Stranded runners leave Liberty softball’s season stuck in PIAA quarters – lehighvalleylive.com

Liberty High Schools softball team couldnt locate the big hit it needed to turn the tide of the game on Thursday.

And, while the Hurricanes searched, Spring-Ford found its knockout punch and ended the Bethlehem schools historic season.

Liberty fell to the Rams, 9-2, in the PIAA Class 6A quarterfinals at Parkland High School.

Spring-Ford, the third-place team from District 1, advances to Mondays state semifinals, where it will meet the Council Rock North-Hazleton winner.

The Rams jumped out in front during the games second at-bat when Megan Kern launched a home run over the right field fence, a rare occurrence at the South Whitehall Township venue.

Spring-Ford (21-4) led the rest of the way, tacking on an insurance run in the fifth inning, before breaking the contest open with a three-run sixth inning and four-run seventh.

Bridget Sharkey provided the pop in the last three innings, smacking a run-scoring double in each frame and finishing with five RBIs for the Rams.

We knew coming in that they were going to be one of the better teams weve faced, Hurricanes senior center fielder Reyna DeJesus said of Spring-Ford.

Liberty (21-6) put a pair of runners on base during the first, third and fifth innings, but didnt push any across.

We got the girls on base, we just couldnt get them around, Liberty coach Sam Carrodo said. We had first-and-second, second-and-third a few times, we just couldnt get that hit to bring them in. Thats what separates good teams from great teams when it comes to this level. If you want to advance, youve got to get those runners in.

The Hurricanes finally broke onto the scoreboard in the bottom of the sixth inning thanks to RBI singles from Paige Zigmund and Alexa Burger.

I tell you what, they could have given up, Carrodo said. They could have let it go, but they kept fighting and fighting and fighting. You have to be proud of them. Theyre great kids.

Despite Thursdays disappointing conclusion, Liberty has plenty to be happy about at the end of the day. The Hurricanes had the most wins in program history, a District 11 title and the schools first victory in the PIAA tournament.

We had a great group of girls, said DeJesus, the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference Co-MVP. People doubted us from the beginning. It was just great to show people what we can do.

Liberty will lose seven seniors: DeJesus, Kristin Kaleycik, Cailin Donegan, Skilee Diaz, Keri Appleman, Jess Watts and Miranda Kinney.

They made us proud all four years not only on the field, but off the field and in the classroom, Carrodo said. They were just outstanding young ladies. The hole that theyre going to leave is going to be very, very tough to fill. But, were going to work at it. We had a very good JV team Hopefully, we can fill some holes with some of those kids and continue on, because I think we have a bright future.

DeJesus, who is headed to the University of Delaware, is confident that the younger players will take this years success and run with it.

We have good freshmen coming in every year, she said. We have juniors and sophomores who are very good and are going to fill our positions when the seniors leave. I think theyre going to make a good run next year.

Kyle Craig may be reached atkcraig@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter@KyleCraigSports. Find Lehigh Valley high school sports on Facebook.

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Stranded runners leave Liberty softball's season stuck in PIAA quarters - lehighvalleylive.com

Detective posing as 13-year-old girl online, leads to charges against Liberty, Mo. attorney – fox4kc.com


Kansas City Star
Detective posing as 13-year-old girl online, leads to charges against Liberty, Mo. attorney
fox4kc.com
LIBERTY, Mo. -- A Liberty, Missouri attorney faces charges of sexual exploitation of a minor because investigators say he had numerous chats online that were sexual in nature, with an undercover officer posing as a 13-year-old girl. Jerome M. Patience ...
Liberty lawyer accused of online sex crimes with someone he thought was a teen girlKansas City Star

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Detective posing as 13-year-old girl online, leads to charges against Liberty, Mo. attorney - fox4kc.com

Five injured in Liberty crash – The Wellsboro Gazette

Five people, four of them less than age 19, were injured in a one-vehicle crash in Liberty Township Saturday, June 3.

According to state police at Mansfield, Drake Schmouder, 18, of Roaring Branch was operating a 1992 Jeep Wrangler northeast on Route 414 in the right lane of travel.

A 2015 Volkswagen Jetta, operated by Danielle L. Page, 40, of Liberty, was traveling southwest on Route 414 in the right lane of travel when she drifted into the opposing lane and hit the Schmouder vehicle head-on, police said.

Page and her three-year-old female passenger were transported to Geisinger Medical Center, Danville with numerous serious injuries.

A 7-year-old passenger in the back seat of the Schmouder vehicle not wearing a seat belt was ejected from the vehicle and was unconscious and unresponsive at the scene, according to police.

The boy also was transported via medical helicopter to Geisinger Medical Center.

Schmouder and a 17-year old female passenger in the his vehicle were wearing seatbelts.

Both were transported to Geisinger Medical Center with serious injuries.

Page was listed in fair condition Wednesday.

Neither Schmouder nor the 7-year-old male were at Geisinger as of Wednesday morning, according to a public relations spokesperson there.

The conditions and whereabouts of the two and the others injured in the crash are unknown.

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Five injured in Liberty crash - The Wellsboro Gazette

Is Proposed "State of Liberty" Constitutional? – The New American

Any people anywhere, being inclined and having the power, have the right to rise up and shake off the existing government, and form a new one that suits them better. This is a most valuable, a most sacred right a right which, we hope and believe, is to liberate the world. Nor is this right confined to cases in which the whole people of an existing government may choose to exercise it. Any portion of such people that can may revolutionize, and make their own of so much of the territory as they inhabit. Speech by Abraham Lincoln in the House of Representatives, January 12, 1848

In December 2016, Washington State Representatives Matt Shea, Bob McCaslin, and David Taylor sponsored House Joint Memorial 4000, which would create the "State of Liberty," the 51st state, out of the portion of Washington State east of the Cascades. Opponents are saying such a move would be unconstitutional.

Sheas bill explains the impetus for the proposed partition: "Since statehood, the lifestyles, culture, and economies of eastern and western Washington have been very distinct and dramatically different, while the urbanization and rapid growth in the western portions of the state has progressively heightened this divergence of cultural and economic values between the western and eastern portions of the state."

Culturally, the area of the propsed State of Liberty, eastern Oregon, Idaho, Montana, and Wyoming are all similar, and have been termed derisively by the Left as the "American Redoubt," a land of ignorant bigots, homesteaders, Bible-thumpers, preppers, gun nuts, and the like. But some residents of this cultural region are proudly adopting the term "Redoubt," noting that liberals have their "redoubts": socialist havens such as San Francisco, Los Angeles, Seattle, Portland, Chicago, New York, etc.

Conservative journalist Sheri Dovale explained the popularity among constitutionalists of the area that includes the proposed State of Liberty in a May 27 article for redoubtnews.com. Calling the American Redoubt a great place to live and to raise a family, she said, the weather is comfortable, it is not too crowded, and it is not overblown with government regulations. We can share our Conservative views and not be incarcerated for them. We can garden and preserve the fruits of our labors. We can raise livestock and provide meat for our families. We can go to church and share the word of God without fear, she added.

In an exclusive statement to The New American, Representative Shea reveals not only the popularity of the proposal, but the prospect for prosperity such a separation would bring: "Liberty State is hugely popular of over 10,000 people polled there is 74% support in eastern Washington. Seattle continues to disparage us on this side of the state and say we are a bunch of welfare freeloaders because we get more money expenditures than we raise in taxes. If we are such a burden then why not let us go then? This is not going away. Ultimately we will have success in this endeavor and keep pushing until we do."

An article published in Liberty Hangout lays out the plan, highlighting obstacles and opportunities:

If the bill succeeds, this would be an important domino for the secession movement, and help inspire other disaffected communities across the nation to secede. As governments decentralize, power is restored to the individual, and communities can appropriately govern themselves as they see fit, without outside influences. As even our founders recognized, the government which is closest to home is easiest to control.

Should the bill fail, communities ought to learn from their efforts and push forward with their own secession movements anyway. For if their voices are not being heard in the federal and state governments anyway, then what do they have to lose? They only have everything to gain.

