Meet the mega-donor who funded fight against Georgia ‘religious … – Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)

Opponents of the religious liberty legislation march to the Capitol in 2015. Bob Andres, bandres@ajc.com

Rolling Stone has a fascinating piece on Tim Gill, the mega-donor who pumped more than $422 million of his fortune into the cause of equal rights for the gay community.

One of his main goals was to block religious liberty bills in state legislatures across the nation that critics saw as thinly-veiled attempts to legalize discrimination against same-sex couples.

And one of the groups biggest battlegrounds was Georgia, where Republican lawmakers had pushed for years to adopt a version of the measure and in 2016 aimed to finish the job.

From Rolling Stone:

In response, the Gill Foundation helped form a new front group called Georgia Prospers, and settled on a strategy that eschewed noisy, colorful protests in favor of a state-centric approach led by businesses. You can get money from outside, Gill explains, but the state has to own it. Gill also knew the importance of finding the right face for the effort, in this case, Ronnie Chance, a former Republican state Senate majority leader under the current governor, Nathan Deal.

In January 2016, Georgia Prospers kicked off with more than 100 businesses signed on, including Coca-Cola, Google and Marriott. As the RFRA fight played out in Atlanta, Chances phone never stopped ringing, he says, with companies clamoring to sign his groups pro-equality pledge. But the full genius of the approach wasnt clear to him until another dad at his daughters basketball practice mentioned reading about the effort in a companywide e-mail. The man worked at Delta, which had joined Georgia Prospers and was mobilizing employees to call their representatives. Lawmakers, Chance realized, were hearing organically from their constituents who may be employed by Home Depot or Delta Air Lines.

You know the story from here.

The measure passed in March 2016 with the help of House Speaker David Ralston and Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle. It was vetoed days after the sessions end by Gov. Nathan Deal, who said the state does not have to discriminate against anyone to protect the faith-based community.

An effort to revive it again this year went nowhere, this time amid staunch opposition from Cagle, Ralston and Deal.

Rolling Stone called it the first major victory for what Gill calls his Southern strategy.

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Meet the mega-donor who funded fight against Georgia 'religious ... - Atlanta Journal Constitution (blog)

Police: Texting While Driving Led To Violent Liberty Bridge Crash – CBS Pittsburgh / KDKA

June 30, 2017 6:21 PM By Julie Grant

PITTSBURGH (KDKA) A Brownsville man is facing charges for allegedly texting while driving and causing a violent crash on the Liberty Bridge on April 4.

There is a warrant out for the arrest of the man police say caused that crash because of texting while driving.

Thirty-two-year-old Richard Hauschel II, of Brownsville in Fayette county, is facing felony charges of aggravated assault by vehicle for allegedly texting while driving and causing a violent crash on the Liberty Bridge that left a family critically injured.

According to Pittsburgh Police detectives, Hauschel was driving a Dodge Journey when he accelerated coming out of the tunnels into the wrong lane.

Police accident reconstruction experts said Hauschel was going 44 mph in what was a 30 mph active work zone.

According to detectives, Hauschels cell phone records show several text messages were received and sent in the minutes leading up to the crash.

Police said Brandon and Maureen Ciampaglia and their 4-day-old son were heading outbound in a Nissan when they were struck by Hauschel head-on. Police said the force caused their car to spin out and hit Robert Hvizdak, who was driving a Lexus.

Police said Hvizdak did not want to be taken to a hospital, but the Ciampaglia family and Hauschel were transported for treatment.

Police report interviewing Hauschel in the hospital after the crash. They said he told them he came through the Liberty Tunnel onto the bridge, but cannot recall anything after that until he woke up in an ambulance on the way to the hospital.

KDKA went to the Ciampaglias home and tried to speak with them to get an update on their conditions and the reaction to the charges being filed, but nobody answered the door.

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Julie Grant is a reporter, anchor and legal editor at KDKA. Shes thrilled to be working for the station she grew up watching. VITALS Joined KDKA: September of 2016 Hometown: Steubenville, Ohio (my parents are...

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Police: Texting While Driving Led To Violent Liberty Bridge Crash - CBS Pittsburgh / KDKA

Man accused of texting and driving in Liberty Bridge crash that … – Tribune-Review

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Burns: Remembering the price of our liberty – Longview News-Journal

Peggy Garner had a deeper and different understanding of liberty than Patrick Henry he who famously shouted "Give me liberty or give me death." Peggy Garner had no liberty. She was a slave. Henry detested taxation without representation by a distant British Parliament.

Peggy Garner paid no taxes and had no liberty. A black female imprisoned on a plantation, she had perhaps the least liberty of all.

But when she escaped across a frozen river to Ohio with her four children perhaps she faintly heard Henry when hunted down by slave catchers. "Give me liberty or give me death?" Peggy chose death, wanting to kill her children and herself rather than be returned to slavery. She had killed just one child, slitting her throat, before being restrained.

Opposites help define each other, much as the meaning of light resides in total darkness. Peggy Garner's act of desperation tells us what liberty means in a deeper and different way than even Thomas Jefferson's majestic claim that we are endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.

We get a deeper sense of the gradual, grinding progression of actualizing Jefferson's bold claim for all Americans when two centuries elapsed between a colonial editor's shutting down his paper rather than pay the Stamp Act tax of 1764 and Martin Luther King Jr.'s soaring words on the national mall in 1963. "Free at last! Free at last! Thank God Almighty, we are free at last!"

And while black females were perhaps last in line for liberty and white males, particularly wealthy ones, first in line our liberty largely started with wealthy white males claiming those rights and then, with commoner whites and free blacks and some courageous women, fighting with guns, guts, and French help to secure freedom from British rule.

Two people illustrate the gradual "trickle down" progression of liberty over the next several centuries. David Acheson immigrated to America from northern Ireland in 1788 with the clothes on his back and a letter of introduction from his minister. Nine years later he was a successful banker, businessman and politician who was invited to dine with President George Washington. The vast expanse of our new country soon from sea to shining sea opened up opportunities for those with ambition and talent to pursue their dreams, the "American dream."

No one really wanted war. But Abraham Lincoln knew it was coming, perhaps unavoidable due to historical circumstance and economic pressures. Julia Ward Howe awakened about dawn at her Washington hotel and peered out the window. Having watched Union troops parade the day before, new words came to her for the rhythmic music of "John Brown's Body."

"Mine eyes have seen the glory of the coming of the Lord, He is trampling out the vintage where the grapes of wrath are stored; He hath loosed the fateful lightning of his terrible swift sword; His truth is marching on."

