Liberty Tax CEO sued by ex-girlfriend claiming he shoved her down stairs – Virginian-Pilot

VIRGINIA BEACH

A lawsuit filed against Liberty Tax CEO John Hewitt claims he shoved a woman down the stairs and threatened to throw her dog in the lake outside the Virginia Beach home they shared.

Tiffany K. Glenn filed the lawsuit in Virginia Beach Circuit Court, nearly two yearsafter the night of May 26, 2015, when she claims Hewitt grabbed her by the face and neck and shouted: This is my house. Get out!

Glennclaims Hewitt shoved her down the stairs from behind, threatened her dog Gucci and threw her boots into a lake on the property, according to requests for admission filed by her attorney.

Calls and an email sent to Hewitt at his Liberty Tax address seeking comment were not returned. His attorney, Larry Woodward, declined to comment, but said he would be filing a response to the complaint in the next few days.Hewitt founded the Virginia Beach-based tax prep franchise company.

The lawsuit says Glenn was left withnumerous bruises and marks on her face, neck, arm and other places.

Glenns attorney, Kevin Martingayle, said Hewitt was arrested and criminally charged at the time, but his client dropped the charges at the urging of Hewitt and his then attorney. She and Hewitt had been in a relationship for a significant period of time and she believed they might reconcile, Martingayle said. The relationship, though, ended.

Glenn is seeking up to $700,000 in combined compensatory and punitive damages.

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Liberty Tax CEO sued by ex-girlfriend claiming he shoved her down stairs - Virginian-Pilot

Statue of Liberty finally free of oil tycoon’s mega-yacht – New York Post


New York Post
Statue of Liberty finally free of oil tycoon's mega-yacht
New York Post
Just days after The Post aired locals' grievances over Russian-American oil tycoon Eugene Shvidler parking his luxury vessel, Le Grand Bleu, in front of Lady Liberty, the boat weighed anchor Monday, photos show. According to tracking data, the yacht ...

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Statue of Liberty finally free of oil tycoon's mega-yacht - New York Post

Morning Call all-area boys tennis: Liberty is team of year – Allentown Morning Call

Loaded with experience and strong leadership, the Liberty boys tennis team set the bar high coming into the spring season.

The Hurricanes lived up to the expectations as they ran through the Eastern Pennsylvania Conference with an unblemished 14-0 record, then went on to claim gold in the District 11 Class 3A team tournament.

In singles districts, Dan Lynn finished runner-up, while Louis Gruber reached the semifinals and Jacob Berg was a quarterfinalist. Lynn and Gruber rode that momentum into the district doubles tournament, where they knocked off teammates Luke Conrad and David Lynn in the championship.

For its outstanding achievements, Liberty is The Morning Call Boys Tennis Team of the Year.

"Being the only Liberty tennis team to ever win a team district title was truly a team effort," Liberty coach Leo Schnalzer said. "Having success in any program is a positive. As far as Liberty's boys program this year, it's added a lot of conversation both at Liberty and the community. That's been fun for everyone because it brings pride to the school and team."

Schnalzer described singles players Lynn, Gruber, and Berg as the backbone of the team with a fine supporting cast from the doubles players. The three singles players contributed heavily to the team's success as they combined for a 66-6 record this season.

The doubles teams of Luke Conrad-David Lynn and Duke Jin-Gavin Snyder provided depth and experience for the Hurricanes. Conrad-Lynn turned some heads in the district doubles tournament when they knocked off the No. 2 seed from Parkland in the semifinals.

Schnalzer knew he had a talented team on his hands before the season started. The majority of Liberty's players have a strong foundation in tennis, having played at various clubs throughout the Lehigh Valley. Schnalzer also credits his assistants Chris Conrad and Dawn Ketterman-Benner for the team's success.

The Hurricanes will lose two senior starters in Dan Lynn and Conrad, but should remain in the hunt for another EPC and district title next year.

"Those seniors will be missed next year for a variety of reasons," Schnalzer said. "Their quality of play, leadership and just fine individuals. I will certainly miss them."

Dante Terenzio is a freelance writer.

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Morning Call all-area boys tennis: Liberty is team of year - Allentown Morning Call

Liberty cancels Hardin sewer pact – Chron.com

By Vanesa Brashier, vbrashier@hcnonline.com

The Liberty City Council at its June 13 meeting voted to terminate its contract with the City of Hardin for wastewater disposal. Repeated overages flowing into the City of Liberty's wastewater plant prompted the cancelation, according to Liberty City Manager Gary Broz.

"In the certified letter we sent to the City of Hardin, it states that if they fix everything in their system, there is an opportunity to come back," Broz said. "The overages the City of Hardin are sending us every time it rains are causing a strain on our system."

The contract between the two cities allows Hardin to send a daily maximum of 200,000 gallons of wastewater, which is run through an extensive sewer system that stretches from Hardin to Liberty along SH 146. The June statement from Liberty shows that Hardin exceeded the limit four times in the month of May, with the largest increase on May 5 when Hardin sent a total of 500,000 gallons of wastewater down the pipes to Liberty.

Hardin is charged $0.75 per 1,000 gallons for the first 200,000 gallons of wastewater per day. The overages alone cost the City of Hardin an additional $5,426 on the June statement.

"The overages the City of Hardin are sending us every time it rains are causing a strain on our system." - Gary Broz, Liberty city manager

"Every time it rains, we are seeing overages," Broz said. "The City of Liberty is permitted by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality to process 2.5 million gallons of wastewater per day."

On May 5, Hardin, with its 900 residents, produced one-fifth of the total capacity of wastewater permitted by Liberty, a city of 9,000 residents.

"We have to protect our sewer plant," Broz said. "That's where we are unfortunately with Hardin."

The termination will not be immediate though. The contract has a five-year termination agreement, so Hardin has time to get its sewer problems sorted.