Strictly speaking, should a new star be added to the flag of the United States for the State of Liberty, secession from the Union would not be involved (though this would involve secession from the state of Washington). Despite the fact that articles and blog posts by many supporters describe the proposal as act of secession, logically a state cannot leave the Union (secede) and be the 51st state!

In a recording posted to SoundCloud last week, Representative Shea refuted the assertion put forth by some opponents that the division of a state into two or more states is unconstitutional.

Thats simply ridiculous! Shea exclaims, referring to the charge of constitutional violation.

Shea cites Article IV, Section 3 of the U.S. Constitution which reads, New states may be admitted by the Congress into this union; but no new states shall be formed or erected within the jurisdiction of any other state; nor any state be formed by the junction of two or more states, or parts of states, without the consent of the legislatures of the states concerned as well as of the Congress.

In other words, should lawmakers in the states parts of which would be ceded to form the State of Liberty agree to allow the division and should Congress do likewise, there is nothing in the Constitution that would prevent the proposal from being enacted.

In fact, this precise procedure has been followed a few times in American history: first, with the formation of the state of Kentucky. In 1789, the state legislature of Virginia approved the creation of the state of Kentucky, followed two years later by the constitutionally mandated approval by Congress; second, the state of Maine was formed in a similar fashion having separated from Massachusetts; and in 1861 in a manner much less constitutionally compliant West Virginia separated from Virginia.

Shea believes that separating from the other states and forming one where people share customs, beliefs, and values is the proper way to protect and preserve those beliefs for generations to come.

Classically, of course, the idea of restraining republics to territories wherein the residents share fundamental values was accepted as a given. In The Spirit of the Laws, Montesquieu asserts that the public good is better felt, better known, lies nearer to each citizen. In this, the celebrated Frenchman was advocating a small size and the State of Liberty, should it be formed, is certainly not small.

The spirit of Montesquieus observation is present in the proposal, however. Those who would choose to become citizens of the State of Liberty would be those who, as explained above by Sheri Dovale, share a vision of the proper size and power of government, as well as more fundamental values, including the importance of religion, family, and self-sufficiency in a well-functioning, peaceful society.

As of now, there seems to be little movement on the part of the Washington State Legislature toward approving the separation. After all, proposals to form a new state out of Eastern Washington were put forth in 2015, 2005, 1991, 1985, and even as far back as 1915; none of which, obviously, succeeded.

Such lack of movement for separation is not not true globally, however, as evidenced by Brexit and the efforts by Scotland and Catalan to break away from the larger societies with which they are close geographically, but historically and culturally very distant. Perhaps these events are portents of a zeitgeist supportive of separation and decentralization and that spirit will sweep across the Cascades and across the State of Liberty.

Representative Shea is undeterred, and told me in a text message, "Liberty is not just a proposed state, it's a state of mind and the more we spread liberty the more successful we are."

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Is Proposed "State of Liberty" Constitutional? - The New American

Cooling off at Liberty Pool – Sedalia Democrat

Taking a leap of faith, Bryan Borgstadt, 11, left, and Hezikiah Montgomery, 12, both of Sedalia, dive off the deep end of the Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. With sunny skies and temperatures in the 80s, the pool was a busy place Thursday. Sunshine and highs in the 90s will continue through the weekend.

Photos by Faith Bemiss | Democrat

Dylon Adair, of Sedalia, splashes into Liberty Pool after riding down the slide Thursday. Dylon was at the pool with his brothers Blayne Nicholson, 8, and Ricky Adair, 12, who were both celebrating their birthday.

Photos by Faith Bemiss | Democrat

Blayne Nicholson, 8, takes a leap and dives into Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. Blayne, who was celebrating his birthday, was at the pool with his two brothers and mother, Heather Snyder, and father, Rickey Adair.

Photos by Faith Bemiss | Democrat

Getting ready to take the plunge, Ricky Adair, of Sedalia, holds his nose before hitting the water at Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. Ricky was spending the day at the pool to celebrate his birthday.

Photos by Faith Bemiss | Democrat

Taking a leap of faith, Bryan Borgstadt, 11, left, and Hezikiah Montgomery, 12, both of Sedalia, dive off the deep end of the Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. With sunny skies and temperatures in the 80s, the pool was a busy place Thursday. Sunshine and highs in the 90s will continue through the weekend.

Dylon Adair, of Sedalia, splashes into Liberty Pool after riding down the slide Thursday. Dylon was at the pool with his brothers Blayne Nicholson, 8, and Ricky Adair, 12, who were both celebrating their birthday.

Blayne Nicholson, 8, takes a leap and dives into Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. Blayne, who was celebrating his birthday, was at the pool with his two brothers and mother, Heather Snyder, and father, Rickey Adair.

Getting ready to take the plunge, Ricky Adair, of Sedalia, holds his nose before hitting the water at Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. Ricky was spending the day at the pool to celebrate his birthday.

Taking a leap of faith, Bryan Borgstadt, 11, left, and Hezikiah Montgomery, 12, both of Sedalia, dive off the deep end of the Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. With sunny skies and temperatures in the 80s, the pool was a busy place Thursday. Sunshine and highs in the 90s will continue through the weekend.

http://sedaliademocrat.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/web1_TSD060917PoolPhotos-1.jpgTaking a leap of faith, Bryan Borgstadt, 11, left, and Hezikiah Montgomery, 12, both of Sedalia, dive off the deep end of the Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. With sunny skies and temperatures in the 80s, the pool was a busy place Thursday. Sunshine and highs in the 90s will continue through the weekend. Photos by Faith Bemiss | Democrat

Dylon Adair, of Sedalia, splashes into Liberty Pool after riding down the slide Thursday. Dylon was at the pool with his brothers Blayne Nicholson, 8, and Ricky Adair, 12, who were both celebrating their birthday.

http://sedaliademocrat.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/web1_TSD060917PoolPhotos-2-.jpgDylon Adair, of Sedalia, splashes into Liberty Pool after riding down the slide Thursday. Dylon was at the pool with his brothers Blayne Nicholson, 8, and Ricky Adair, 12, who were both celebrating their birthday. Photos by Faith Bemiss | Democrat

Blayne Nicholson, 8, takes a leap and dives into Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. Blayne, who was celebrating his birthday, was at the pool with his two brothers and mother, Heather Snyder, and father, Rickey Adair.

http://sedaliademocrat.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/web1_TSD060917PoolPhotos-3.jpgBlayne Nicholson, 8, takes a leap and dives into Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. Blayne, who was celebrating his birthday, was at the pool with his two brothers and mother, Heather Snyder, and father, Rickey Adair. Photos by Faith Bemiss | Democrat

Getting ready to take the plunge, Ricky Adair, of Sedalia, holds his nose before hitting the water at Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. Ricky was spending the day at the pool to celebrate his birthday.

http://sedaliademocrat.com/wp-content/uploads/2017/06/web1_TSD060917PoolPhotos-4.jpgGetting ready to take the plunge, Ricky Adair, of Sedalia, holds his nose before hitting the water at Liberty Pool Thursday afternoon. Ricky was spending the day at the pool to celebrate his birthday. Photos by Faith Bemiss | Democrat

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Clay Twp. vet recalls ‘harrowing night’ on USS Liberty 50 years later – Port Huron Times Herald

Clay Township veteran Jack Beattie stands in front of a world map depicting all the places he was while in the U.S. Navy on Monday, June 5, 2017. He served on the American spy ship USS Liberty when it was attacked Israeli war planes and ships 50 years ago Thursday, June 8,(Photo: Jackie Smith/Times Herald)Buy Photo

Fifty years ago, Jack Beattie watched unknown pilots flying overhead while he was aboard the USS Liberty in the Mediterranean Sea.

They were close enough to wave to, but they didnt wave back.

Beattie questioned what was happening then. Five decades later, on the anniversary of the attack on his spy ship, hes still seeking answers.

Beattie, 69 ofClay Township,easily recounts the June 8, 1967, attack that took the lives of 34 men on Libertyand wounded 170 more. It's a story he wants Americans to hear and remember 50 years later.

The unprovoked attack by Israeliforces on the ship came during what is now known as the Six-Day War, a clash between Israel and several Arab nations. The U.S. stayedneutral during the conflict.

Beattie said survivors whove sought an investigation into the 1967 attack have often received some pushback that it was anti-Semitic or derogatory of an American ally. On Monday, he said they just wantanswers.

Clay Township Jack Beattie served on the USS Liberty, which was attacked by Israeli forces 50 years ago Thursday. He remembers keeping quiet of the events early on but has made an effort to share his experience since. Jackie Smith/Times Herald

Still, he added its humbling to be in a position to share the experience. It shouldve been done years ago, but it was not, he said. Weve been pushing this for the last 20 years, Id say.

The day of the attack started with aircraft circling overhead.In the hours before the attack, Beattie said they had felt safe onboard, thinking it was clear to whomever they were the Liberty was an American ship and not involved in the conflict.

You could actually wave to the pilots. They never waved back. I (saw) for myself, he said. One time I was on the main deck, and the Israeli transport plane flew over us and went around the ship several times and took off. We were monitored many times. So they knew who we were. The USS Liberty (showed it was the) AGTR-5 on the bow, port and starboard side, in 5-foot letters. On the back of the ship said (it was) the Liberty, and an American flag (flew).

Beattie was in a whaleboat hanging on the side of the ship, helping enginemen, when he saw sailors on the bridge looking at oncoming aircraft moments before rockets hit that day.

Once the rockets hit, he said, they were shocked, andjets came back and forth for about 40 minutes.

They said, Stand by for torpedo attacks, starboard side. Im thinking, Torpedos? Were not even at war. Whats going on? And Im looking at the wall there, and I (knew) thats the starboard side, he said. So I get on the phone; I said, Request permission to leave and they said, Wait one, which is hold on. Im thinking, How much longer are we going to hold on? So I have the phone on, and Im going up the ladder. Id just opened the hatch and was just getting out when the torpedo hit, and all the kids collapsed. There was smoke. It threw me around like a rag doll. And the ship just started rolling over.

The frenzy continued as crews made their way on deck, Beattie said, where they just hunkered down until the machine-gunning of the ship was over. He said hed been banged around but never sought medical treatment.

U.S. Navy veteran Jack Beattie, of Clay Township, shows a picture of himself on Monday, June 5, 2017. While on the USS Liberty, he was an E-3 fireman in the ship's machine shop.(Photo: Jackie Smith/Times Herald)

Beattie called it a harrowing night that left them to sleep in their life jackets for several nights on a ship that ultimately never sank.

In the half-century since the attack, hes made it almost his mission to share his story.

We didnt know it was Israel right away. Nobody knew, Beattie said Monday in his home. John Scott, he was a (damage control) officer with us, down on the deck. (We asked), Mr. Scott, whos shooting? and he said, I dont know. I dont know whos shooting at us. We thought it had to be Egypt. Then we found out.

Beattie, age 19 at the time, said theyd been told not to talk about it and largely kept quiet after the attack something he said probably changed after about 15 years.

Israel would go on to apologize for the attack, citing an error in mistaking the Liberty for an Egyptian ship. However, Beattie said hes among the survivors who believe theres a bigger story there.

When you tell the truth of what happened to you personally, it comes out the same every time, said the veteran, whose naval service ended in 1991.

The Liberty was an American technical research ship or a spy ship. Beattie had been on board two years and was an E-3 fireman, working in the ships machine shop.

Jack Beattie sorts through magazines, photographs and documents regarding the USS Liberty on Monday, June 5, 2017, in the kitchen of his Clay Township home. The U.S. Navy veteran served on the Liberty when it was attacked 50 years ago Thursday.(Photo: Jackie Smith/Times Herald)

In May, Beattie joined the other Vietnam-era veterans who received a special label pin honoring his service from state officials. Sen. Phil Pavlov, R-St. Clair Township, and Senate Majority Floor Leader Mike Kowall shared the honors with Beattie, and Pavlov said 1,000 received the recognition in the capital last year.

Jack was one of the people that reached out, Pavlov said. It was very nice. Hes got a heck of a story if you havent talked to him about it yet. Its unique.

On Tuesday, Beattie was to leave for Washington, D.C., for events and recognition more specific to those who served on the Liberty. That was to include a visit to Arlington National Cemetery to recognize veterans and those killed in the attack and a reunion in Norfolk.

Contact Jackie Smith at (810) 989-6270 or jssmith@gannett.com. Follow her on Twitter @Jackie20Smith.

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Charles scores 18, leads Liberty to 76-61 win over Dream – The San Luis Obispo Tribune


The San Luis Obispo Tribune
Charles scores 18, leads Liberty to 76-61 win over Dream
The San Luis Obispo Tribune
Tina Charles had 18 points and 15 rebounds to help the New York Liberty beat the Atlanta Dream 76-61 Wednesday in the annual school day matinee game. Sugar Rodgers added 16 points for the Liberty (5-3), who have won three straight games. New York ...
Liberty vs. DreamNewsday
Liberty Rides Kid Power To Win Over Atlanta DreamNY Sports Day

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Charles scores 18, leads Liberty to 76-61 win over Dream - The San Luis Obispo Tribune

Liberty Univ. to build new Route 460 exit, entrance ramp – WSET

File Photo: Liberty Univ. sign on Route 460 (WSET)

LYNCHBURG, Va. (WSET) -- Big traffic changes are coming to Liberty University by way of a new exit and entrance ramp.

They're calling the project the "Liberty Mountain Drive 460 Connection" because it will do just that - to the tune of $5 million.

The Campbell County Board of Supervisors approved the project Tuesday night. Liberty will be splitting the cost with VDOT, absorbing what the community would normally pay for.

The hope is that the ramp will help alleviate traffic around Candler's Mountain, which LU's planning coordinator says is a win for everyone.

"The need has been here for many years since the college started to bloom in the late 80s, there was a number of traffic issues," said Brad Butler. "But it's not just movement on and off campus, it's local traffic coming through the community."

The next step is to start advertising bids for construction.

Butler says they aim to have construction start later this year; and they hope to have it completed by winter of 2019.

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Liberty Univ. to build new Route 460 exit, entrance ramp - WSET

Catholics At Prayer Breakfast Praise Trump’s Stance On Religious Liberty – The Daily Caller

Catholics who gathered bright and early on Tuesday for the 13th National Catholic Prayer Breakfast praised Donald Trumps administration for its commitment to religious freedom.

Trump, they told The Daily Caller, is delivering a welcome change from former President Barack Obamas policies, which they said penalized Christians for living out their faith in the public realm.

At the breakfast, more than 1,000 Catholics heard from from Mother Olga of the Sacred Heart, the archbishop who oversees the Archdiocese for the Military Services and Vice President Mike Pence about the importance of Catholicism, service and prayer for the future of the America. They also addressed concerns like religious liberty, unborn life and Christian persecution.

[Vice President] Pences speech really set the tone for how the Trump administration has and will continue to stand for Christian values, college student and business owner Grant Calderon told TheDC. Today was the first time since 2008 that the White House has been represented at the prayer breakfast, which speaks volumes about how much the Obama administration valued not only the Catholic community but the church as a whole.

Arlington, Va., resident Bernadette Michael agreed. Sadly, the Obama administration promoted policies that threatened to drive people of faith from their own businesses, and force the shutdown of vital services faith organizations provide, unless they agreed to actions that violated their faith, she said. While much remains to be done, I am pleased that the Trump administration has taken important steps to end these policies by recognizing the right of people and organizations faced with severe penalties to seek redress on the basis of their First Amendment rights.

The Obama administration was heavily criticized by Catholic leaders for many policies, such as threatening to pull funding from schools that did not allow gender-dysphoric teens to use the restroom and locker room of their choice. Likewise, the administration said that federal contractors must treat same-sex couples the same as married couples with hiring policies, and attempted to expand direct federal funding of abortion through the Affordable Care Acts insurance exchanges.

But perhaps no policy was more excoriated than a 2012 mandate requiring many non-profit and for-profit organizations to be involved with insuring contraceptives and abortifacients. That mandate first lost in the 2014 Hobby Lobby Supreme Court decision that said closely held corporations would not have to follow the mandate, and then again in 2016 when the court ordered the administration to negotiate a resolution with religiously-affiliated non-profits, such as the Little Sisters of the Poor, Thomas Aquinas College and 35 other groups that challenged the mandate.

Trump promised to reverse the mandate and to stand with social conservatives on most issues. Leaked information last week indicated that the administration is beginning that process. Trump has also signed an expanded ban on federal funding of international groups that promote abortion. Trump has let the Obama contractor regulations stand.

Self-described cradle Catholic and pro-life and religious liberty advocate Michele Tennery told TheDC that Trumps administration has taken a strong stance in defense of our God-given right of religious liberty on which our great Nation was founded. President Trump has shown bold leadershipby signing an Executive Order in the Rose Garden to restore religious liberty in the public square.

She praised Trump for the Department of Justices recent move to draftrules regarding our religious liberties and our rights of conscience in the public square.

President Trump wants all Americans to follow the dictates of their conscience and their values as they live out their lives in America, continued Tennery. The president believes that our freedom to practice our faith is the birthright of every American. Conversely, the Obama Administration and itsHHS Mandate within Obamacare, violated Americansfundamental rights of consciencewith its HHS Mandate regarding birth control and abortifacients being offered and paid for within health care insurance policies.

A spokesperson for the Military Archdiocese said, Certainly, the Trump Administration has made clear that it supports the free exercise of religion, as we heard from Vice President Pence this morning, and thats a welcome change of pace. We just hope the Administration can turn words to action. There is certainly a better climate and less urgency about pushing an agenda neutralizing religion.

Area pro-life leader Will Waldron, the Executive Director of Divine Mercy Care, said that the Trump administration is showing a complete 180-degree turn in the policies relating to abortion.

The previous administration wanted to make abortion easily accessible, culturally acceptable, and even free, he explained. The strategy was right in line with Planned Parenthoods culture-of-death agenda.By contrast, the current administration is collaborating with the pro-life movement to make abortion at least much less frequent, if not soon eliminated entirely.

Attendees also praised Pence, who spoke about being raised Catholic before he became an Evangelical Christian. I really enjoyed Pences speech, said Calderon, not only because of the way he delivered it but also the content. The agenda of the administration on hot issues such as abortion and foreign policy was made very transparent. Pence did not use any weasel words, he stood his ground on issues that even the church remains divided on, which says a lot about his character.

Michael had no criticism of Pence, whom she said spoke movingly of the continuing importance to him of his Catholic upbringing and the positive role that Catholics, individually and in lay and religious organizations, have played in improving the lives of so many Americans.He emphasized that he and President Trump stand with Catholicsand those of other faiths, in working for the protection of the poorand vulnerable, and in educating young people to be citizens who serve others.

I cant think of anything more positive, concluded Michael.

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Catholics At Prayer Breakfast Praise Trump's Stance On Religious Liberty - The Daily Caller

Fiat Chrysler under investigation for Jeep Liberty airbag failures – CNET

Before the federal government compels an automaker to issue a recall, it will first investigate the issue. That's what's going on right now with one specific Jeep model.

The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) is investigating a potential issue that could affect approximately 105,000 examples of the 2012 Jeep Liberty SUV. Since it's just an investigation, there are no specifics available for the cars, whether it's certain trim levels or build dates.

NHTSA investigations aren't the only way to spur a recall. Automakers can issue them voluntarily, as well.

The investigation began after the NHTSA received 44 complaints regarding the airbag system. The reports allege that the airbag warning light stayed illuminated after the occupant restraint controller, which controls airbag deployment, apparently failed. If this controller fails, it could prevent the airbags from deploying in the event of a crash, which is a massive safety issue, if true.

According to NHTSA documents, some owners were able to remedy the issue by having the controller replaced, while others opted to forego a fix, even after being advised that the controller needed replacing. The investigation is limited to the 2012 model, because "reports involving earlier model years appear to be less frequent."

The NHTSA's investigation will look at the "scope, frequency and safety-related consequence" of the purported defect. If the feds determine that this issue is widespread and occupant safety is at risk, it can compel the automaker to recall the vehicle to remedy the issue. Were that to happen, the solution would likely be the same simple parts replacement that remedied the warning light as mentioned above.

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Fiat Chrysler under investigation for Jeep Liberty airbag failures - CNET

Liberty Town Center to host arts fest – Hamilton Journal News

For the second consecutive year, the Arts Alliance is producing the Liberty Arts Festival at the Liberty Town Center.

We used our Fall Fair Arts Festival at Cottell Park for inspiration, said Meredith Raffel, executive director of the Arts Alliance. So we bring two arts festivals per year now. Were a highly collaborative organization that likes to partner with as many groups as we can who understand our mission. The Liberty Town Center is that kind of partner, so it was a mutual decision to bring more attention to the arts and the town center. Its a beautiful venue and has a built-in audience of shoppers.

Those who frequent the Liberty Town Center will be familiar with the green space where the festival is to be held, the little park flanked by the Kona Grill, Cobb Theatre and Marriott Hotel.

As with last year, there will be approximately 30 artists from the tri-state area, exhibiting in ceramics, digital art, drawings and pastels, fibers, glass, jewelry, metalwork, mixed media, painting, photography, printmaking and graphics, sculpture, wearable art (handmade clothing and accessories), and wood.

Although those are the official categories, the festival is open to all fine arts and fine crafts media. The only difference is artists that fall into the other category would have to provide a detailed description of their process and materials, in addition to meeting the general criteria.

The items all have to be handmade, she said. We also look at originality, quality of construction, and balance. We dont want too many painters or jewelry designers.

The Liberty Arts Festival is a judged and juried show. Winners in individual mediums will receive ribbons, and the Best of Show winner will receive a $250 gift card to the Liberty Town Center. The artists will be displaying as well as selling their work, and there will be live music, as well.

How to go

What: Liberty Arts Festival

Where: Liberty Center, 7100 Foundry Row, Liberty Twp.

When: Noon-8 p.m. Saturday, June 10

Cost: Free

More info: 513-644-0900 or http://www.liberty-center.com

Contact this contributing writer at aaronepple@gmail.com.

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Liberty Town Center to host arts fest - Hamilton Journal News

Bond set at $1 million for student accused in West Liberty school shooting – The Columbus Dispatch

Holly Zachariah The Columbus Dispatch @hollyzachariah

URBANA - A Champaign County juvenile-court judge set bond for the first time today for the student accused of the Jan. 20 shooting at West Liberty-Salem High School.

Judge Lori L. Reisinger set 17-year-old Eli Serna's bond at $1 million, as she weighs now whether the case against Serna qualifies for an automatic transfer to adult court.

She said that if Serna, who is currently in custody in juvenile detention, is released he must wear a GPS ankle monitor and be with a responsible adult 24 hours a day.

She also ordered that he have no contact with any of the named victims in the case, or any student or teacher in the school district.

Serna faces 13 charges in connection with the shooting, the most serious among them two counts of attempted murder and three counts of felonious assault.

Authorities say he sneaked his own disassembled 12-gauge, pump-action Mossberg shotgun into the school in his backpack that morning and then reassembled it in a bathroom stall.

He then put on a homemade mask and left the stall as the first bell rang and the hallways had presumably emptied, only to be surprised when Logan Cole, who was a 16-year-old junior then, entered the bathroom.

Serna shot Cole twice, once in the back and once in the chest. He then fired the gun into the hallway and into two classrooms, before retreating back into the bathroom and surrendering to two administrators.

Cole was critically injured, but finished his school year on the honor roll and is recovering.

A second student, Adam Schultz, was hit by a scattering shot pellet.

Todays court hearing was expected to be to determine what is known as "probable cause" - that the events happened and that Serna committed them. That step is one of many required in juvenile court.

But the hearing never happened. Both prosecutors and the defense attorney waived their rights to it.

That's because in May, the Ohio Supreme Court apparently reversed it own decision that certain cases such as Serna's could not be automatically transferred from juvenile court to adult court.

In reaction to that, Champaign County Prosecutor Kevin Talebi renewed a request for the move to Common Pleas Court. The judge said she rule in writing and indicated she would do that soon.

Talebi objected to the request for bond in the meantime, but was overruled.

"The state has great concern for the safety of the community," Talebi said in court.

He and defense attorney Dennis Lieberman also both referenced "numerous" mental health conditions or concerns with Serna.

Reisinger said that if Serna's family posts bond, he must live with his mother and stepfather and there can be no guns in the home.

If the judge eventually decides to keep the case in juvenile court, Serna has been charged under a "serious youthful offender" designation. That means he could eventually be subject to adult penalties if he breaks the rules in juvenile detention.

hzachariah@dispatch.com

@ollyachariah

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Bond set at $1 million for student accused in West Liberty school shooting - The Columbus Dispatch

Fifty Years Later, NSA Keeps Details of Israel’s USS Liberty Attack Secret – The Intercept

On June 8, 1967, an Israeli torpedo tore through the side of the unarmed American naval vessel USS Liberty, approximately a dozen miles off the Sinai coast. The ship, whose crew was under command of the National Security Agency, was intercepting communications at the height of the Six-Day War when it came under direct Israeli aerial and naval assault.

Reverberations from the torpedo blast sent crewman Ernie Gallo flying across the radio research room where he was stationed. Gallo, a communications technician aboard the Liberty, found himself and his fellow shipmates in the midst of an attack that would leave 34 Americans dead and 171 wounded.

This weekmarks the 50th anniversary of the assault on the USS Liberty, and though it was among the worst attacks in history against a noncombatant U.S. naval vessel, the tragedy remains shrouded in secrecy. The question of if and when Israeli forces became aware they were killing Americans has proved a point of particular contention in the on-again, off-again public debate that has simmered over the last half a century. The Navy Court of Inquirys investigation proceedings following the incident were held in closed sessions, and the survivors who had been on board received gag orders forbidding them to ever talk about what they endured that day.

Now, half a century later, The Intercept is publishing two classified documents provided in the cache of files leaked by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden related to the attack and its aftermath. They reveal previously unknown involvement by Government Communications Headquarters, the U.K. signals intelligence agency; internal NSA communications that seem to bolster a signals intelligence analysts account of the incident, which framed it as an accident; as well as a Hebrew transliteration system unique to the NSA that was in use at least as recently as 2006.

The first document, a formerly unreleased NSA classification guide, details which elements of the incident the agency still regarded as secret as of 2006. The second lists a series of unauthorized signals intelligence disclosures that have had a detrimental effect on our ability to produce intelligence against terrorist targets and other targets of national concern. Remarkably, information relevant to the attack on the Liberty falls within this highly secret category.

Though neither document reveals conclusive information about the causes of the assault, both highlight that at the time of their publication approximately four decades after the incident the NSA was determined to keep even seemingly minor details about the attack classified. The agency declined to comment for this article.

The classification guide, dated November 8, 2006, indicates previously unknown GCHQ involvement in the ships intelligence gathering. The specifics of this involvement remain classified, and it is therefore unclear if involvement was of a material nature on board the ship or through other means. GCHQ declined to comment.

The guide also reveals NSAs own classified Hebrew transliteration system, the existence of which underlines that the agency has historically counted Israel as an intelligence target even as the nation acted as a key partner in signals collection. This inherent tension in the U.S.-Israeli relationship was also manifest on the Liberty, where the Hebrew translators brought aboard the ship were referred to as special Arabic linguists, according to journalist James Bamford, in order to conceal their surveillance of Israeli communications.

Israeli planes and torpedo boats attacked this U.S. Navy research ship, the USS Liberty, in the Mediterranean Sea near the Sinai Peninsula on June 8, 1967.

Photo: Bettmann Archive/Getty Images

The Six-Day War between Israel and its neighbors Jordan, Syria, and Egypt was a conflict that the United States chose to stay out of, despite Israels entreaties for military support. Egypt and Syria were Soviet allies at odds with American-aligned Israel. The local conflict could easily have turned into a direct conflict between the superpowers, which neither the United States nor the USSR wanted. The countries directly involved were left to fend for themselves in what proved to be an overwhelming military and territorial victory for Israel one that doubled the fledgling countrys size in less than a week.

Though the United States refused to intervene on behalf of its ally, it was nevertheless eavesdropping on Israeli military communications during war. There, according to Bamford, lies the rub: Over the course of Israels remarkable territorial acquisition and military victory, it allegedly committed a war crime by slaughteringEgyptian prisoners of war in the city of El Arish in the northern Sinai. Bamford argued in his 2001 book, Body of Secrets, that the USS Libertys proximity to the Sinai, and its ability to intercept Israels motives and activities during the Six-Day War, mighthave prompted Israels attack on the vessel. Other national security experts, including Steve Aftergood of the Federation of American Scientists, disputed Bamfords analysis, however. According to Aftergood, who directs the FAS Project on Government Secrecy, the killing of Egyptian POWs never happened. [There] appears to be no verifiable evidence that such a massacre ever took place, and Bamfords description of events at El Arish doesnt hold up, Aftergood wrote in 2001 following the publication of Body of Secrets.

Ultimately, both the United States and Israels investigations deemed the attack on the Liberty an accident that resulted when Israel mistook the American spy ship for an Egyptian freighter. Bamford considers that conclusion a cover-up, however, citing the gag order issued to survivors, as well as the fact that NSAs deputy director at the time, Louis Tordella, referred to the Israeli Defense Forces preliminary inquiry into the attack a nice whitewash. Still, other sources assert that any notion of cover-up is mere paranoia. According to a spokesperson at the Israeli Ministry of Foreign affairs, the Liberty assault was a tragic accident that was settled between the parties involved years ago, and that, as is the case with many of these matters, there are always enough conspiracy theories to go around, but they never hold water.

The USS Libertys legacy indeed fed conspiracy theories, and Bamford is not alone in asserting a cover-up. The Liberty Veterans Association, an organization comprised of survivors of the 1967 attack, has called for a robust and transparent investigation into the incident for decades, to no avail.

In a statement to The Intercept, Ernie Gallo, who currently serves as the president of the Liberty Veterans Association, said, We now know that the Navy Court of Inquiry was merely for show, as the officers were told to come to the conclusion the Liberty did [its] job and the attack was accidental. Bamford also references the magnitude and length of the attack as proof of its deliberateness: The ship was hit repeatedly, first by planes dropping thousand-pound bombs and napalm, and then by torpedo boats. Israeli forces also jammed the Libertys antennas and communication channels, took out the four .50-caliber machine guns on board, and reportedly shot at life rafts and crew members as they attempted to evacuate the vessel. It was an attack in broad daylight, said Bamford. They were flying a large U.S. flag. [The ship] said USS Liberty on the back. I mean, what do you need?

The incident and its aftermath took a significant psychological toll on survivors, many of whom were reported to suffer from PTSD.One survivor and member of the Liberty Veterans Association, James Ennes, was shot in the femur during the attack, and was then instructed never to discuss it. Ernie Gallo had a fellow crewmate die in his arms. It was decades before survivors began sharing their experiences, and they were sometimes criticized for being anti-Semitic or slanderous of Israel for doing so.

Not all veterans involved believe in a cover-up, however. Former Navy Chief Petty Officer Marvin Nowicki, the chief Hebrew-language analyst aboard a U.S. Navy EC-121 spy plane that was intercepting Israeli aircraft communications as they were assaulting the Liberty, believed the attack was an accident. He stated in a letter to the Wall Street Journal in 2001 that though he heard and recorded Israeli pilots and captains references to the U.S. flag flying on the deck of the Liberty, these remarks were made only after the attack was underway, and not before. It was when aircraft and motor torpedo boat operators moved closer to the Liberty, recalled Nowicki, that they were able to recognize and therefore reference the American flag.

Unbeknownst to Nowicki at the time, his letter to the editor sparked concerns at NSA that he had revealed classified information on the Liberty. The second Snowden document, dated 2002, referenced several disclosures in his letter surrounding National Security Agency sources and methods or NSAs ability to successfully exploit a foreign target. Though the document does not specify which details in Nowickis article constituted such disclosures, it does reference materials related to the investigation. Nowicki, in a statement that would stir apparent concern at both the NSA and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, called the accident a gross error. How can I prove it? he wrote. I cant unless the transcripts/tapes are found and released to the public. I last saw them in a desk drawer at NSA in the late 1970s before I left the service. After several unsuccessful attempts to reach Nowicki byphone andemail, he ultimately responded to a mailed request for comment. He returned The Intercepts original posted letter, on which he had hastily scrawled: I cannot comply w[ith] your request. The last time I spoke publicly, I was visited by NCIS agents. (NCIS stated that it had no records related to Nowickis claim.)

