 15 report that religious persecution "includes both social hostilities and government restrictions."

"It finds expression in physical assaults, arrests and detentions, desecration of holy sites, and in discrimination against religious groups in employment, education, housing, the selection of a marriage partner and whether you are considered a citizen."

He said the committee respects "the approaches adopted by the local Church. Like a physician, our first duty is to do no harm. We adopt strategies that complement the work of the local Church."

Health Care

The USCCB reinforced its stand that the American Health Care Act passed by the House of Representatives May 4 needs major reform to provide quality health care for the "voiceless," especially children, the elderly, the poor, immigrants and the seriously ill.

"We find ourselves in a time marked by a deep sense of urgency and gravity," said Bishop George L. Thomas of Helena, Montana, in remarks to the assembly. "Within two weeks, we may see a federal budgetary action with potentially catastrophic effects on the lives of our people, most especially children and the elderly, the seriously ill, the immigrant and our nation's working poor."

Referring to the House bill and its plan to "eliminate $880 billion from Medicaid over the next decade," Bishop Thomas said, "If left unchallenged or unmodified, this budget will destabilize our own Catholic health care apostolates, take food from the mouths of school-aged children and the homebound, and deny already scarce medical resources to the nation's neediest in every state across the land."

His comments followed a report on health care reform by Bishop Frank J. Dewane of Venice, Florida, chairman of the USCCB's Committee on Domestic Justice and Human Development.

Bishop Dewane focused on the Senate's work to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

"The Catholic Church remains committed to ensuring the fundamental right to medical care, a right which is in keeping with the God-given dignity of every person," Bishop Dewane said. He told his fellow bishops that the USCCB has been in contact with members of Congress. Noting that the USCCB sent a letter to U.S. senators June 1, Bishop Dewane said, "It called on the Senate to strip away harmful promises of the AHCA or start anew with a better bill."

Migrants and refugees

Meanwhile, the bishops' working group on migrants and refugees was set to complete its work by the spring assembly, but Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo of Galveston-Houston, USCCB president, announced June 15 he was extending the group "recognizing the continued urgency" so many migration and refugee issues present.

Archbishop Jose H. Gomez of Los Angeles, USCCB vice president and the group's chairman, and Bishop Joe S. Vasquez of Austin, Texas, chairman of the USCCB Committee on Migration, outlined the working group's origins, activities and next steps on issues.

Young people

The spiritual life of young people also was discussed during the opening day of the assembly.

Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, and Archbishop Charles J. Chaput of Philadelphia opened the discussion with a presentation on the consultations and questions for the bishops to consider in preparing for the October 2018 Synod of Bishops on youth and vocations.

"The synod indeed comes at a critical time," Cardinal Tobin said. "We know that there are both challenges and opportunities here in the U.S. The increased amount of disconnected millennials is certainly a concern for us, as is the decline and the delay of marriage among young people. Still there are various positive signs to build upon."

Those signs, he said, include "the high interest among millennials during the liturgical seasons of Advent and Lent" and "the continued importance in our ministries and outreach to young people which have a positive effect on vocational discernment."

"The Church in the U.S. is poised to engage this conversation for and with young people," he added.

Sexual abuse

Francesco Cesareo, chairman of the National Review Board, urged the bishops June 14 to continue their commitment to stopping clergy sexual abuse and supporting victims of abuse "at the forefront" of their ministry.

He said sexual abuse of minors by clergy is "not a thing of past" and stressed the bishops have to always be vigilant and be sure to not "let complacency set in" in their efforts to stop it.

At a Mass as part of a "Day of Prayer and Penance" June 14 at Sts. Peter and Paul Cathedral some 200 bishops heard Atlanta Archbishop Wilton D. Gregory say in the homily that "we can never say that we are sorry enough for the share that we have had in this tragedy of broken fidelity and trust" in the clergy sexual abuse crisis in the Catholic Church.

Cardinal DiNardo, the principal celebrant, spoke about the pope's call at the liturgy's start.

"In solidarity with our brother bishops around the world, we acknowledge the sins that have occurred and ask forgiveness from and healing of those who have suffered abuse at the hands of those who should have been protecting and caring for them," he said.

At the end of the Mass, the bishops, in a sign of penance, knelt while praying a prayer of healing and forgiveness for the victims of sexual abuse in the church.

Missionary discipleship

The bishops were reminded June 15 that the historic Convocation of Catholic Leaders was nearing by Bishop Richard J. Malone of Buffalo, New York, chairman of the bishops' Committee on Laity, Marriage, Family Life and Youth. He noted that it will be the largest gathering sponsored by U.S. bishops and will be a time to show the unity of the Church.

