Let’s Play GTA : SA-MP Liberty-Reallife #002 – Busfahrer keiner mag sie – Video


Let #39;s Play GTA : SA-MP Liberty-Reallife #002 - Busfahrer keiner mag sie
Hey, herzlich Willkomen zu einer weiteren Let #39;s Play Reihe. Wir spielen GTA:SA Online sprich SA-MP. Wir stellen euch dort den Reallife Server "Liberty Reallife" vor. In diesem Let #39;s Play...

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Let's Play GTA : SA-MP Liberty-Reallife #002 - Busfahrer keiner mag sie - Video

About Liberty | Official Page | Liberty University

Letter from the President

Liberty University is the largest private, nonprofit university in the nation, the largest university in Virginia, and the largest Christian university in the world. Liberty was founded in 1971 by my father, the late Dr. Jerry Falwell, Sr., with a vision to Train Champions for Christ as a world class university. An accredited institution, Liberty now offers more than 450 unique programs of study. Libertys more than 7,000-acre campus boasts millions of square feet of technologically advanced academic, residential, and recreational space, the vast majority of which was constructed in the last 15 years. Liberty hosts some of the worlds best-known speakers from all walks of life every semester, and our vibrant spiritual life programs are based on a solid doctrinal statement that truly sets us apart from other schools. Our code of conduct teaches discipline and promotes a lifestyle of Biblical morality, but is well-balanced to allow students the freedom to enjoy their college experience. While academics and faith are our top priorities, Liberty also fields 20 NCAA Division I athletic teams, 32 club sport teams, and provides a host of student activities, intramural sports, and recreational opportunities. Everything we do is designed to develop Christ-centered men and women with the values, knowledge and skills essential to impact tomorrows world.

- President Jerry Falwell

Liberty University is a Christian academic community in the tradition of evangelical institutions of higher education. As such, Liberty continues the philosophy of education which first gave rise to the university, and which is summarized in the following propositions.

God, the infinite source of all things, has shown us truth through scripture, nature, history, and above all, in Christ.

Persons are spiritual, rational, moral, social, and physical, created in the image of God. They are, therefore, able to know and to value themselves and other persons, the universe, and God.

Education as the process of teaching and learning, involves the whole person, by developing the knowledge, values, and skills which enable each individual to change freely. Thus it occurs most effectively when both instructor and student are properly related to God and each other through Christ.

Maintaining the vision of the founder, Dr. Jerry Falwell, Liberty University develops Christ-centered men and women with the values, knowledge, and skills essential to impact the world.

Through its residential and online programs, services, facilities, and collaborations, the University educates men and women who will make important contributions to their workplaces and communities, follow their chosen vocations as callings to glorify God, and fulfill the Great Commission.

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About Liberty | Official Page | Liberty University

Fake deputies storm home, rob Liberty County family

Two burglary suspects impersonated Liberty County deputies in an early Sunday home invasion where officials had previously searched for drugs.

Shortly after 4:30 a.m., Arthur and Elizabeth Harrison of Ames, a small town 30 miles northeast of Houston, called the Liberty County Sheriffs Office, demanding to know why their home had been raided by officers.

As no law enforcement agencies reported any similar activity in the county that morning and the description of events did not match police procedure, investigators concluded it had been a robbery, not a raid.

The Harrisons told Sgt. Joel Davila that they had been preparing for work when two men kicked open their front door.

The men wore black clothes with badge shoulder patches and black masks as well as police-type belts, boots and gloves. They carried handguns as they repeatedly shouted, Liberty County Sheriffs Department! Get on the floor! and demanded to know the location of their money.

After being told, the men left carrying a suitcase filled with about $6,000, a shotgun and a .22-caliber revolver.

Investigators said the men put pillow cases on the Harrisons' heads, but did not restrain them, and they had strained to look through the fabric for any identifying clues, to no avail. They were uncertain if the patches on the mens arms were the same as those on the shoulders of investigators.

The Harrisons told investigators they had so much cash in their home because they were gamblers.

Davila said the Harrisons' home had been the target of an Aug. 21 drug raid by the Texas Department of Public Safety, the Daisetta Police Department and the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency. No further information about that raid or the home invasion was available.

The Sheriffs Office requests anyone with information about the incident to call investigators at (936) 336-4500.

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Fake deputies storm home, rob Liberty County family

Liberty High football rebounds post-war

LIBERTY, Miss. (AP) - Among the many side effects of World War II was shutting down high school football programs as boys left to join the military, some even lying about their age to get in.

When the war ended in 1946, football rebounded with a vengeance - especially at Liberty High School.

Those were some of the best days of my life, said Charles T. Dixon, 83, of Liberty. I really wouldnt take nothing for it - not just because I played football but from all that I learned.

In 1946 the school didnt have much to work with. The football field - located at the present site of the old Kellwood Building on Main Street - was low and boggy, sometimes mucky with overflow from the schools large septic tank.

The school hired Coach Harold Dickerson to resurrect the program, and one of the first orders of business was building up the field.

Wed bring shovels with us from home, Dixon said.

Dump trucks would haul dirt to the site, and boys would do much of the work with shovels.

I remember when that old field was just a field, and they graded that off and it became a football field, and that was when the boys came back from service, said the Rev. Ernest Whittington, 83, of Liberty.

There were no age restrictions, and Whittington said boys even in their 20s who had suspended their schooling returned from the war to play ball.

There were some real powerhouses, said Whittington, whose small size landed him the job of manager. Coach Dickerson asked me to be the water boy. Of course, they gave me the title of manager.

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Liberty High football rebounds post-war

Liberty lineman moved to running back

Kevin Morgans will be arunning back for Liberty after playing the offensive line last season.William Montgomery/Times Herald-Record

By WILLIAM MONTGOMERY

Published: 4:00 PM - 08/30/14 Last updated: 12:39 AM - 08/31/14

LIBERTY Aside from the occasional fumble recovery, tipped pass or interception, linemen rarely get to touch the football or taste the glory that comes with being the one to run the ball into the end zone.

Kevin Morgans is going to find out, firsthand, what the fuss is all about. Morgans, a 5-foot-10, 195-pound junior three-year varsity player at Liberty, is returning to his natural position at running back.

As a freshman, Morgans was called up to the varsity team when Liberty needed some help on the offensive and defensive lines. By the end of the 2012 season, Morgans was a two-way starter.

Last season, Morgans started both ways, playing offensive tackle and middle linebacker. With the backfield looking thin and Liberty gaining some younger reinforcements on the line, Morgans is making a rare transition from tackle to running back.

It was kind of evident that it was going to happen eventually but this year it just panned out, Morgans said.

Morgans played running back through his youth career, up until the varsity team needed him to play a different position. A wrestler in the winter months - he was the Section 9 Division II champion at 182 pounds as a sophomore - Morgans has the athleticism and the aggressiveness, as well as the experience, to make the switch.

He has the tools to play running back, said Liberty head coach John Wilhelm. He is actually quite fast. He's a wrestler, so he's pretty cut up. He doesn't have a lot of extra weight. He dropped some weight from wrestling. He's a strong athletic kid. When he was younger we put him on the line because he was an aggressive kid. We were looking for someone who was going to be aggressive, so that's why we put him there. Morgans led Liberty with 112 tackles in 2013. He also got a taste of the backfield, gaining 119 yards on 23 rushing attempts as a sophomore.

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Liberty lineman moved to running back

So Glad I’m Here In Jesus Name – Greater Liberty Temple Youth Choir 1995 – Video


So Glad I #39;m Here In Jesus Name - Greater Liberty Temple Youth Choir 1995
A clip from the 33rd Anniversary DVD, a Youth Service with Brooklyn Temple and Greater Liberty Temple UCOC formerly of Orange, NJ now in Newark, NJ. Honoring Bishop Dr. Robert C. Jiggetts Jr.,...

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So Glad I'm Here In Jesus Name - Greater Liberty Temple Youth Choir 1995 - Video