Even 50 years after the attack, and in a radically different geopolitical climate than that of the Six-Day War, extremely limited information is available about the assault and its subsequent investigations. Inquiries by the media and by the survivors have yielded profoundly limited results, despite considerable attempts; ABCs Nightline interviewed survivors decades after the attack, the results of which never aired. And while James Bamford presumes this is because interested parties didnt want unsavory information about Israel broadcast on mainstream American television, Nightlines then-host Ted Koppel said otherwise: At the risk of contributing to the veneer of cover-up that surrounds any discussion of the USS Liberty story, my only recollection is that we did nothing because we found nothing new or substantive. Neither, it seems, has anyone else.

Top photo: A victim of the Israeli assaulton the American communications ship USS Liberty is carried from a helicopter aboard the aircraft carrier USS America somewhere in the Eastern Mediterranean on June 9, 1967.

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Fifty Years Later, NSA Keeps Details of Israel's USS Liberty Attack Secret - The Intercept

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks gets a reboot – Chron.com

Begin Slideshow 20

Photo: Elizabeth Conley, Houston Chronicle

The BLT-Better Grilled Chicken Sandwich done "Denverado Style" (with fried chicken, bacon, smashed deviled egg, pickles and green garlic ranch) at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The BLT-Better Grilled Chicken Sandwich done "Denverado Style" (with fried chicken, bacon, smashed deviled egg, pickles and green garlic ranch) at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The Pineapple Room Loco-Moco'ish' Cheeseburger (plancha-style beef patty, fried chicken breast, cheese, grilled Spam, fried egg, fried onion ring, and "angry" Russian dressing) at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The Pineapple Room Loco-Moco'ish' Cheeseburger (plancha-style beef patty, fried chicken breast, cheese, grilled Spam, fried egg, fried onion ring, and "angry" Russian dressing) at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

Shrimp with jalapenos is offered on the patio menu at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

Shrimp with jalapenos is offered on the patio menu at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

On the patio menu at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks: grilled crab ball and shrimp Louis tacos.

On the patio menu at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks: grilled crab ball and shrimp Louis tacos.

On the patio menu at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks: grilled crab ball and shrimp Louis tacos.

On the patio menu at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks: grilled crab ball and shrimp Louis tacos.

F.E.E.D. TX Team includes COO Brian Schrumpf, from left, culinary director Lance Fegen and development director Carl Eaves stand in the beer garden at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

F.E.E.D. TX Team includes COO Brian Schrumpf, from left, culinary director Lance Fegen and development director Carl Eaves stand in the beer garden at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The rooster from BRC Gastropub now sits in front of the beer garden at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The rooster from BRC Gastropub now sits in front of the beer garden at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

Poutine with Spam and brown mushroom gravy at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

Poutine with Spam and brown mushroom gravy at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

Poutine with Spam and brown mushroom gravy at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

Poutine with Spam and brown mushroom gravy at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The beer garden bar at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The beer garden bar at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The beer garden bar at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The beer garden bar at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The interior of Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The interior of Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is set to open mid-June 2016 at 3715 Alba. It will be the fourth restaurant in the brand from F.E.E.D TX. Shown: Details of interior.

The BLT-Better Grilled Chicken Sandwich done "Denverado Style" (with fried chicken, bacon, smashed deviled egg, pickles and green garlic ranch) at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

The BLT-Better Grilled Chicken Sandwich done "Denverado Style" (with fried chicken, bacon, smashed deviled egg, pickles and green garlic ranch) at Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks.

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks gets a reboot

So many things can go wrong when a restaurant opens. But what happened to Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks is something even the most seasoned restaurateurs were helpless to correct.

Shortly after the F.E.E.D. TX restaurant group opened its charming new restaurant a year ago at 3715 Alba, the city began a full-scale construction project for street drainage and sewer improvements that blocked access to the restaurant. It was a major blow to a restaurant that was eager to begin business in an area not known as a restaurant mecca.

"If we had been a single-entity business, we would have shut down," said Carl Eaves, partner and development director for F.E.E.D. TX which at that time had three other Liberty stores in operation.

But the restaurant didn't shutter. In fact, it survived the long construction ordeal thanks to neighbors who, undeterred by mud, blocked off streets, and construction madness, found their way to Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks. Last week only two weeks after the restaurant regained street access after construction LKGO threw a party to thank those loyal neighbors who kept them afloat.

And now the restaurant is ready for its re-debut to the public. A year after opening, LKGO is marking a "re-opening" with a new menu (about 30 new items) and a new beer garden with its own outdoor bar. Although technically a year old, the restaurant feels brand new an opportunity to start fresh.

F.E.E.D.'s partners took that to heart and made the most of an opportunity to reboot. There's even a new/old mascot in front of the restaurant: the familiar Big Red Cock rooster statue from the former BRC Gastropub.

Culinary director Lance Fegen has made sweeping changes to the dinner menu as well as the happy hour menu and a new beer garden menu that launches June 17. The main dining menu welcomes some familiar dishes from the BRC menu including fried chicken and biscuits, biscuits with bacon jam, pork roll sandwich, poutine with Spam and brown mushroom gravy, triple-cooked wings, and dill and garlic pickles. There are more salads (including variations on the Crab Louis salad), new sandwiches (including a towering Pineapple Room Loco-Moco-ish Cheeseburger made with a beef patty, fried chicken breast, grilled Spam, fried egg, and fried onion ring), a new dry-aged Prime beef program, and expanded children's menu offerings.

"This neighborhood is so rich with kids and families, it doesn't make sense for us not to cater to children," said Brian Schrumpf, company COO, adding that it is the largest kids menu of any of its Liberty Kitchen stores.

When the beer garden menu launches it will offer famous Sabrett natural casing hot dogs, a selection of street tacos, queso made with beer, and a combination plate of tuna salad and egg salad.

LKGO also has an unbeatable happy hour, weekdays from 3 to 6 p.m. and Sunday from 5 to 9 p.m. There are the J n' B Tacos that the company launched when the company briefly launched The El Cantina Superior (at 2 for $1.49, it's a happy hour steal). But there are other bargains: garlic butter and parmesan grilled oysters (2 for $2.50), pimento cheese and ranch-flavor Ritz crackers ($2.50), sweet and hot flank ribs ($3), and $1 fresh oysters. Coupled with $2 domestic can beer or $5 well pour cocktail, and you're sitting pretty.

Fegen said the new menu offerings represent a new commitment to options. "We're going back to choice. One thing that could always be said about BRC and the original Liberty Kitchen: you always got a lot of choices."

A bigger menu, at least in Garden Oaks, is a better menu, Fegen said. "If you can satisfy four out of four people in a family, we're going to be the restaurant of choice," he said.

Maybe it's time to check out the "new" Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks?

Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks, 3715 Alba, 713-290-0074; libertykitchengardenoaks.com

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Liberty Kitchen Garden Oaks gets a reboot - Chron.com

Liberty, Bangor softball teams get locations for PIAA quarterfinals – Update – lehighvalleylive.com

By Josh Folck | For lehighvalleylive.com on June 06, 2017 11:42 AM, updated June 06, 2017 1:11 PM

Liberty and Bangor softball teams have found out where they will play their next state playoff games.

The Hurricanes will play District 1 third-place team Spring-Ford at 4 p.m. at Parkland High School in a Class 6A quarterfinal.

The Slaters will take on District 1 champion Upper Perkiomen at 1:30 p.m. at Lyons Park in Fleetwood. The game was originally scheduled for Patriots Park in Allentown, but then was moved.

Following the Liberty game, it will be District 1 fifth-place team Council Rock North taking on District 2 champion Hazleton at 6 p.m. at Parkland. The Liberty-Spring-Ford winner will play the Council Rock North-Hazleton winner in Monday's semifinals.