David Acheson's grandson of like name marched to those stirring words on his way to Gettysburg. He fell in battle a few hours later, giving his life that others might be free to live theirs more fully. His blood sacrifice and that of thousands more fulfilled the last verse of The Battle Hymn of the Republic "As he died to make men holy, let us die to make men free."

Julia Ward Howe fought for women's rights and emancipation from a paternalistic culture her own husband was something of a tyrant for the next 50 years, being a fighting feminist before the phrase existed. Deep in her heart, she knew one eternal truth that was marching on was that none of us are truly free until we all are free free to fully develop our God-given talents as both an act of self-fulfillment and a contribution to our national welfare.

For, as Peggy Garner, David Acheson, Julia Ward Howe and many others knew, the freedom we celebrate on the Fourth of July must be for all people and for as long as we are willing to sacrifice blood and treasure to preserve it. God bless America and let us not let our liberty slip away. Many paid a high price for us to have it.

James F. Burns, a retired professor at the University of Florida, is an occasional contributor to the Saturday Forum.

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Burns: Remembering the price of our liberty - Longview News-Journal

Ivory Latta and the ‘Goon Squad’ power Mystics past Liberty – Washington Post

Ivory Latta has a name for certain Washington Mystics players who come off the bench with her. The Goon Squad, she has dubbed the reserves, and Thursday night they changed the tenor of the game when Washington was getting outpaced, being pushed around and unable to make a basket against the New York Liberty.

That group especially Latta and Tianna Hawkins fueled the Mystics past the Liberty, 67-54, in Washingtons last game at Verizon Center before a nearly three-week stretch of road games begins Sunday.

Tonight we set basketball back about 20 years offensively, Coach Mike Thibault said. Weve won three games already where weve shot terribly but figured out a way to win. Our bench bailed us out.

Latta helped pace the team with 15 points, which ties her season high, and four three-pointers, and Hawkins had 13points and four steals in what was the lowest-scoring game of the season for both the Mystics (10-5) and the Liberty (7-6).

Washington shot a meager 30.9 percent from the field and 16 percent from the three-point line. New York shot just 32.3percent and 23.1 from beyond the arc.

Latta was 4 for 6 from three-point range and was the only Mystics player to make a three-pointer.

[Elena Delle Donne of Washington Mystics leads WNBA Eastern Conference in all-star voting]

Forward Elena Delle Donne was the only starter to score in double figures, also scoring 15 points, and pulled in a team-high nine rebounds.

Were the Goon Squad, Latta said. When you get in there, you just do what you got to do to help lift a teammate or continue a run or if we just need to pick it up. We look at it as just doing our job.

The win Washingtons lowest-scoring victory since beating San Antonio, 66-63, in August 2015 was also a testament to the Mystics defense.

New York was missing starting guard Sugar Rodgers (lower-back injury) but started strong. The Liberty set a crisp pace and outmuscled Washington in the paint during the first quarter, ending the period with a 15-9 lead as the Mystics struggled to create any movement on offense. Washington made just one basket in the first six minutes and finished the first quarter just 4 for 17 from the field before Thibault plugged in Latta to play alongside starting point guard Tayler Hill.

A lineup of Hill, Latta, Delle Donne, Hawkins and Natasha Cloud started the second quarter and closed the gap. Cloud started the period with a 13-foot jumper, and Hawkins added back-to-back baskets to tie the game at 15. Hawkins, Latta and Cloud were also much-needed aggressors on the defensive end, helping energize a defense that looked shellshocked by New Yorks physicality early on. Washington ended up with just six turnovers to New Yorks 19.

It was a sense of urgency knowing that we came out a little slow and we needed to step up on defense, Delle Donne said. You cant always control if the ball is going to go in the hoop, but you can control your effort on the defensive end. Tayler disrupting, letting them start their offense a little bit further back than theyre used to it just helped us contain them.

That defensive urgency also fueled the offense. In the second quarter, the Mystics shot 43.8 percent to the Libertys 23.8 percent. Washington held New York to just seven points in the third quarter, outscoring the Liberty 11-3 in the final 7:20 as it methodically built a lead.

[Mystics aim to maintain consistency as they finally approach full strength]

Guard Shavonte Zellous led the Liberty with 17 points, and Epiphanny Prince added 12. New Yorks leading scorer, Tina Charles, had just eight points, well below her 20.5-per game average, matching up against Delle Donne.

To Thibault, the game was evidence of a team culture solidifying. He has preached defense since the day his new roster came together for the first time this spring.

[Defense] is a focal point from the first day of training camp, Thibault said. And I thought for the first eight or nine games we played kind of safe defense. We played okay, but we werent aggressive enough to get as many steals and deflections. ... We won because we defended the heck out of them. So Im happy with that.

The defense gets an added boost this weekend with the return of starting center Emma Meesseman. She has been playing for the Belgian national team for the past month.

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Ivory Latta and the 'Goon Squad' power Mystics past Liberty - Washington Post

Liberty doesn’t mean life: Report shows freed cities in Iraq and Syria face major hurdles – Military Times

WASHINGTON Cities in Iraq and Syria that have been liberated from Islamic State control still suffer a great deal of violence at the hands of the extremist group, but the attacks may beISISreaction to its weakening foothold in the region, according to a report Thursday bythe U.S. Military Academys Combating Terrorism Center.

The report monitored 16 cities, from their date of liberation until April 2017, and used self-reported data from ISIS, which only reported death tolls in 30 percent of its 1,468 attacks. The group claimed just under 2,600 deaths, about 8.6 per attack. According to the CTC report, if that average were applied to the remaining 70 percent of attacks, the death toll would be greater than 12,000.

Among the 16 cities surveyed, the eastern side of Mosul, Iraq, has the highest number of post-liberation attacks, averaging around 130 a month. According to Ilan Goldenberg, director the Middle East Security Program at the Center for a New American Security, Mosul may be suffering more because it is a major symbol for ISIS. Its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, now believed to be dead, declared the caliphate there and its fall to ISIS was a huge victory for the group.

When Mosul fell, that was the news that rocked the world,Goldenberg said. Once [ISIS] has lost Mosul and Raqqa, therell still be a lot of fighting to do, but the narrative will be, This is inevitable.

Despite all the coverage that suicide bombings receive, most Islamic State military action now happens at a distance. More than 82 percent of its attacks on freed areas avoid direct confrontation.