Broz said the top priority for Hardin should be fixing its manholes, which are flooding the sewer system instead of diverting the water to drains.

In the meantime, Liberty is projecting to spend a total of $22 million over the next few years on repairs and upgrades to its sewer system.

The project will be accomplished in three phases with the first expected to cost $7 million.

The Dayton News tried to contact Hardin Mayor Stephanie Blume for comment, but phone calls to the mayor went unanswered.

In other news from the June 13 meeting, council heard a presentation from Cory Stull of the consulting firm, Freese Nichols.

Stull explained the firm's recommendations for a possible levee project that would protect the city from future floods.

On May 15, 2015, the city's current levee was threatened by flood. Emergency repairs kept the waters from breaching the levee.

According to Stull, the city can apply for two grants of approximately $2.1 million each.

The city would have to match 25 percent of each grant, but there is a possibility of folding the projects into one and reducing the costs by $1 million.

The grant from the Federal Emergency Management Agency wouldf cover trash racks, culverts and paved concrete slopes on the levee.

The National Resource Conservation Service grant would fund earthwork, riprap on the new levee, extend the outfall pipes of the electric pump station to match the new levee grade extension and elevate the diesel pump outfall structure to match the new levee grade elevation.

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Liberty National 100 days away from Presidents Cup – FOXSports.com

JERSEY CITY, N.J. (AP) The trucks loaded with materials started arriving at Liberty National Golf Club a couple of weeks ago. Preparations for the Presidents Cup in late September have started.

The flooring is down, the media center is almost finished and the scaffolds for the stands around the first tee were up on Monday.

Its roughly 100 days and counting until the United States takes on the International Team on a course that offers tremendous views of the New York City skyline and the Statue of Liberty.

If you watched Brooks Koepka win the U.S. Open at Erin Hills in Wisconsin over the weekend, Liberty National has some similar characteristics. Its long at 7,387 yards. The fairways are a little narrower and they are lined with that troublesome fescue. The greens are undulating and there are runoff areas to the sides of them.

Add in a wind off the harbor that blows one way in the morning and another way in the afternoon, and water that runs the length of some holes, and it should be fun to watch, especially in match play.

This will be the third major event at the course, which is now managed by the PGA. The Barclays was held there in 2009 and 13.

We want it to be a great challenge for the best players in the world, considering the conditions, including the wind, moisture level and the format, too, Derek Sprague, managing director for the PGA at the site, said Monday. The fescue, the rough and the greens will all be the same regardless of the format. We can change the tees and the pin placements, but the conditioning will be pretty much the same.

One thing that is going to change: how the holes are numbered on the course designed by Tom Kite and Bob Cupp.

In an attempt to bring the signature holes into play every round, No. 5 will serve as the first hole in the competition and everything will follow. No. 6 is the second hole and so on.

Matches that go 18 holes will have a somewhat odd finish because two of the final three holes will be par 3s.

With the course starting at No. 5, there will be four par 5s on the front side and only one par 3, which will play at 250 yards.

The back side will have three par 3s and no par 5s.

Having had two FedEx playoff events here, the Barclays in 2009 and `13, its pretty recent. So it is fresh in our minds where we will put things and what were good holes for viewing, Sprague said. Were in good shape in that regard.

For the next three months, workers will transform the $250 million club co-founded by Paul and Dan Fireman into a small city that will have 25,000 spectators on each of the four days of play, plus volunteers, vendors and corporate hospitality.

The United States has won the Presidents Cup six straight times, winning the last 15+ -14+ in South Korea in 2015. It was the closest competition in 10 years.

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Liberty National 100 days away from Presidents Cup - FOXSports.com

Bishops’ concerns for religious liberty, health care echo at assembly – CatholicPhilly.com

By Catholic News Service Posted June 19, 2017

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Bishop Dewane focused on the Senates work to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

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

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

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

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

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

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

Cardinal DiNardo, the principal celebrant, spoke about the popes call at the liturgys start.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

***

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

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Bishops' concerns for religious liberty, health care echo at assembly - CatholicPhilly.com

Pearl developer tries again to rehab former Liberty Bar – mySanAntonio.com

Photo: San Antonio Express-News File Photo

The historic Boehler/Liberty Bar building

The historic Boehler/Liberty Bar building

On Wednesday, HDRC will also consider GrayStreet Partners plan to renovate the downtown Light building into creative office space.

On Wednesday, HDRC will also consider GrayStreet Partners plan to renovate the downtown Light building into creative office space.

GrayStreet plans to replace one side of the Light building with a wall of glass and to add a small tower to one corner of its roof, to match the towers on the other corners.

GrayStreet plans to replace one side of the Light building with a wall of glass and to add a small tower to one corner of its roof, to match the towers on the other corners.

City staff recommends approving GrayStreets proposal as long as the firm doesnt add the new tower and it changes the material it would use for the exterior of the new structure.

City staff recommends approving GrayStreets proposal as long as the firm doesnt add the new tower and it changes the material it would use for the exterior of the new structure.

Pearl developer tries again to rehab former Liberty Bar

Pearl developer Silver Ventures is taking another swing at rehabilitating the former Liberty Bar, the now-boarded-up 19th-century building that sits with a fun-house lean at Josephine Street just off the exit ramp from U.S. 281.

The citys Historic and Design Review Commission on Wednesday will consider the firms request to move the building about 250 feet to Grayson Street and Avenue A. The building, constructed in 1890, is known for its slant caused by a flood in 1921 and neglect since then.

The HDRC denied a similar request in May 2014 out of concern that moving the building would diminish its historic value. But Silver Ventures spokeswoman Elizabeth Fauerso thinks the new proposal has a better chance because the firm wants to shift the building to another side of the same block, whereas it previously proposed moving it several blocks.

Silver Ventures wants the building to be closer to the heart of the Pearls culinary scene, Fauerso said. The building now sits next to the exit ramp for U.S. 281 and across the street from a pharmaceutical company.

We want the facade to relate to a corner that has a neighborhood life, as it once did, she said. This is a very special building with a special history that relates to the Pearl. We are taking pieces of our history and breathing new life into them.

The building, which was constructed by former Pearl Brewery brewmaster Fritz Boehler, was a beer garden for decades. It then served as the location of the Liberty Bar from 1985 to 2008, and local chef Andrew Weissman operated his restaurant Minnies Tavern & Rye House there until Silver Ventures bought the property in 2014.

Silver Ventures also wants to renovate a small house and move it next door to Boehlers building. The two buildings would be part of the same restaurant and would face a courtyard with tables, HDRC renderings show.

The firm doesnt have a particular restaurant in mind for the buildings, Fauerso said.

Were open to multiple concepts, she said. We want it to be an anchor in the neighborhood, as it once was.

The buildings current locations would become a parking lot, an idea that was met with public outcry when it was first floated by Silver Ventures in 2014. Fauerso said the project would replace an existing parking lot at Grayson and Avenue A. The firm plans to hire an artist to create a sculpture for a corner of the lot to mark the entrance of the Pearl from U.S. 281, she said.

City staff recommended that the HDRC grant preliminary approval to Silver Ventures plans. The firm would have to return with more detailed plans for final approval.

On Wednesday, the HDRC will also consider GrayStreet Partners plan to renovate the downtown Light building into creative office space. GrayStreet, one of the most active developers downtown, bought the Depression-era building in December from Hearst, the parent company of the San Antonio Express-News, and plans to turn it into 60,000 square feet of upscale office space with a rooftop restaurant.

GrayStreet wants to remove a skybridge connecting the Light building with a three-story annex built in the 1960s, according to documents from the HDRC. In its place, the firm has proposed to build a five-story structure connecting the two buildings.

It also wants to replace one side of the Light building with a wall of glass and to add a small tower to one corner of its roof, to match the towers on the other corners.

City staff recommended approving GrayStreets proposal as long as the firm doesnt add the new tower and it changes the material it would use for the exterior of the new structure. Kevin Covey, the firms managing partner, didnt respond to a request for comment.

Another downtown project is on Wednesdays HDRC agenda: Local development firm Crockett Urban Ventures is asking for final approval to rehabilitate the Witte building on the River Walk, at 135 E. Commerce St. The firm wants to turn the buildings River Walk level and ground floor into restaurant space and the top two floors into four apartments, the firms president, Patrick Shearer, said Monday.

Crockett Urban is applying for state and federal historic tax credits for the project, Shearer said. In response to feedback from state and federal officials, the firm changed the exterior of an elevator tower it wants to construct alongside the building. City staff didnt like the new exterior and sided against the project.

Were doing our best to have the design be acceptable to both the local historic staff as well as the state historic staff, Shearer said. I think well ultimately be able to achieve that.

The Witte project would contribute to the revitalization of that block of Commerce Street, which is now largely vacant. Crockett Urban is also building the Canopy by Hilton hotel a few doors down, and another local developer, Keller Henderson, plans to build the Floodgate luxury apartment building between the two projects.

rwebner@express-news.net

@rwebner

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Pearl developer tries again to rehab former Liberty Bar - mySanAntonio.com

Liberty Bell replica – Madison.com

The Capitol holds a replica of the Liberty Bell, given to Wisconsin by France in 1950 as part of a savings bond drive and quite a bit of controversy.

The 2,045-pound bell, 85 percent of which is copper, is the same weight and size of the original but has no crack and is on display on the second floor of the Capitol rotunda.

The bell was first housed at the Wisconsin Historical Society but was later moved to the State School for Girls in Oregon where it was discovered in 1968 in rough shape and missing its clapper.

The framework was repaired and the clapper replaced with the bell moved to Fountain Park in Sheboygan, where it was rung each Fourth of July. The bell was supposed to be in Sheboygan for only about a year but wasn't moved back to Madison until 1975.

The move, designed to help the state celebrate the country's Bicentennial in 1976, was preceded by heated letters from Sheboygan officials who wanted the bell to remain in their city and an executive order from Mayor Richard Suscha making it illegal for anyone to set foot in the park for the purpose of removing the bell.

The state threatened legal action, Suscha rescinded his executive order and, after two years of haggling, the bell was returned to Madison.

"I can assure you that on my many trips to Madison I will keep a wary eye on the Liberty Bell and make sure it does not get shoved off in some corner of the Capitol unnoticed by residents of the state," Suscha wrote in a letter to the state in March 1975. "I may have lost the battle of the bell, but I have not lost the war."

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10 facts about the Statue of Liberty – kiiitv.com

Caitlin Mullan , WTSP 7:37 AM. CDT June 17, 2017

(Photo: iStock)

In 1885, the dismantled Statue of Liberty arrived in New York after being shipped across the Atlantic Ocean. Lady Liberty was delivered in 350 pieces and carried in 214 crates. We're taking a look at 10 facts to celebrate her arrival 122 years later.

France gifted the Statue of Liberty to the United States to celebrate America's first 100 years as a nation.It symbolizes the alliance between France and the U.S. during the Revolutionary War.

You have to climb 154 steps to climb from the pedestal to the head of the Statue of Liberty.There are 354 steps inside the statue from the pedestal to the crown, which was open to visitors prior to September 11, 2001.

7 rays make up Lady Liberty's crown. The rays represent the seven continents of the world.

The War Department was in charge of the statue's care from 1902 to 1933. Before that, the U.S. Lighthouse Board cared for her. Since 1933, she's been in the care of the National Park Service.

Copper covers the bulk of the Statue of Liberty. The natural weathering of the copper, called "patina" is what gives her the light green color.

Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi designed the Statue of Liberty.

Liberty Island was once known as Bedloe's Island. A Dutch colonist named Issac Bedloe obtained a land grant for the Oyster Island in 1667.

From the ground to the tip of the flame, Lady Liberty stands at 305 feet, 6 inches tall. That's the heigh of a 22-story building.

There are chains at the feet of Lady Liberty. The broken shackles represent the freedom from tyranny and oppression.

2017 WTSP-TV

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10 facts about the Statue of Liberty - kiiitv.com

Liberty’s Street, Duggan are teammates once more in Big 33 game – lehighvalleylive.com

Next Sunday, Darian Street and Jaohne Duggan will split opposite directions from Bethlehem to pursue their college football careers.

For one more night before then, the Liberty standouts shared the same uniform and field together.

Street and Duggan both played a hand in helping Pennsylvania beat Maryland 44-33 Saturday night in the 60th annual Big 33 Classic at Central Dauphins Landis Field.

Me and Jaohne, weve been playing basketball together since we were nine years old, Street said. It was good to play one last game with him.

It was cool, especially having Darian as my teammate, Duggan added.

Street will head to Pittsburgh while Duggan is set to play at Rutgers. Before they go, the Hurricanes made sure Pennsylvania picked up a third straight win in the Big 33 series.

For Street, the game served as an opportunity to gain bragging rights with his brother Devin, who played in the 2009 Big 33 game before moving on to Pitt and his current career in the NFL. Devin was in attendance Saturday night, along with a big Liberty cheering section, to see Street earn the start at wide receiver and haul in three catches for 84 yards including a 51-yard touchdown catch in the fourth quarter, which ended up providing the winning points.

I always try to do better than (Devin) did, Street grinned. (He didnt score) and he didnt start, either. I got two on him.

Streets touchdown came on a double move, one that EPC opponents know all too much about. He gained separation and was in stride when the pass from Pennsylvania MVP Reece Udinski (North Penn) came down and led him into the end zone.

The week meant more to Street than just the game, though. He appreciated his time with the buddies the special needs kids with intellectual and developmental disabilities paired with players and cheerleaders and his host family, all of which made for a memorable experience before the game kicked off.

Throwing the football with the buddies and seeing them smile, they were so excited to be around us, Street said. They looked up to us like a brother and that was really great.

Duggan, meanwhile, made his presence known from the second he stepped onto the field Saturday night. The hulking 6-foot-2, 270-pound defensive lineman came flying into the backfield on his first snap and laid a big hit on the Maryland quarterback, just after he got rid of the ball for an incompletion.

It was crazy because Maryland had some big O-linemen, Duggan said. It was good competition. I was playing inside a lot and end a little bit. When I was playing inside, I was getting doubled a lot, so it was pretty tough. It was good competition though.

While Duggan may have made a late rise as one of the top talents in the Lehigh Valley gridiron scene, he took full advantage and turned back-to-back all-state selections into a Division I scholarship and a ticket to the Big 33.

Man, theres a bunch of players around the state and were the players that got picked, Duggan said. Representing my state, it meant everything to me. Im grateful that I had a chance to play in this.

Greg Joyce may be reached atgjoyce@lehighvalleylive.com. Follow him on Twitter@GJoyce9.FindLehigh Valley high school sports on Facebook.

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Gallery: Pa. vs. Md in the 60th Big 33 Classic

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March for racial justice in Liberty Park | KREM.com – KREM.com

KREM 2's Alexa Block went to the march to see what the people wanted to communicate with this demonstration.

Staff , KREM 6:42 PM. PDT June 17, 2017

photo by Alexa Block

SPOKANE, Wash --- There was a march for racial justice Saturday afternoon, stemming from the communitys displeasure with the verdict in last months Bushnell trial, said the organizers Facebook page.

The Facebook page also said, the march is intendedto address ongoing racial disparities, and to demand justice and racial equity within Spokanes criminal justice system.

The march was organized by the Spokane NAACP, Spokane Community Against Racism and the Spokane Ministers Fellowship. The march started at Liberty Park and went to fifth and Altamont, the spot where William Poindexter was shot in 2015. They marched with the sound of some of the marchers drumming.

I felt I need to be out here, you know Im a father Ive got two daughters I needed to be out here and couldnt stand by and just let it be, said demonstrator, Bryan Stone.

Stone also said when people get off for killing black men he cannot help but worry he wont be around for them.

People gathered at Liberty Park, then marched to have their voices heard, and bring what they call injustices to light.

Its not just enough to talk about it, we got to be about it. And a vital part of that is expressing our concerns and our emotions in a healthy, constructive and productive manner, said the NAACP President, Kurtis Stanley.

The demonstrators expressed themselves through songs, poems and standing together in silence, all in the hope of helping mend something they say is broken.

We know the information out there of how people of color are pushing through the justice system or how the justice system does not work for them and so I felt it was important to come out here so we realized that this is part of a larger political situation that we have here in the U.S. said demonstrator, Jackie Vaughn.

2017 KREM-TV

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A License to Mow Lawns? Occupational Licensure and Liberty – The New American

If teenagers in Gardendale, Alabama, want to earn money this summer mowing lawns, theyll need to comply with a city ordinance requiring them to get a lawn mowing license, permission that will cost $110.

Learn Liberty reports on its blog how the city government came to require a business license before mowing a lawn:

Young Alainna Paris was mowing her neighbors lawns for $20$40 each. Now, many teens earn extra money mowing lawns, and yet there dont seem to be a lot of law-enforcement resources dedicated to licensure enforcement.

So how did Alainnas illegal lawnmowing come to the attention of the authorities? Someone with a lawn company, upset by the prospect of competition, filed a complaint.

Occupational licensure is an egregious denial of basic liberty and an all too common example of crony capitalism and the monopolies they establish.

Consider this comical example of the ridiculousness of these regulations as published by the Foundation for Economic Education:

[Sherry] Japhet is a veteran in the makeup industry and, according to Idaho laws and regulations, something of a criminal. Because she doesnt hold a cosmetology licenses, Japhet breaks the law each time she applies makeup to Idaho politicians, TV personalities, and corporate leaders.

Plus, she usually does her work on-site, not in a licensed, state-inspected salon or shop. That, too, is against Idaho law.

Thats why Japhet found true irony in a call she received last week. The caller sought her mobile makeup services for Idaho First Lady Lori Otter.

Yeeeah No.

The first ladys husband, three-term Gov. Butch Otter, vetoed cosmetology reform legislation this year that would have exempted makeup artists like Japhet from state regulations. Had Otter signed the legislation, Japhet would have been able legally to provide her services to the governors wife.

"I was more than happy to remind them of what just recently happened.

The sensible reform bill that Otter vetoed would have also lowered training hours required for cosmetologists to secure the state license. And, the bill would have provided a legal grace period for cosmetology schools that missed license application deadlines.

In his veto statement, Otter pointed to the grace period as the reason he rejected the bill.

How did we come to a place where the powers that be can demand people apply for permission to earn a living? Is occupational licensure not a contemporary cousin to the Stamp Act that sparked a revolution?

In a 1975 article reviewing Milton Friedmans demolition of the practice of prohibiting work without permission of the government, Melvin D. Berger wrote:

Pressures are created to produce licensing that effectively protects the producer groups from competition and makes entry to the field more difficult for persons who might otherwise challenge the practices and pricing arrangements of the current practitioners. Friedman says that licensure almost inevitably becomes a tool in the hands of a special producer group to obtain a monopoly position at the expense of the rest of the public. There is no way to avoid this result. One can devise one or another set of procedural controls designed to avert this outcome, but none is likely to overcome the problem that arises out of the greater concentration of producer than of consumer interest. The people who are most concerned with any such arrangement, who will press most for its enforcement and be most concerned with its administration, will be the people in the particular occupation or trade involved Once licensure is attained, the people who might develop an interest in undermining the regulations are kept from exerting their influence. They dont get a license, must therefore go into other occupations, and will lose interest. The result is invariably control over entry by members of the occupation itself and hence the establishment of a monopoly position.

In other words, once the authorities mandate official approbation of this or that line of work, those who comply with such strictures demand the licensing regulations be perpetuated so as to drive up the cost they can charge for their services. Members of the public will perceive the possession of a government-issued license as some sort of sign of superior quality of service, thus preventing unlicensed practitioners from making a living, until such time as they decide to play ball and petition the powerbrokers for permission to earn a living.

Peering into the committee meetings and city council deliberations that result in these licensure regulations, Adam Smith famously wrote, People of the same trade seldom meet together even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public or some contrivance to raise prices.

Supporters of the scheme, however, insist that if the government didnt stand as sentinel, protecting the public from poorly performing providers of this or that service, the people would suffer unspeakable harm. Barger has an answer to such a silly assertion:

The customer himself should be the supreme judge of who is competent to perform the services he requires. If the members of a trade or profession believe that certain standards or practices are considered desirable in their field, they ought to have a right to publicize this fact and even to urge customers to accept such standards and practices before making service commitments. But it is wrong to use the police power of the state to make the views of a producer group binding upon all people within the occupation and upon all customers. There is, in every field, a great deal of personal opinion about what is necessary for good service and what constitutes acceptable practice.

Ultimately, requiring a license to do anything converts an act that was once a right into a privilege, a privilege to be granted and revoked by rulers according to their whim.

Occupational licensure is an example of this transformation and it artificially inflates prices, prevents people from practicing the livelihood of their choice, and exchanges genuine capitalism for crony capitalism and all the corruption with which that institution is concomitant.

Photo: Thinkstock

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10 facts about the Statue of Liberty | 9news.com – 9NEWS.com

Caitlin Mullan , WTSP 6:37 AM. MDT June 17, 2017

(Photo: iStock)

In 1885, the dismantled Statue of Liberty arrived in New York after being shipped across the Atlantic Ocean. Lady Liberty was delivered in 350 pieces and carried in 214 crates. We're taking a look at 10 facts to celebrate her arrival 122 years later.

France gifted the Statue of Liberty to the United States to celebrate America's first 100 years as a nation.It symbolizes the alliance between France and the U.S. during the Revolutionary War.

You have to climb 154 steps to climb from the pedestal to the head of the Statue of Liberty.There are 354 steps inside the statue from the pedestal to the crown, which was open to visitors prior to September 11, 2001.

7 rays make up Lady Liberty's crown. The rays represent the seven continents of the world.

The War Department was in charge of the statue's care from 1902 to 1933. Before that, the U.S. Lighthouse Board cared for her. Since 1933, she's been in the care of the National Park Service.

Copper covers the bulk of the Statue of Liberty. The natural weathering of the copper, called "patina" is what gives her the light green color.

Frederic-Auguste Bartholdi designed the Statue of Liberty.

Liberty Island was once known as Bedloe's Island. A Dutch colonist named Issac Bedloe obtained a land grant for the Oyster Island in 1667.

From the ground to the tip of the flame, Lady Liberty stands at 305 feet, 6 inches tall. That's the heigh of a 22-story building.

There are chains at the feet of Lady Liberty. The broken shackles represent the freedom from tyranny and oppression.

2017 WTSP-TV

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Douglas student receives Liberty scholarship – The Record-Courier

Douglas High School valedictorian Hunter Celio was awarded a $500 scholarship from Liberty Utilities.

Celio was one of eight students to receive scholarships from the company.

Coleville High School student Slone McCann also received a Liberty scholarship, according to the company.

This is the fifth consecutive year that Liberty has provided these awards.

A Liberty Utility representative attended each of the school's awards ceremony to personally congratulate the student and present the check.

"We're very pleased to once again offer these scholarships to deserving students," said Jeanne-Marie Bruno, President of Liberty Utilities-California. "We truly enjoy supporting the communities we serve in this manner."

Also receiving awards were:

South Tahoe High School Emily Doyle

Loyalton High School Sequoia Bergstrom

North Tahoe High School Lionel Pascal

Portola High School Christina Silva

Truckee High School Julia Meyer

Lake Tahoe Community College Hannah Brown

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Meeting WNBA heroes inspires poetry from young female athletes – ESPN

By Ellen Hagan | Jun 16, 2017 Special to espnW.com

Victoria Will for ESPN

Kiah Stokes poses with student Jakeema James.

Women show up for one another. They cheer in the stands. They make jokes, split massive bags of popcorn and nachos. They take endless selfies. They dance.They rock when the beat drops and break out new moves when it counts. They show up for basketball games, poetry slams, gigs and gatherings. They motivate and bless, encourage and bolster. They calm and soothe when it matters, and rally and instigate -- they make one another better.

This is what friendship among women looks and feels like.

We get to witness all of this at the New York Liberty vs. Phoenix Mercury game on June 4. A Liberty game is a celebration. It's a multicultural crowd of young and old descending upon Madison Square Garden. The WNBA is a reminder of what women have always been capable of -- championship.

I get the chance to watch these players work as a collective with a group of students whom I've witnessed exhibiting that same strength and companionship over the past several years.

Although not an athlete myself, I've been the director of the poetry program at the DreamYard Project in the Bronx, New York. Partnering with Global Writes, I direct the BronxWrites poetry slam program for elementary and middle school students, so I know about competition, and what it means to work hard toward something you want and something you love.

I'm here with the young girls: Eliah Yode, Aylin Almonte, Jakeema James and Latavya Hinton, who are not only the superstar poets, but are also the starting basketball players for their middle school team. They are also best friends, and it has been clear over the past few years how much they love and carry each other through every competition -- whether with words or baskets.

Our students are amped up and ready for the game. They talk about their favorite players and show off the basketballs they brought, hoping to get them signed. Throughout the game, they talk about their futures, playing college ball, getting drafted or writing a collection of poetry. They talk about the state math test they will be taking in June and their performance for the Bronx Arts Festival.

We all love watching Kiah Stokes score a career-high 23 points and Shavonte Zellous sink a 3-pointer in the third quarter. We get giddy seeing Tina Charles lead the charge for her team and new Liberty player Bria Hartley make her mark as part of the new guard.

During the game, the Liberty block and pass, hold one another up when they win -- they charge, sink, high-five, dribble and laugh. They work seamlessly as a team, and everywhere on the court you can see their admiration and love for one another.

In the locker room, our students celebrate by posing in front of the camera -- strutting and stunting with newly signed basketballs. They are 13 and 14 -- fresh, with their whole lives stretching out before them.

Young basketball-playing poets who root for one another, who celebrate and honor one another -- they are sidekicks, classmates and best friends.

When Charles, Zellous, Stokes and Hartley walk in, we are all in awe. They are just as cool and mind-blowing in person as they are on the court. They pose with the students, ask them what position they play and thank us all for being witness to their work and win.

It is clear to all of us that these women relish life together -- both on and off the court.They stand up for one another and the issues they believe in, wearing #BlackLivesMatter shirts last summerand supporting the LGBTQ community with #OrlandoUnited after the shooting at the Pulse Nightclub in Florida.

They do not shy away from what they care about -- they are not silent. They speak out, and in doing so they carry one another. Our students follow their lead, with poems about the myth of beauty and identity, and writing about where they come from. They watch the women of the New York Liberty, and they see what it means to be a proud, radiant woman, and they are stepping right up.

These poems honor their mentors. This is what they mean to them.

Ellen Hagan is a Kentucky-born writer, performer and educator. Her latest collection of poetry, "Hemisphere,"was published by Northwestern University Press, Spring 2015. Ellen's performance work has been showcased at The New York International Fringe and Los Angeles Women's Theater Festival. She is the recipient of the 2013 NoMAA Creative Arts Grant and received grants from the Kentucky Foundation for Women and the Kentucky Governor's School for the Arts.

***

Victoria Will for ESPN

Kiah Stokes poses with student Jakeema James.

Kiah Stokes: Warrior Woman

By Jakeema James

Watching

warrior women

fly down the court

like nothing else matters,

representing all

the little girls and teens

that love ball--

how women can play

both parts,

showing them boys that ball

is not only for men.

Kiah Stokes drove down

the court, got that good

assist from her teammate

and made the points,

made her foul shots

like straight water. Kiah had

21 points because

her team had

them slick passes--

just good at what they do.

Jakeema James is a student at MS 328: New Millennium Business Academy in the Bronx. She is a starter for her basketball team and a BronxWrites slam poet.

***

Victoria Will for ESPN

Tina Charles poses with student Latavya Hinton.

Tina Charles: Rethinking the Game

By Latavya Hinton

Your passion

on the courts is

a different perspective

and then

meeting you in person--

you're a player

playing a game of

communication with

the other girls

on your team.

I've seen you play

so many times

and I like your

Focus on the courts.

Me meeting you

was very scary but

what I loved most was that

you are Funny--

a sense of humor

beyond magnificent laugher.

You made me think

of basketball

in a different way.

What I mean is that my team

is never communicating, listening,

being patient enough.

Us watching your team play

Together

Is the reason to write

my poem of leadership.

Latavya Hinton is a student at MS 328: New Millennium Business Academy in the Bronx. She is a starter for her basketball team and loves writing poetry for her slam team.

***

Victoria Will for ESPN

Bria Hartley poses with student Aylin Almonte.

Bria Hartley: Game of Hartley

By Aylin Almonte

Bria Hartley

traded to the Liberty this year,

making a great change

to her basketball career.

Hartley

drafted in the first round in 2014.

This June Sunday

With 7 points and an assist

She remained focused

On the defense

To take a win

With the team,

With her whole heart

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Meeting WNBA heroes inspires poetry from young female athletes - ESPN

Liberty and Liberation: Serving the Common Good in Filipino America – HuffPost

My twin brother and I have defined our career paths as opposite signs of the same coin. His career as a Navy officer and a civil engineer and my own trajectory in social justice and policy advocacy can also be seen as parallel lines- on the same course, but never meeting. For a long time, there were real barriers between the lives we set for ourselves- when I first met Maj. Gen. Tony Taguba and told him that my twin brother served in the Navy, he asked me why I wasnt in the military. I didnt skip a beat and said, Sir, I like to think I defend the Constitution in a different way. As an openly gay civil rights advocate in the days of Dont Ask, Dont Tell, I was fighting for, among other things, the right to serve in an institution that I couldnt serve in, and that in many ways, I have grave misgivings about.

My service on the Executive Committee for the Filipino Veterans Recognition and Education Project to correct the injustices of the U.S. governments failure to keep its promises to Filipino WWII veterans who served in good faith has been one important way our paths have crossed. On a practical level, working with members of Congress to pass the Congressional Gold Medal and before that, the creation of the Filipino Veterans Equity Compensation Fund has allowed me to work with members of Congress who have a particular stake in our nations military, members who also work with my brothers service in the Navy from the Pentagon to the territory of Guam. On a deeper level though, we both pursue our work in service of something larger than ourselves. If the metaphor of parallel lines breaks down here, I like to think that public service is the intersection of the Venn diagram of how weve lived our lives.

By focusing on specific outcomes and working to address specific inequities, I have been able to hold in balance my conflicting opinions about the military and the need to recognize military service. I have been able to fight inequities in institutions, while recognizing that those institutions uphold other inequities that I am unable (or unwilling) to address at this particular moment. By no means do I claim to have the right algorithm of ideological purity, but I hope that I can show my work and demonstrate why what I do serves a larger purpose.

Words and symbols are important here. As an example, the notion of liberty demonstrates how a concept can be semantically and operationally framed to serve opposing ideals. While liberty has been a theme of the right to demonstrate freedom from the constraints of government and regulation, liberation has been invoked by the left as a means to transcend oppression and inequity. In a climate of contested ideologies, the snake eats its own tail and accusations of politicization are themselves politicized. While I am very clear about my own personal politics of gun control and do not want to suggest a broader false equivalency, yesterdays horrific shooting in Alexandria, VA of Congressmembers and staff resulted in finger pointing that at times, became a politicized act of accusing the other side of politicizing the attack.

In these times where real political differences are fueled by a 24 hour news cycle and a social media landscape that turns a microscopic lens into a landscape portrait, arguments over ideology and symbols can be both beside the point, and be the point exactly. The contested meanings over how inclusive the iconic rainbow flag is for the entire LGBT community and whether new or different iterations of that flag are divisive remind me that, as in the case of contested meanings of the Confederate flag, or the burning of the Stars and Stripes, that bickering over symbols is more than just distraction from larger more important issues. While I do think that individuals dont get to decide unilaterally what these symbols mean, the dialogue matters in helping shape the culture and determining which meanings and symbols will endure. Whats needed is a dialogue that reminds us that while we must own our own feelings and opinions and share them, we must respect the right of others to own and share contrary opinions. A dialogue that forces us to balance both conviction and empathy to come up with real solutions to real problems is one worth fighting for.

Ben de Guzman serves on the Executive Committee for the Filipino Veterans Recognition and Education Project and is a Co-Chair for the National Host Committee for the 2018 Creating Change Conference. For more information about FilVetREP and its Remember, Register, Recognize campaign, visit our website at filvetrep.org or find us on Facebook or Twitter.

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TRAFFIC: Clemente Bridge closing at 2 pm for Pirates game; Liberty Bridge closing tonight – Pittsburgh Post-Gazette


Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
TRAFFIC: Clemente Bridge closing at 2 pm for Pirates game; Liberty Bridge closing tonight
Pittsburgh Post-Gazette
The bridge will reopen around 5 a.m. Monday. Crews will conduct barrier removal, line eradication and painting, lane control system adjustments, and other construction activities. The outbound Liberty Tunnel and McArdle Roadway will remain open all ...

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TRAFFIC: Clemente Bridge closing at 2 pm for Pirates game; Liberty Bridge closing tonight - Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Liberty Twp. brothers attending Yale featured on Steve Harvey show … – WRGT TV Fox 45

Liberty Twp. brothers attending Yale featured on Steve Harvey show (Photo courtesy: Steve Harvey show)

(WKEF/WRGT) - Getting in to an Ivy League school is no small feat, so imagine a Liberty Township family's pride when their four sons were all accepted to Yale.

The Wade brothers, Nigel, Zach, Aaron and Nick will be heading off to Connecticut for school this fall, and chose the school because of its "extraordinary" financial aid package. Oh that's right -- we forgot to mention -- not only were the brothers accepted to Yale, they were also accepted to Harvard.

The family's story earned them attention from news outlets all across the globe. Today, Friday, June 16, the family will appear on the Steve Harvey show. Harvey called the story a gift from God, but went on to say it's the result of good parenting, "you have got to be proud," Harvey said to the Wade parents, Kim and Wade. Kim Wade, who happens to be a principal, said she and her husband worked to make sure their boys stayed focused during the summers. The boys' father, Wade, said he and his wife didn't give their boys many choices when they were young, "they didn't know what they wanted," he said and now he says, as a result, they do have choices.

WATCH: Wade family talks to Steve Harvey about quadruplets attending Yale.

During their appearance on Steve Harvey's show, each boy received a check made out for $5,000 to help with expenses.

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Liberty Twp. brothers attending Yale featured on Steve Harvey show ... - WRGT TV Fox 45

Community Foundation of West Chester/Liberty honors couple’s giving – Hamilton Journal News

WEST CHESTER TWP.

Bill and Jenny McCloy, are supporters of many impactful organizations and programs in the area.

Thats why The Community Foundation of West Chester/Liberty presented the couple with the Patricia F. Alderson Philanthropist of the Year Award earlier this month.

The award is presented annually to a local philanthropist who has shown exceptional dedication to improving the community through time, talent, and treasure, according to Erin Clemons, the foundations president and CEO.

The McCloys, who have four children, focus their efforts of time, talent, and treasure on improving the lives of area neighbors living with disabilities.

They got their start after their second child, Sam, now 22, was born with Down Syndrome, a moment Bill McCloy said was probably the greatest and most scariest day of our life.

Being introduced to the Down Syndrome Association of Greater Cincinnati was the spark that ignited the couples philanthropic efforts, he said.

Because we came from humble beginnings, I think we really didnt know all of the need of all of the non-profits out there that are really in need out there, Jenny McCloy said. Having Sam was an introduction into that world.

Jenny McCloy is a 20-year volunteer with organizations such as Melodic Connections, where she serves as board president, and ReelAbilities Cincinnati as Festival Chair.

Bill McCloy, who serves as chief strategic relations officer of CE Power, is board vice president of the Ken Anderson Alliance, an organization acting to create opportunities for adults with developmental disabilities. He is a past board member at Down Syndrome Association of Cincinnati.

The McCloys also support several local hospitals, parochial schools, and charitable organizations.

In addition, they are supporters of the Forever Fund Operating Endowment at the Community Foundation of West Chester/Liberty, and hold a philanthropic donor fund at the Foundation, as well.

Despite their generous giving, Bill McCloy said the couple never uses the word philanthropist.

We knew that we had a responsibility to give back, he said. What kind of legacy do you want to leave behind? What do you want to teach your children? What kind of money do you want to leave behind? What are you going to do with your money?

Patti Alderson, for whom the award in named, founded the Community Foundation of West Chester/Liberty 18 years ago. She said the McCloys are amazing individuals and, as a couple, theyre a dynamo.

I was doing a little research on them and thought Lets see what theyve give to, Alderson said. Its easier just to say You name it, theyve given to it. What a wonderful example they set in their lives Theyre just great people and good souls.

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Community Foundation of West Chester/Liberty honors couple's giving - Hamilton Journal News

Bishops’ voices called ‘vital’ to fight challenges to religious liberty – National Catholic Reporter

Indianapolis

The U.S. bishops voted June 15 to make the Ad Hoc Committee for Religious Liberty a permanent standing committee.

The 132-53 vote came on the second day of the bishops' spring assembly in Indianapolis. There were five abstentions. A simple majority was required for approval.

The bishops' action came less than a week before the start of the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops' fifth annual Fortnight for Freedom June 21-July 4. It is a two-week period of prayer, advocacy and education on religious freedom.

Before the vote, Baltimore Archbishop William E. Lori, chairman of the committee since its creation in 2011, spoke in favor of making it permanent, arguing the need for the body stretches beyond the specific legal and public policy issues challenging religious freedom that continue to emerge.

"Rather, the very idea of religious freedom and its roots in human nature is challenged," he said, "along with the right of religious people and institutions to raise their voices in the public square and to perform ministries that serve the common good in accordance with their religious and moral convictions."

Sunday marks the two-year anniversary of the publication of Laudato Si'. Explore Pope Francis' environmental encyclical with our complimentary readers' guide.

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

"In the face of these challenges, our voice is vital," he said. "Debates about religious freedom in our country are often, sadly, polarizing. In our tumultuous political culture, Catholic laity must be equipped to participate in conversations about the future direction of our country."

Lori will celebrate the fortnight's opening Mass the evening of July 21 at the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Blessed Virgin Mary in Baltimore. The archbishop will celebrate a special closing Mass July 4 in Orlando, Florida, during the Convocation of Catholic Leaders.

In the discussion that followed Lori's presentation, some bishops spoke in favor of establishing a standing committee on religious freedom. Among them was Washington Cardinal Donald W. Wuerl.

"The challenge to religious liberty is a growing one," he said. "The dominant culture increasingly now finds that it's not just a matter of disagreeing with religious principles and positions. But there's a certain level of hostility becoming more and more evident. This problem is not going to go away."

Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York, who was USCCB president when the ad hoc committee was created, also spoke in favor of making it permanent.

He noted that bishops around the world "look to us in the United States (as) real quarterbacks when it comes to the defense of religious freedom" and added that "ecumenical partners how deeply they cherish our leadership on this issue."

"I think it's enhanced the cause of interreligious and ecumenical dialogue, because we're not the only ones concerned," Dolan said. "So, we need some permanence. We need some stability. And I think this is the way to go."

Some bishops felt the ad hoc committee did not need to become permanent because they felt religious liberty could be addressed by existing standing committees.

Cardinal Joseph W. Tobin of Newark, New Jersey, also noted that it was "very unfortunate" that the vote on the committee was taking place a day after the bishops allowed its working group on immigration to cease to exist.

However, after the vote on the committee, Cardinal Daniel N. DiNardo announced he would allow the working group to continue its efforts, prompting applause from the bishops.

In a news conference after the meeting session, Lori said he was grateful "it was not a pro forma discussion, but rather an opportunity for bishops in a wonderfully respectful and dialogic way, to express their views about" religious liberty.

"It's a big step to establish a standing committee," he said. "And so no one would expect it to be a walk in the park."

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Bishops' voices called 'vital' to fight challenges to religious liberty - National Catholic Reporter