In a Class 4A quarterfinal, District 2 champion Tunkhannock will play District 3 runner-up Eastern York at 4 p.m. Thursday at Pates Park. The winner of that game will play the Bangor-Upper Perkiomen winner in the semifinals.

Josh Folck may be reached atjfolck@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter@JoshFolck.FindLehigh Valley high school sports on Facebook.

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Liberty, Bangor softball teams get locations for PIAA quarterfinals - Update - lehighvalleylive.com

No letdown in sight as Liberty softball makes history … – lehighvalleylive.com

After Liberty softball handed Parkland its first loss of the season to win the District 11 Class 6A championship on Thursday night, the Hurricanes were a little worried about having a letdown in their PIAA first round game against Penn Manor at Patriots Park in Allentown.

But the Hurricanes avoided any letdown and made program history in the process on Monday afternoon.

Behind another stellar pitching performance by freshman Paige Zigmund, Liberty posted a 2-0 win over the District 3 runner-up for its first state playoff victory in program history.

"We worried about that a little bit that we would get let down," Liberty coach Sam Carrodo said. "We're kind of the coaching staff that is really kind of weird. When they come over on the bus, I want them dancing, singing, making as much noise as they want. I want them loose and having fun. I don't want them tense and worried about it. We came out here and they were ready to go."

"I was scared. I didn't want to come into this and feel almost too confident and just not play our regular game. But we came out and played our normal game," Zigmund said.

Liberty will play the District 1 third-place team Spring-Ford in Thursday's quarterfinals at a time and place to be determined. Spring-Ford beat District 12 champion St. Huberts 16-1 on Monday.

Zigmund certainly didn't have a letdown after holding Parkland to five hits in the district final. The freshman struck out nine and allowed four hits and two walks.

In the sixth inning, Penn Manor put two runners on with one out, but Zigmund had a strikeout and popout to end the threat.

"It's exciting as a freshman and helping my team to their first playoff game of states and winning it," Zigmund said. "We're just staying calm and keeping the confidence up that we had."

Senior first baseman Jess Watts broke a scoreless tie in the fifth inning with an RBI double. She followed senior designated player Miranda Kinney, who led off the frame with a double.

Watts had four RBIs in the Hurricanes' 11-2 win over Emmaus in the district semifinals.

"I just keep my head clear," Watts said. "We knew she (Penn Manor pitcher Brittany Hook) was going to throw some speed. So I knew if I just had my hands to the ball, it would go pretty far and do good for us."

"Jess Watts, what can you say about her anymore with her hitting," Carrodo said. "And just the defense, she plays solid defense all the time."

Hurricanes senior left fielder Skilee Diaz led off the sixth inning with a single. She then advanced to third on an error and a passed ball before scoring on sacrifice fly by senior center fielder Reyna DeJesus, who also had a single in the fourth inning.

"It's a great feeling overall," DeJesus said about making program history. "It's great to know that we can really show people what we've got. People really doubted us in the beginning of the season. It's just really great to show them that we can actually do it and we have a great team."

Watts, Kinney and senior catcher Cailin Donegan each had a double for Liberty, which improved to 21-5 this season.

"We all love each other," DeJesus said of the Hurricanes. "The pitching, the hitting, the fielding. We just practice so much together and we just do great together. I think it just all fits."

Josh Folck may be reached atjfolck@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter@JoshFolck.FindLehigh Valley high school sports on Facebook.

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No letdown in sight as Liberty softball makes history ... - lehighvalleylive.com

Supreme Court rejects appeal from Marine over religious liberty – Fox News

The Supreme Court on Monday rejected an appeal from a former Marine who was court-martialed in part for expressing her Christian faith in the workplace.

Lower courts had concluded orders from her military superiors did not constitute a "substantial burden" on her First Amendment rights. The justices on Monday upheld her court-martial without comment.

At issue was the extent a federal law on religious freedom protects members of the armed forces like Monifa Sterling, who continued posting biblical verses at her desk, despite orders from a superior that she remove them.

The intersection of free speech on government property, especially within a military context, made this appeal closely watched by a number of advocates on both sides of the debate.

The First Liberty Institute, which represented Sterling, lamented the Supreme Courts call on Monday.

Because the Supreme Court did not decide to review the case, the travesty below by the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces will now stand, Kelly Shackelford, CEO and chief counsel for First Liberty, said in a statement. The military courts outrageous decision means federal judges and military officials can strip our service members of their constitutional rights just because they dont think someones religious beliefs are important enough to be protected. Our service members deserve better.

Sterling, who was a lance corporal stationed at Camp Lejeune, N.C., originally was court-martialed for various offenses relating to separate incidents including disrespecting a superior officer, disobeying lawful orders, and failing to report to an assigned duty.

But the part of the case that fueled her court challenge involved orders to remove a personalized version of the biblical phrase from Isiah 54:17: "No weapon formed against thee shall prosper."

Sterling taped the verses in three spots on her workspace. Court testimony said Sterling's superior repeatedly ordered her to remove the signs -- and when she refused, trashed them.

In its original 4-1 opinion, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces turned away Sterlings case.

"We reject the argument that every interference with a religiously motivated act constitutes a substantial burden on the exercise of religion," the court said.

Sterling was ultimately reduced in rank and given a bad-conduct discharge -- and later left the service. Her legal team acknowledged Sterling did not ask for permission to post or repost the verses but called the earlier ruling against her shameful and wrong.

Fox News Bill Mears contributed to this report.

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Supreme Court rejects appeal from Marine over religious liberty - Fox News

Analysis: Liberty’s vision for the future of F1 broadcasting – Motorsport.com, Edition: Global

Since their arrival, F1s new owners have already made some small but well-received changes to grand prix weekends, such as adding post-qualifying interviews on the grid and making it a little easier for teams to bring their guests into the paddock. As a result, there's a lot of goodwill around, and an air of optimism about the future.

However, as the Liberty team keeps telling us, the strategy is not about the next race or even the rest of the 2017 season, but where the sport is heading three or four years down the line, when it will have a new engine package and a new commercial framework for the teams.

During that time the new bosses will face some major challenges as they chase their goals on several fronts, while picking their way through the complicated arrangements left behind by Bernie Ecclestone.

Redistributing income among the teams, maximising revenue from current and new venues, and adding multiple official sponsors and partners are three of the key targets. But Liberty will also have to deal with the future of F1 broadcasting.

Photo by: Andrew Hone / LAT Images

Of course, to a large degree all of these issues are interrelated just consider where the TV side fits in. The more events there are on the calendar, the more hours of content there are for the broadcasters to sell advertising around.

The more revenue received from TV companies, the more cash goes into the kitty for the teams. The more eyeballs watching races, the more attractive F1 is for sponsors.

As such, how races will be viewed by fans is one of the keys to the future and the word that keeps coming up is 'digital'.

The magic phrase in any discussion of F1's future is OTT, or 'Over The Top.' In essence, that encompasses reaching the consumer's phone, tablet, computer or TV via the internet rather than traditional satellite or cable broadcasting services. Think Netflix, Amazon, and the like.

Carey plans to create a premium package to allow fans around the world to follow the sport this way. It won't be the only way the idea is that traditional free and pay TV formats will survive, but the exact pattern will depend upon where you live.

"It's going to vary market by market, it's clearly not going to be one size fits all," Carey explained recently. "We were really a non-player in the digital platforms, so whether it's free, pay or digital, we want to make sure we're engaging with them all.

"There's no question that the migration in places from free to pay has an impact on audience. Now, almost every sport in the world is going through a migration from free to pay there is a directional shift to pay.

"Part of what we have to do is make sure it's more than free to pay, it's digital how you connect and engage fans across the broader spectrum of free-pay-digital, including OTT, which is a tremendously important opportunity."

F1 cannot lose sight of the fact that overall viewer numbers have to be kept as high as possible. In the UK, for instance, the switch from every race being live on the BBC to only half appearing on C4 has obviously had a significant impact on viewership - and that is something sponsors, looking to maximise their exposure, will naturally take note of.

"We're going to be much more analytical about trying to evaluate the trade-off between reach and dollars," says Carey. "I think in general what has been true is you expect to gravitate towards the pay platform over time, but we want to make sure we're maintaining the reach.

"Obviously, digital will help maintain some of that reach to the degree we can find the right agreements to marry that with some free over the air. That is something we clearly value.

"But our goal is really going to be to engage the full spectrum of video platforms, to find the right balance of reach and dollars."

Photo by: LAT Images

Carey sees F1's future digital service as a premium product that dedicated fans will be willing to pay for so that they can really become deeply involved. It's a vision that the oft-maligned Ecclestone had more than two decades ago, when he was ahead of his time.

"Your most valuable fans are your most passionate fans," says Carey. "Because we actually have an incredibly important group of passionate fans around the world who love the sport.

"And we're actually, as a sport, ideally suited, because we have such a wealth of data and information and such great history, so the ability to really create unique packages. We're still figuring it out for that fan who wants a much deeper understanding of what's going in the sport, what's going on on the track.

"And the demographics of those fans are great too. We have generally a wealthy, educated group, so if you create a package that creates value for them, we think there's real potential to tap into something very special for those fans."

Exactly how it will work is still up for discussion: "I think this year we'd like to really define that package, and take it out into the marketplace and start engaging with consumers.

"We're spending a lot of time with a whiteboard defining what's the product, what is the experience, what is going to be in that to motivate the hardcore F1 fan around the world to pay?

"We haven't priced it yet, but let's say, for example, 10 bucks a month to access that package.

"So creating a subscription package for the strongest F1 fans we think is a tremendously important opportunity. There are geographies that are clearly just upside to us, big countries like China and the US, that we're really just scratching the surface in.

"Some of the digital connections have already indicated the opportunity that exists. It will take time, the US and China aren't going to drive the business in a year or two, but I think we'll get visibility between now and 2020 to really paint a better picture of that opportunity."

As Carey suggests, digital works for F1 because it's an effective way of using the data that permeates the sport, such as laptimes, top speeds and so on.

"There is obviously an opportunity to integrate information with the linear video stream," says Liberty CEO Greg Maffei. "The reality is that that is easier on digital platforms other than television, and it's one of the reasons why OTT offerings are attractive, particularly in a data-rich environment like baseball or F1.

"These digital platforms are going to grow, they are going to fill in interesting opportunities for us in markets, and you will be inter-splicing those, I suspect, with traditional broadcast partners."

It also ties together with sponsorship revenue. F1's sponsors will love the aforementioned demographics in essence, they love people with money to spend on premium products and they will have the opportunity to reach those folk directly via the new digital service.

"Sponsorships in the past have been too one-dimensional," says Carey. "We didn't take advantage of technology, just slapped signs on walls and then counted how many minutes they showed up on TV.

"We need to develop a much more targeted set of experiences that will have that new technology to get differentiation."

Johnny Herbert, Sky Sports F1

Photo by: XPB Images

The challenge is all this is that F1 can't just do what it wants. It has ongoing contracts with broadcasters that were agreed on the basis of exclusivity in those territories. Some of those companies have their own OTT platforms Sky UK has Now TV, for instance and competing with F1's own service will create complications.

"We will have to navigate through broadcast agreements, they'll vary by country, so it's never a one size fits all when you're global," says Carey. "So there'll be a process we have to work through with our broadcast partners to enable us to do that. We're on that path already.

"In two to three years we probably have well over half of the TV agreements coming into some form of renewal. It does happen over a multi-year period, they are either three- or four-year contracts. I think we probably have a fair bit bunched in in the next few years."

New or renewed agreements, such as the one recently concluded with France's Canal Plus, will be written to take F1's digital plans into account. Carey even hopes that broadcasters with ongoing contracts can be persuaded to accept change sooner rather than later.

"We're carving out the flexibility. In some of the historic agreements, there'll be issues that we have to navigate around. It doesn't mean we can't go back and talk to somebody about ways to address it in the midst of an agreement, but as we go forward, the agreements will be structured to much more contemplate the ability to make sure we can exploit all our rights.

"In many ways we think it's good for our television partners, it creates a level of excitement, it creates a level of variety of experiences for fans that we think are good. Bottom line, in the agreements we are doing, we are creating that flexibility."

It's hard to imagine that the broadcasters will be all that accommodating, but who knows?

Of note, too, is that when F1 does renew those deals, it's aiming to have them be shorter than the current ones. The hope is that, a couple of years down, the line the sport will have grown and become so attractive that it can put prices up.

"I would say in general the strategy is not to do the longest deals," says Maffei. "Because we're very bullish on our ability to increase the excitement level, the fan interest, and the broadcaster interest therefore in the sport.

"So having actually shorter-term agreements with an opportunity to increase our position in the next few years is a strategy."

"It is a sport that we think has got a lot of potential," adds Carey. "We're just starting to market it, we're just starting to engage fans in areas like digital platforms, so we think we can create some real momentum and energy in the next couple of years.

"And we really believe we'll be able to take advantage of that as we go forward with current renewals, as well as the next round of renewals."

As the plans all come together, Carey and co. appear to be hoping that over the next few years teams will accept less money, that venues will continue to pay more and more to host races, and that the established TV companies will do the same while potentially ceding viewers to F1's own digital service.

However much of that comes to fruition, there are certainly interesting times ahead for F1.

See the article here:

Analysis: Liberty's vision for the future of F1 broadcasting - Motorsport.com, Edition: Global

Coralville man reported missing – The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Jun 6, 2017 at 8:13 am | Print View

NORTH LIBERTY North Liberty Police are looking for help locating Michael Graham, 37, of Coralville.

A missing persons report was filed by Grahams wife, Jill, on Monday afternoon, according to a Facebook post made by Jill.

Grahams last known location was in a parking lot near his work between Hawkeye Drive and Highway 965 in North Liberty, according to the post.

He is 5 feet 7 inches tall and weighs about 165 pounds, with shaved brown hair and brown eyes, Jill said.

North Liberty Police traced Grahams location at 1 p.m. Monday through his cellphone at Keokuk-Washington Road and 265th Street near Keota, Iowa, according to a news release from North Liberty police. However, police have been unable to locate Graham since.

Grahams 2016 black Volkswagen Jetta has not been located, and police said he sent text messages indicating he had been tied up and forced into the trunk of his vehicle, according to the news release. The license plate number for the Jetta is ELL 592.

Please, please share this information, Jill wrote in the post. He has four children and a wife who are beyond eager to have him home with us.

Anyone with information can call North Liberty Police at (319) 626-5724, Johnson County Communications Center at 319-356-6800 or local law enforcement.

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Coralville man reported missing - The Gazette: Eastern Iowa Breaking News and Headlines

Air bag computer failures in 2012 Jeep Liberty under investigation, NHTSA says – Detroit Free Press

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Associated Press Published 7:58 a.m. ET June 5, 2017 | Updated 8:19 a.m. ET June 5, 2017

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2012 Jeep Liberty Arctic. Picture received Dec. 7, 2012.(Photo: Chrysler)

DETROIT The U.S. government is investigating complaints that air bag control computers in some Jeep Liberty SUVs can fail, preventing the air bag system from operating properly in a crash.

The probe covers about 105,000 of the vehicles from the 2012 model year.

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The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration says in documents posted Monday that it has received 44 complaints about the problem involving a computer that detects crashes and controls air bag deployment. No related injuries have been reported.

Fiat Chrysler says it is cooperating with the probe and that the only safety device affected is a head rest that moves to prevent injuries if a crash happens.

Many drivers told the agency that an air bag warning light came on. In some cases the problem was corrected by replacing the computer, while others kept driving their SUVs with the light on.

One owner said in a complaint that the light came on and he took the Liberty to a dealer, where he was told that he'd have to pay to fix the computer. "This is a safety issue which should be covered by the manufacturer," wrote the person. Others wrote that the repair cost $375 to more than $500.

NHTSA said in the documents that complaints appear to be less frequent in the vehicles from model years before 2012, which was the last year the SUV was built. The government will investigate how often the problem happens and the potential safety consequences. The agency could seek a recall or it could determine there's no safety defect.

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Air bag computer failures in 2012 Jeep Liberty under investigation, NHTSA says - Detroit Free Press