Thus, although the group maintains the infrastructure to carry out operations in territories that have been liberated, it seems particularly focused on avoiding (or, at the very least, not carrying out) operations that will further deplete the groups strength in these areas, the West Point report said.This strategy seems well suited to increasing the groups ability to remain on the battlefield and not waste its strength.

In Goldenbergs mind, firing from afaris a last gasp effort. But beyond stopping violence in freed cities, political problems remain after order is restored.

In many areas, you still have forces that are not indigenous to the local area and dont really have legitimacy amongst the local population, Goldenberg said.

Daniel Milton and Muhammad al-`Ubaydi, authors of the West Point report,note that in Manbij, Syria, U.S. forces had to prevent fighting between Syrian Democratic Forces and Turkish government forces. The variety of actors converging on Mosul to drive out ISIS could pose similar problems, not only there, but in other cities as well.

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Liberty doesn't mean life: Report shows freed cities in Iraq and Syria face major hurdles - Military Times

Liberty fall on Pride Night – Amsterdam News

The crowd was more than 10,000 strong, some of them rocking super cool rainbow sunglasses courtesy of Resorts World Casino NYC. Others in attendance bore the NOH8 message on their faces. Celebrities sat court-side, including cast members from the hit show Orange Is the New Black. Iconic dance music singer/songwriter Crystal Waters performed at halftime. Last Fridays Pride Night at Madison Square Garden was almost perfect, except that the New York Liberty lost to the Connecticut Sun 94-89.

Connecticut played a very strong game all game long, said Liberty coach Bill Laimbeer. We have to value the basketball moregiving up 28 points off turnovers and 21 points on offensive rebounds was our undoing. Thats what cost us the game.

Kia Vaughn and Epiphanny Prince returned to the lineup after spending several weeks in Europe. Prince contributed 14 points, five rebounds and three assists. Huge baskets from Bria Hartley and Shavonte Zellous late in the fourth quarter brought victory within sight for the Liberty, but the Sun pulled away in the final minute.

We came out strong, said Sun center Jonquel Jones, the second player from the Bahamas to play in the WNBA. Today we learned a little bit about making sure that were really focused coming into that last quarter. We were still able to pull it out.

We knew the crowd was going to be loud for Pride Night, said Sun guard Alex Bentley, who met the celebs before heading to the locker room. Those are the atmospheres you live for. We love playing basketball and we love this big stage.

On Sunday, for the first time in team history the Liberty had its own float in the NYC Pride March. Players, members of the Torch Patrol and Maddie were on hand. The NBA/WNBA also had a float. This participation is a joyful departure from how the league treated its die-hard LGBT fan base in its first decade and marks a significant change for the Liberty.

Performing at Madison Square Garden felt 100 percent pure amazing, said Jeff Cowans, one of Waters dancers and a native New Yorker. For me, Pride means a lot. To be a part of this in a time where more people are having more pride in themselves is just amazing. Im glad I got to be at a game, see it this way and participate.

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Liberty fall on Pride Night - Amsterdam News

Police: Man was texting and driving when he caused crash of Liberty Bridge – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Police: Man was texting and driving when he caused crash of Liberty Bridge
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
Richard Lee Hauschel II, 32, of Brownsville was charged Tuesday with aggravated assault, recklessly endangering another person and other offenses. The April 4 crash shut down the bridge for several hours and was the catalyst of a massive traffic jam ...
Police: driver texting before Liberty Bridge crash that injured family, babyWTAE Pittsburgh

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Police: Man was texting and driving when he caused crash of Liberty Bridge - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

North Liberty boy fishes stolen bike from Michigan at local pond – KCRG

NORTH LIBERTY, Iowa (KCRG-TV9) -- A boy in North Liberty got a surprise when he went fishing with his brother but this fish story isn't about a fish.

"So I threw my line in and it got attached to a tire but I thought it was weeds so I started pulling and I saw the tire and I eventually pulled the bike out" said Tyler Loren of North Liberty.

Tyler Loren's catch in Liberty Pond over the weekend easily won the fishing contest with his brother.

"We just immediately knew I should give it to the police and do the right thing" said Loren.

"We showed up, saw the bike. It was in pretty good shape and were able to run the serial number and when he did that it came back as a hit confirmation so it was stolen out of Michigan State. I think it was Michigan State University" said North Liberty Police Chief Diane Venenga.

Now the question - who's on the hook for the dumping the bike?

"I kept thinking maybe somebody moved or was it sold on Craigslist? There's all kinds of possibilities" said Chief Venenga.

"So we just assumed that somebody probably stole it, drove it, and then dumped it when they were done with it" said Christine Schultz, Tyler's mother.

Chief Venenga said it's likely the thief dumped it there. She said Tyler made the right call not to throw this catch back.

"They could've found it and left it there, thrown it back in or just dumped it by the side of the pond but they took that extra step to make that report" said Chief Venenga.

The catch to this story... the bike rode here from Michigan.

"I was actually very surprised. I was surprised that they were able to find the owner, especially being so far away" said Schultz.

"It's always a great day when we can return stolen or abandoned or found property back to the owner" said Chief Venenga.

Making this the story of the bike that didn't get away.

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North Liberty boy fishes stolen bike from Michigan at local pond - KCRG

How the Supreme Court is restoring religious liberty in America – New York Post

God save the United States and this honorable court. Even with all the cynicism in our politics, that prayer is still the traditional announcement of the opening of a session of the highest court in our land.

And its starting to look like one good deed begets another. The Supreme Court under Chief Justice John Roberts is well on its way to becoming a historic champion of religious freedom.

That is the outlook after justices on Monday blocked Missouri from denying a grant for safe playgrounds to a church school. The subsidy, for paving playgrounds with recycled tires, had nothing to do with religion.

The case wont secure the reputation of the Roberts court in a fell swoop. Not the way, say, Brown v. Board of Education secured the reputation of the court led by Chief Justice Earl Warren.

The long legal battle for religious freedom has been taking place in small-to-medium sized legal skirmishes all over the country. With the Missouri case, the hugeness of the trend is starting to become clear.

The Show Me state, the court ruled, cant discriminate against religious people by denying them the non-religious support everyone else gets. It would violate the free exercise clause of the First Amendment, the court ruled.

It also would have turned Christians and those who choose to go to other religious schools into second-class citizens. So more than playground paving was on the line in Missouri.

The court ruled by a solid majority of seven to two. The only dissenters were Justices Sonia Sotomayor, who seems to grow angry at the idea of unfettered religious practice, and the constitutional crabapple Ruth Bader Ginsburg. (Only a few months ago, Ginsburg joked that were Donald Trump elected president shed quit America for New Zealand. She probably didnt know that the head of state in New Zealand must swear he is a Protestant.)

Trinity Lutheran, in any event, would be a satisfying case in and of itself. But its part of a string of cases in which the Roberts court has vindicated religious Americans often by astonishing majorities.

The trend began to emerge in 2012, when the court blocked federal authorities from trying to apply equal-employment law to the hiring of church ministers. That case, known as Hosanna-Tabor v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, was unanimous.

Several key cases followed. In one, the court ruled that the upstate town of Greece was within its rights to permit volunteer chaplains to open town meetings with a prayer. The New York Times editorial board nearly fainted.

Then came the Hobby Lobby case. Thats where the court exempted the religious owners of a closely held retail chain of craft stores from the contraceptive mandate that was put into effect by the Department of Health and Human Services after ObamaCares passage.

That puzzler divided the court five to four and infuriated the godless left. Thats because it seemed to suggest that a capitalistic corporation could have religious views, as if the family owners didnt matter.

The courts secularist wing buckled, though, before the Little Sisters of the Poor. The doughty nuns who care for the elderly poor finally won their right not to be entangled in the birth-control mandate in a unanimous ruling by the nine.

What was President Barack Obama thinking? Someday historians will try to divine how much the Democrats were damaged at the polls by their wholly gratuitous attempt to bully a charity named Little Sisters of the Poor.

Not that the fight is over. The court flinched last year from hearing the appeal of a Washington-state pharmacist, Greg Stormans, seeking shelter under the First Amendment against the states attempt to force him to sell an abortion drug.

The same day the court ruled for Trinity Lutheran, though, it agreed to hear the case of the wedding-cake baker, Jack Phillips, under fire from the Orwellian Colorado Civil Rights Commission for refusing to bake a cake for a same-sex marriage. Must such a religious person choose between God and Colorado?

Its hard to predict how the court will rule in that case, which will be heard in the fall. Its not hard, though, to forecast that if the justices do rule for the rights of the religious baker, they will extend a remarkable trend.

And answer the prayer to God for the salvation of their honorable court.

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How the Supreme Court is restoring religious liberty in America - New York Post

Watch: Building a Statue of Liberty out of Legos – USA Today – USA TODAY

This Statue of Liberty is made of more than 25,000 LEGOs. See how it was built. USA TODAY

Lego's 9-and-a-half-foot model of the Statue of Liberty in the Smithsonian's National Museum of American History.(Photo: LEGO Systems, Inc.)

A team of Lego enthusiasts finally finished their replica of the Statue of Liberty. It only took them a mere 292 hours, five colorsand 125 pounds of Legos to do the job.

The 9-and-a-half-foot statue now stands in the Smithsonian National Museum of American History in Washington, D.C., as part of"The Nation We Build Together" exhibit.

The structureis 1/32nd the size of the 111-foot, 6-inch original on Ellis Island. Lego master builder Erik Varszegi,49, spent 70 hours to design the statue, which was the second time he's builta Lego Lady Liberty.

"We had discussed using the same model here but thought the scale wasn't right," he said. "We wanted to make a bigger impact this time around."

Altogether, an estimated 25,375 Lego bricks were used to build the statue from toes to torch. With a task so big, we needed more answers from Varszegi, who has spent 22 years as a professionalLego builder. Here's what he said:

What was the most difficult part of designing the model?

If I had to pick a most difficult part of the model, Id have to say the whole backside of her. Very little in the way of photographs exist online of Lady Liberty. Seems like people only like shooting her from the front. I tried my best to get the flow of her robes just right when viewed from the back.

A replica of the Statue of Liberty built out of Legos.(Photo: LEGO Systems, Inc.)

How long did it take to design and build?

We actually had a comfortable lead time with this one compared to some of our other builds starting around the first of the year and putting the last bricks on around late February/early March.

Now that it's finished, what would you do differently?

I had actually starteddesigning the full pedestal underneath her as well, but unfortunately we didnt have the ceiling height for the full thing.

Is this your most ambitious Lego build?

As far as complexity goes this one was pretty standard. The statues robes lent a nice stable base for the build. Characters with exposed legs and skinny ankles pose more of a challenge. Then we have to start thinking about internal steel armatures just so they survive shipping from our shop to the display site.

A Lego version of the Statue of Liberty.(Photo: LEGO Systems, Inc.)

How many people helped you on this project?

Three other master builders helped build the model.

What do you want to build next? Or, what is the Lego build you most want to do?Is there a "white whale" out there for you?

Ha, Ive actually already built a white whale! A number of years ago I designed Moby Dick breaching out of the water for an aquarium in Australia. The model was some 15 or 16 feet tall. As far as future projects go? I enjoy building detailed architectural type models. I havent built one of those in a while. Its nice to switch it up every now and again.

Any advice for young Lego builders?

The most often asked question for Lego master builders. I always tell kids just to keep building. I had a few LEGO sets when I was younger but not a whole lot. Im guessing todays kids will have a huge head start over me in terms of LEGO experience when they get to be my age. Im looking forward to see what crazy things they will build.

The model is on the museum's first floor and will be on display through the end of 2017.

Follow Sean Rossman on Twitter: @SeanRossman

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SCOTUS delivers win for religious liberty but punts on school choice – American Enterprise Institute

On Monday, the Supreme Court handed down its long-awaited decision in Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Inc. v. Comer, delivering a potent victory for religious libertybut one with murkier implications for school choice than many had anticipated. In a 72 ruling, the Court held that Missouri violated the First Amendments free-exercise clause when it prohibited a church from receiving public funds for playground improvement solely because of their religious character.

The dispute dates to 2012, when Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Mo., was excluded from a state grant competition created to assist nonprofits in the installation of rubber playground surfaces. The Missouri Department of Natural Resources rejected the churchs application, despite having determined that it deserved funding on the merits. Missouri argued it had to reject Trinity Lutherans bid because its state constitution bars distributing public funds to religious organizations.

In its ruling, the Court majority held that the Departments policy violated the rights of Trinity Lutheran under the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment by denying the Church an otherwise available public benefit on account of its religious status. The verdicts import, however, is clear only when the assemblage of that 72 majority comes into focus. Chief Justice John Roberts authored the majority opinion, which was joined in full by Justices Kennedy, Alito, and Kagan. Those four were joined by Justices Thomas and Gorsuch in all but one crucial footnote, while Justice Breyer issued a concurring opinion. Only Justices Ginsburg and Sotomayor dissented.

A police officer stands outside the U.S. Supreme Court building after the Court sided with Trinity Lutheran Church, which objected to being denied public money in Missouri, in Washington, U.S., June 26, 2017. REUTERS/Yuri Gripas

Trinity Lutheran had been avidly awaited by school-choice advocates. As we noted on NRO back in April, the issue is Missouris so-called Blaine amendment a provision added to many state constitutions in the late 1800s as part of an anti-Catholic crusade intended to stymie the nations then-fledgling parochial-school system. Today, some 39 states still have some version of a Blaine amendment in their constitution. These are routinely used by teacher unions and their allies to attack school-choice policies that permit students to use public funds to attend religious schools. In the past two years alone, for example, Blaine amendments have been used to challenge the constitutionality of school-choice programs in Alabama, Georgia, Oklahoma, and Colorado.

While Trinity Lutheran could have yielded a sweeping decision, the Courts majority shied away from anything so decisive. Instead, in holding that Missouris policy expressly discriminates against otherwise eligible recipients by disqualifying them from a public benefit solely because of their religious character, the justices chose to rule narrowly. The majority pointed out that the playground was publicly accessible, and not for use solely by students or members of Trinity Lutheran. Breyers concurrence cautioned that the decision ought not be broadly read.

Roberts narrow language left unsettled whether states are still free to discriminate against religious schools when it comes to publicly available benefits that arent related to playground surfaces. This question crucial for school choice efforts going forward rests on the significance of that aforementioned footnote. Footnote 3 of Roberts opinion reads, This case involves express discrimination based on religious identity with respect to playground resurfacing. We do not address religious uses of funding or other forms of discrimination. Though concurring that this ruling need not go further than the public benefit provided by the playground grant program specifically, Justice Breyer opted not to join in the salient footnote. As Justices Thomas and Gorsuch also refused to concur with footnote 3, it was endorsed by just four justices Roberts, Kagan, Alito, and Kennedy and thus does not register as the opinion of the Court.

Trinity Lutheran strengthens the protections accorded to free exercise, but punts on the question of whether states can prohibit religious schools from participating in publicly funded school-choice programs. Deciphering the import of that mixed message requires discerning what Roberts sought to accomplish with this ruling. Did he seek a narrow decision by design, hoping to avoid a controversial free-exercise ruling that would invalidate century-old clauses in dozens of state constitutions? Or did he seek a precedent to provide firmer footing for a more dramatic ruling in a future term?

The answer, and the significance of footnote 3, will matter much for efforts to expand tax credits, vouchers, and education savings accounts. We may not have to wait too long for more clarity. Just yesterday, the Court vacated state-supreme-court rulings in Colorado and New Mexico, in cases in which the courts had invoked Blaine amendment language to rule against including religious options in private school-choice programs. The Supreme Court directed the respective state courts to revisit their rulings in light of Trinity Lutheran. Given the narrowness of the High Courts decision, of course, its not clear whether those courts will feel obliged to revise their rulings. In any event, these developments mean that the Supreme Court may be issuing a more clear-cut determination sooner rather than later.

As Justice Gorsuch wrote in his rejoinder to the pivotal footnote, The general principles here do not permit discrimination against religious exercise whether on the playground or anywhere else. Court watchers had thought there might be five justices, or more, willing to embrace that principle this time around. But this weeks ruling stops at the playgrounds edge.

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SCOTUS delivers win for religious liberty but punts on school choice - American Enterprise Institute

Renovated amphitheater in Erie’s Liberty Park unveiled – GoErie.com

The $570,000 project features a new, permanent roof made of a hard plastic called thermoplastic polyolefin that is supported by glue-laminated wood beams.

The sun's rays glistened on Presque Isle Bay's choppy waters early Tuesday evening as concertgoersparked lawn chairs at Liberty Park and awaited aribbon-cutting ceremony andafree concert celebrating Erie's newly renovated Highmark Amphitheater.

A stiff breeze from Lake Erie made it feel like spring or fall, but a couple thousand music aficionados didn't seem to mind the chilly temperatures.

About a dozen Erie County and Highmark Health officials unveiled the renovated structure, which is located on Erie's west bayfront,in a ceremony at 6:30 p.m. Then, it was time to rock to the sounds of Erie band Money Shot 2.0, and the music of Steve Augeri, a former frontman for the rock band Journey.

The $570,000 project features a new, permanent roof made of a hard plastic called thermoplastic polyolefin that is supported by glue-laminated wood beams.

A June 2015 thunderstorm destroyed the fabric canopy that had covered the amphitheater's stage for nearly 20 years.

"This roof isweather resistant,and the materialit is made out of is actually used to build bridges in Alaska,'' said Brenda Sandberg, the Erie-Western Pennsylvania Port Authority's executive director. "It's the same type of wood that was used at the Tom Ridge Environmental Center, so it's very, very sturdy and able to withstand the elements.''

Work crews from Erie-based E.E. Austin & Son Inc., handled foundation work and construction of the roof, according to Sandberg.

"This is a great, new facility,'' Erie Mayor Joe Sinnott said. "This amphitheater is very popular and very widely used, and the old structure had some limitations, as we saw in that storm. Something like this is a better functioning cover for this stage. It allows us to do more with it, and, obviously, we don't have to worry about this one failing. I think it's a logical addition to this park because of how the park is utilized.''

Work on the roofbegan in mid-April and was completed about two weeks ago, Sandberg said.

"We had all the foundations go in last fall,'' she said. "In order to be economical, we reused the previous stage that thecanopy structure sat on top of. The structure is larger than that previous tent. There was no additional space addedto the stage, which is still 40 (feet)by 60 (feet). From a maintenance standpoint,the new roof issomething we don't have to put up, take down, and we don't have to do repairs to it. There will be some maintenance, as there is with every building, but it will be much less significant than it was before.''

Ron Leonardi can be reached at 870-1680 or by email. Follow him on twitter at twitter.com/ETNleonardi.

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Renovated amphitheater in Erie's Liberty Park unveiled - GoErie.com

Liberty Quartet, Valley Shepherd to host free Stars and Stripes concert – Meridian Press

Liberty Quartet, a Meridian-based Southern Gospel group, will perform a free Stars and Stripes concert at Valley Shepherd Church of the Nazarene this Sunday.

The quartet, founded in 1995, performs roughly 170 shows each year in the United States and Canada. The original founder, Royce Mitchell, is still with the group singing bass. He started the quartet as a music minister in Boise, and Liberty eventually became so popular that Mitchell quit his job to perform full time.

Libertys baritone vocalist, Derek Simonis, said the the group is excited to come together with Valley Shepherd a pillar in the Treasure Valley that has been around for more than 100 years to celebrate the Fourth of July through music. The audience will also get to join in on some songs.

The concert will be a special time for Simonis, he said. He served in the Army for nine years including in special operations and did multiple tours in Iraq and Afghanistan.

It was an honor to do it, he said. We want to reflect on and appreciate and remember the price thats been paid for our freedom.

Simonis has been out of the military for a year and a half and joined Liberty Quartet six months ago.

Paul W. Ellis, who has a background in music and youth ministry, is the groups lead singer.

During Sundays concert, Liberty will announce its new, fourth member.

We have a great time traveling together, Simonis said. We all love to have a good time and joke around.

Simonis, 30, has been known to play a prank or two on his fellow singers, who are both about 20 years his senior.

Theyve warned me theres payback, he said. When you play jokes on somebody, you have to be careful because its always going to come back full circle.

Beyond the pranks and the concerts and the tours, the groups real mission is to share faith and joy with people, Simonis said.

Were just trying to be real and connect with people and help them, encourage them and be a blessing to them to where theyre at, he said.

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Liberty Quartet, Valley Shepherd to host free Stars and Stripes concert - Meridian Press

Silver out as Liberty superintendent – Times Herald-Record

Pauline Liu Times Herald-Record @PaulineLiu845

LIBERTY Superintendent Bill Silver had about a year left on his contract, but the Liberty School Board voted 6-3 on Tuesday night to oust him from the job that he has held for more than four years.

The three dissenting votes were cast by Daniel Parkhurst, board Vice President Jennifer Desrochers and Philip Olsen, who was away on business but participated via Skype.

Parkhurst called the board's actions "destructive to our district." Both he and Desrochers raised the question of whether the board's decision would discourage highly qualified candidates from applying for the job. "We're not going to get the caliber of superintendent if we do not honor our contract," said Desrochers.

Meanwhile, Olsen repeatedly voiced protests.

"I object 1,000 times. I object to the way it's being done. I think Dr. Silver has been a fine leader for this district and he's been treated as a villain," Olsen said.

The actual wording used in the vote was whether the board members would agree to accept Silver's "resignation." Silver, 66, has a current annual salary of $164,655. Under the terms of the agreement, he will receive a buyout totaling about $200,000 including benefits.

The board then voted to hire former Assistant Superintendent Carol Napolitano as interim superintendent. School Board President John Nichols said she would be paid an annual salary just shy of $159,000. But according to members of the administration, Napolitano's package including benefits will likely cost about as much as Silver's buyout.

Sixteen people stood up to address board members before the vote. Most protested the idea of the district paying for two superintendent salaries. They urged the board to reconsider, citing the district's improved graduation rate and its fiscal health under Silver's leadership. Liberty High was also recently recognized as a bronze medal high school by U.S. News & World Report.

While Nichols told the crowd of more than 60 gathered in the high school media center that he could not discuss the board's reasons for wanting to let Silver go, some members of the community and some teachers pointed to incidents that occurred in the middle school, including a bomb threat, a girl who brought a pocket knife to school and a boy who showed up with a BB gun.

Two middle school teachers, Stacey Feasel and Melissa Murphy, called the school unsafe. "The students are afraid and we are afraid," said Murphy.

But high school art director Kathy Johansen and music director Tim Hamblin said the district of about 1,700 students flourished under Silver. Hamblin suggested the board consider hiring a separate principal for the middle school, which drew applause from the crowd.

Silver didn't address the crowd, but numerous supporters including students, teachers and board members lined up after the meeting to shake his hand and wish him well.

"I'm more sad and disappointed than angry," said Silver. "I wanted to be able to see what we would be doing and continue to move forward."

Instead he will officially resign on June 30. At 66, and with 44 years of education experience, Silver said he plans to retire.

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Silver out as Liberty superintendent - Times Herald-Record

Supreme Court strikes blow for religious liberty – Philly.com

Normally, the most notable part of a Supreme Court decision is not the dissent. Except for the times when the late, lamented Antonin Scalia would express his fury at what he considered to be a moronic decision by his peers, justices who disagreed were not all that interesting in their disagreement. Even Oliver Wendell Holmes, the so-called Great Dissenter, wore on your nerves with his righteous indignation.

But Monday, Justice Sonia Sotomayor penned a dissent that is much more interesting in its transparency than the relatively mild majority opinion written by Chief Justice John Roberts in a case being watched by everyone interested in the tension between church and state, and the status of that crumbling wall.

In Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia v. Comer, a seven-person majority held that the state of Missouri could not single out faith-based organizations for exclusion from grants that would have paid for property maintenance. The facts are fairly simple. Trinity Lutheran is a church that also ran a preschool program. In 2012, it applied for a grant from a state program to make playgrounds safer. Its request for funds to resurface its playground was denied based on a state constitutional provision that forbade the use of taxpayer funding to religious institutions.

That provision was modeled on what is known as the Blaine Amendment, a proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution based in an antipathy toward Catholics. Over a century ago, in the wake of the Civil War, a Republican congressman named James Blaine proposed the amendment to prevent, in part, public money going to parochial schools that were filled with immigrant children.

Many states adopted the language of the original federal amendment, even though it had failed to muster a two-thirds majority in the Senate. Some of these mini-Blaines are still on the books.

Which brings us to Missouri.

Trinity Lutheran sued the state, claiming that the only reason it was being denied funding was because it was a religious institution. And, as Roberts wrote in a you think? moment, thats pretty self-evident:

There is no question that Trinity Lutheran was denied a grant simply because of what it is a church.

So the only question that remained was, is this exclusion constitutional?

Seven members of the court, including some of the more liberal justices, said no. According to the chief justice, the exclusion of Trinity Lutheran from a public benefit for which it is otherwise qualified, solely because it is a church, is odious to our Constitution all the same, and cannot stand.

I like the use of the word odious. Every now and then a Supreme Court justice has to tell it like it is, and cut through that genteel lexicon that makes it difficult to believe that there are human beings on that highest of benches. This was not simply an illegal, distasteful bit of discrimination against people of faith. It was odious.

Of course, not everyone would agree with that conclusion, including most of the members of the ACLU. Every time there is a suggestion that public funds are going to assist religious organizations, the fearsome prospect of a theocracy raises its head. Whether it be a caliphate or Christendom, the church-state separatists are immediately mobilized.

And one of the true believers, excuse the pun, sits on the court. Sotomayor, a woman who wore a Catholic school uniform for many years, railed against the majority decision. Her words seem particularly over the top, since Roberts took great pains to limit the majority holding to cases involving playground resurfacing, and reserved judgment on whether it could be extended to other types of discrimination. It was more about discriminating against entities solely because they were churches or, as Roberts wrote churches need not apply.

Sotomayor wasnt buying that. She clearly saw the diagrammed sentence on the wall:

If this separation [of church and state] means anything, it means that the government cannot tax its citizens and turn that money over to houses of worship. The court today blinds itself to the outcome this history requires and leads us instead to a place where separation of church and state is a constitutional slogan, not a constitutional commitment.

Thats powerful stuff.

Sotomayor sets this up as if the poor taxpayers of Missouri were being forced to pay to prevent some Christian kid from scraping his knees on a rough playground. She makes this seem as if its then a slippery slope to having taxpayers subsidize the erection of a Mormon Temple, or buy new central air for a mosque. Funny, right?

Well actually, maybe not. While I strongly reject the idea that the wall between church and state was built to keep religion out of the public square, it is clear that this case isnt just about playgrounds. It could change the way that we think about people and places of faith, and their relation to the secular state.

Christine Flowers is a Daily News columnist. Listen to her Sundays from 8 to 11 p.m. on WPHT-AM (1210). cflowers1961@gmail.com

Published: June 26, 2017 3:01 AM EDT | Updated: June 26, 2017 4:43 PM EDT

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Supreme Court strikes blow for religious liberty - Philly.com

Liberty Global CEO’s Pay Prompts Backlash in Shareholder Vote – Bloomberg

Mike Fries, chief executive officer of Liberty Global Plc.

Liberty Global Plc encountered one of the biggest scoldings for a U.K company over executive compensation, with about 32 percent of votes cast going against the media companys pay plan, according to a regulatory filing on Monday.

The non-binding vote at the cable operators annual meeting on June 21 covered 2016, a year in which Chief Executive Officer Mike Fries saw his compensation jump 45 percent to $40.1 million. While all resolutions passed, the protest was significant. Billionaire ChairmanJohn Malone and other insiders control 30 percent of the votes at the London-based cable company. That means almost half of the non-affiliated votes objected to the amounts paid to Fries and his top lieutenants.

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The protest follows a 17 percent stock decline last year for Liberty Global, which operates pay-TV systems in Europe, Latin America and the Caribbean. At the annual meeting last year, 34 percent of shares were voted against the pay policy for Fries and other board members. Advisory group Institutional Shareholder Services recommended that shareholders vote against Liberty Globals 2016 pay plan and the remuneration policy, arguing the board didnt address shareholder concerns over pay from last year.

The compensation committee failed to demonstrate adequate responsiveness to last years low say-on-pay vote and CEO incentive opportunities remain excessive and subject to automatic annual increases, ISS said in its report in advance of the meeting. Friess 2016 pay was 1.68 times the median of his peers, ISS said.

The vote announced Monday to approve director remuneration policy for future years, which is binding, had 72 percent of votes cast in favor.

The increase in pay for Fries was as a result of the board front-loading his awards for 2016 and 2017, according to a proxy statement in advance of the shareholder meeting in London. The company also changed stock awards for Fries and about 385 other employees to better align these incentives over a longer term, promote achievement of goals and keep people on their jobs, the filing said.

Liberty Global operates in a hotly contested, talent-driven global market, the company said Monday in an emailed statement. We have a pay-for-performance compensation program which aims to attract, retain and motivate the best so we can deliver the products and services that our customers deserve and create value for our shareholders.

Investors and politicians in the U.K. have become more vocal about the gap between the pay of top executives and ordinary workers. A number of companies have either scrapped their pay policies or made changes to avert a rebellion at annual meetings this year, including Thomas Cook Group Plc, Imperial Brands Plc, Aggreko Plc.

Malones voting clout exceeds his financial interest in Liberty Global, thanks to a 79 percent stake in the Class B shares that carry 10 votes each. He has a 26 percent voting stake, according to company filings. Malone, Fries and other directors and officers together have almost 30 percent of the votes.

Opposition of 30 percent or more is generally considered the informal threshold for a losing vote and an outcome that should prompt directors to address investor concerns, according to governance experts.

The most notable shareholder revolt in the U.K. so far this year has been at Pearson Plc, where about 61 percent of those who voted opposed the education companys pay report.

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Liberty Global CEO's Pay Prompts Backlash in Shareholder Vote - Bloomberg

Celebrate Independence Day in Liberty, July 3 – Liberty Vindicator

Having nailed down all the particulars, the City of Liberty announced today its plans for the towns annual Third of July celebration.

At the Liberty Municipal Park beginning at 6 p.m. on Monday there will be an inflatable obstacle course and bounce houses, face painting and the LYBA All-Star teams selling food and drinks to raise funds for their trips to the state championships.

Timothy Wayne and The Abbot Creek Band will perform at 7 p.m.

Mayor Carl Pickett will act as M.C. and offer welcoming remarks at 9 p.m., and the fireworks display will begin at 9:15 p.m.

The weather looks like it will cooperate with Monday evenings festivities. Today, forecasts call for Monday to be partly cloudy with only a 10 percent chance of rain. The high during the day should be 89 degrees, and the low that night is expected to be 75, so the temperature when the fireworks go off should be in the very low 80s or high 70s. The sun will set at 8:24 p.m.

Anyone enjoying the park, or the outdoors anywhere, during the day Monday, should wear sunscreen. The UV index for Monday is extreme.

The city invites everyone attending the fireworks show that night to bring a blanket and relax on the grass. Bringing bug spray would probably also be a good idea, but remember no alcoholic beverages are permitted in the park.

Historians tell us that it was really on July 3, 1776 that the Continental Congress voted to adopt the Declaration of Independence. John Adams himself once wrote that July 3 would be remembered as the day American became independent.

That is not why Liberty holds its celebration on July 3, but it is good to know.

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Celebrate Independence Day in Liberty, July 3 - Liberty Vindicator

Behind the scenes: The Princeton-Fung Global Forum asks ‘Can Liberty Survive the Digital Age?’ – Princeton University

Americans experience daily threats to their liberty in a world filled with cyber hacks, fake news, communication silos and government surveillance.

The hacking of the Democratic National Committee during the 2016 presidential election brought home just how vulnerable we are, and more recently, the BBC reported that sensitive personal details related to almost 200 million U.S. citizens was accidentally exposed by a marketing firm contracted by the Republican National Committee.

The Princeton-Fung Global Forum, held in March2017 in Berlin, Germany, addressed the timely and urgent question, Can Liberty Survive the Digital Age?

The two-day forum, organized by the Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs in coordination with campus partners, looked at the balance between privacy and security and how it affects liberty and democracy. About 450 industry experts, scholars and students, as well as 30 reporters and editors from German and American media outlets, gathered in Berlin to hear 40 speakers discuss liberty in the digital age as part of the fourth Princeton-Fung Global Forum.

Eight Princeton faculty members from computer science, engineering, public affairs and sociology served as panelists. The faculty joined outside panelists from the tech industry, academia, government, and nonprofits, including, among others: Amazon; Facebook; Google; Microsoft; Humboldt University of Berlin; Stanford Law Schools Center for Internet and Society; McGill University; University of Zurich; Haifa Center for Law & Technology; WZB Berlin Social Science Center; the Institute for Technology & Society of Rio de Janeiro; the Center for Democracy & Technology; Big Brother Watch; andthe Electronic Frontier Foundation.

Keynotes were presented by: Vinton Cerf, vice president and chief internet evangelist at Google and a principal architect of the original internet; Microsoft President Brad Smith, Class of 1981; Roger Dingledine, project leader for The Tor Project, a nonprofit working on anonymity development; andNeelie Kroes, former EU commissioner for competition policy and commissioner in charge of the digital agenda in Europe.

Please take a behind-the-scenes look at the creation of the Princeton-Fung Global Forum, as well as highlights from each panel.

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Behind the scenes: The Princeton-Fung Global Forum asks 'Can Liberty Survive the Digital Age?' - Princeton University

After 170 Years, The Northland’s Liberty Tribune Prints Last Paper – KCUR

The Northlands Liberty Tribune newspaper, one of the oldest weeklies in the country, recently rolled off the printing press for the last time. Since 1846, residents had unfurled their own paper published under the motto, Willing to praise but not afraid to blame.

However, with circulation figures in slow decline, a merger with the Kearney Courier and the Smithville Herald allowed the owners, the News-Press & Gazette Company, to cut costs.

Three positions are gone, bringing total staff down to 15. TheSmithville office has also closed.

Essentially it was formalizing that collaboration that had been happening already, says managing editor Amy Neal.

At 32 pages, the new print publication, the Courier-Tribune, is longer than its three component papers used to be, but there is less space for stories just about Liberty.

During its 170-year history, the Liberty Tribune covered a surprising range of local, national and international events.

In 1973, the papers scribes were there for tenor Luciano Pavarottis American debut performance at Libertys William Jewell College. In 1980, presidential candidate Ronald Reagans campaign stop made the front page.

Joe Roberts lives in Arlington, Virginia but grew up in Liberty and his great grandfather, Irving Gilmer, owned, edited and published the paper from about 1890 until 1929.

Roberts says in those days the paper was known for stories on local history. Like todays big national news organizations, it also covered Americas overseas wars.

I think he published it daily during the Spanish American War and I think the only daily that Liberty ever had was during that period of time.

That was in 1898. In 1846, the year it was founded, the Liberty Tribune had a correspondent covering the Mexican War.

There was Colonel John Hughes that sent letters in to the Tribune covering the Alexander Doniphan expedition to Mexico, says Roberts.

Robert Hugh Miller was the editor and owner then, and he was only 19 at the time. He arranged a loan of $5000 to start the Liberty Tribune. Like most of its readers, the paper was anti-union and pro-slavery. But Miller, who ran the paper for forty years, did have nobler aspirations. In an early editorial, he hoped the Tribune would become a focus of intelligence and literature.

With such a rich and sometimes controversial history associated with his great grandfathers paper, Roberts was disappointed to hear about the merger.

I think thats a sad thing, he says. Im happy that at least theres a remnant of it left. And Im sorry that the name of Liberty Tribune is fading from the scene.

Perhaps the biggest change at the Tribune in recent years, rather than the merger, is its move away from investigative reporting.

I always used to just follow the money, says Angie Borgedalen. Until a few years ago Borgedalen was the papers editor, reporter and opinion writer. During her 37-year tenure she liked nothing better than a political scandal.

During the mid-1980s some of Liberty Hospitals administrators were illegally using hospital money. One illegal perk exposed by Borgedalen was a tropical holiday taken by some administrators and doctors while their hospital was struggling to stay open through a winter snowstorm. The former editor says Liberty residents formed queues outside her office eager to read the next installment in what became a hospital corruption saga lasting many months.

Like any good journalist exposing corruption, she made enemies.

The politicians are kind of like sharks if they smell one drop of blood in the water theyre just after you, she says.

Borgedalen says its hard for newspapers to be courageous unless they have a financially stable owner prepared to back them "no matter what. She received that level of support in Missouris 2004 Congressional race. During the election, political consultant Jeff Roes campaign for Republican incumbent Sam Graves included attempts to tarnish his opponent, Charlie Broomfield, for being married three times.

One day, I wrote an editorial saying that was pretty low down for them to bring that up when they know darn well that Charlies wife died of cancer and he was left to raise two little girls on his own. They were four and six when his first wife died, she says.

Roe, who also ran Texas Senator Ted Cruzs recent presidential bid, was unrepentant. Borgedalen says he threatened to get her fired.But Liberty Tribune owner, David Bradley, supported his feisty editor.

He said, Dont you take any s*** off of Jeff Roe, and I said, Dont worry I wont!

Over the years Borgedalens stories led to arrests and convictions for some corrupt local officials.

Today, her successors at the now Courier Tribune have different editorial tastes but the Bradley familys News-Press & Gazette Company are still the owners. Managing editor Amy Neal remains optimistic about the future.

What we really pride ourselves on today is covering those stories of what are the people in our communities doing, whether its their hobbies, whether its their businesses, whether its whats going on in the schools. Neal says.

Time will tell whether the Liberty Tribunes merger and current editorial preferences extend its impressive longevity, or hasten its demise.

Danny Wood is a freelance reporter for KCUR.89.3.

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After 170 Years, The Northland's Liberty Tribune Prints Last Paper - KCUR