The convocation, an invitation-only event, is meant to give the 3,000 participants expected to attend a better understanding of what it means to be missionary disciples in today's world through workshop presentations, keynote addresses and prayer.

In his address to the assembly Archbishop Christophe Pierre, apostolic nuncio to the U.S., called the bishops to be missionary disciples through listening and fostering solidarity and a culture of encounter. He encouraged the bishops to view current challenges as "a time of grace."

"Take courage," he said, when the "tasks of the new evangelization and of building a culture of encounter and solidarity seem daunting."

He reminded the bishops of Pope Francis' call to "go forth from our own comfort zone in order to reach all the peripheries in need of the light of the Gospel" and noted that many of them will be discussing this more at the convocation of Catholic leaders in Orlando, in July.

Worship and liturgy

The USCCB overwhelmingly approved revisions to the guidelines governing the celebration of sacraments for people with disabilities that take into account medical and technological developments. Passed 180-1 June 14, the revisions in the "Guidelines for the Celebration of Sacraments with Persons with Disabilities" updates a document that was adopted in 1995.

The guidelines were developed as a tool to improve access to the sacraments by persons with disabilities and reduce inconsistencies in pastoral practice.

In other votes, the bishops approved a new translation of the "Order of Blessing the Oil of Catechumens and of the Sick and of Consecrating the Chrism," 178-3. The ritual is used each year at diocesan chrism Masses. It will be sent to the Vatican's Congregation for Divine Worship and the Sacraments for its "recognitio," or final approval.

However, the bishops' approval of a collection of blessings in Spanish for use in the U.S. that complement English texts included in the "Book of Blessings" fell one vote short of reaching the threshold necessary to send it to the Vatican congregation for the recognitio.

The vote on the "Bendicional: Sexta Parte" (Part VI) was 171-2, with two abstentions. Voting will be completed by mail ballot with the Latin-rite bishops who did not attending the assembly.

Sean Gallagher, Natalie Hoefer and John Shaughnessy contributed to this story.

For more information about the Fortnight for Freedom, observed June 21-July 4, visit:

USCCB Resources:

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Archdiocese of St. Louis resources:

http://www.archstl.org/liberty

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Liberty split games on the road, head home for Pride – Amsterdam News

It was lose one and win one for the New York Liberty on their recent road trip. The Libertys four-game winning streak was snapped by the Connecticut Sun, 96-76.

We didnt really have our best effort tonight, said Liberty coach Bill Laimbeer after the loss. We have been pushing hard, being shorthanded, and tonight we kind of hit a wall a little bit and didnt have the energy necessary. They are feeling good about themselves and we knew it would be a hard game if we didnt put forth the effort.

The Liberty then headed to Texas to take on the Dallas Wings. It was a close encounter of the toughest kind, but the Liberty managed to force overtime, prevailing 102-93. Four Liberty players scored in double figures, including Shavonte Zellous with a season-high 28 points. It was Zellous sixth consecutive game in double figures.

Our defense made stops down the stretch, said Laimbeer. Zellous was really key offensive-wise in the second half for us. Really attacked, facilitated a lot. But I think our stopswe had a lot of blocked shots in the second half, and got the rebounds.

The Liberty has not played a game since Dallas and has had time to get some rest and focused practice. The team is still without Epiphanny Prince and Kia Vaughn, and replacement guard Lindsay Allen continues to make her case that she belongs in the WNBA with strong minutes in both road games.

June is Gay Pride month, and the Liberty is showing decisive support for the LGBT community. Friday night, the Liberty look to turn the tables on the Connecticut Sun as New York celebrates Pride Night at Madison Square Garden. Then Sunday, for the first time in team history, the Liberty will have a float in the Gay Pride Parade. The players and coaches will be joined by team executives, members of the Torch Patrol and Timeless Torches as well as select fans.

Love is love; Im all about that, said Zellous. I give credit to the WNBA, New York Liberty and everybody around the league to bring this. Giving a Pride month, it just shows us as a league supporting important causes, and this is a big cause. Im very excited for the parade.

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Demolition begins at Penn Plaza site in East Liberty – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Demolition begins at Penn Plaza site in East Liberty
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Demolition has begun at the remaining Penn Plaza apartments in East Liberty, the site of a long-running dispute between the city and a developer that has grown into a flashpoint for broader issues of affordable housing in Pittsburgh. A group of ...

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Demolition begins at Penn Plaza site in East Liberty - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette