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Jerry Parkway?? June 13, 2007

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Sorry its been a while since I’ve blogged. Been busy here at the paper. I am contemplating starting a new blog, on something or someone closer to me.

 For now:

There is a push to name part of U.S. 460 after the late Falwell.

Jerry’s Mountain May 23, 2007

Posted by atjohnson in About Jerry, Business, Education, Jerry Falwell, Liberty University, Uncategorized.
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From washingtonpost.com:

‘Jerry’s mountain’
    ”Realtor Brenda Phelps likes to point out the sights to those contemplating a move to Lynchburg: ‘There’s Jerry’s church. There’s Jerry’s mountain.’ Once, when asked if Jerry Falwell personally owned that land overlooking the city, she said no, Liberty University did — ‘but it’s Jerry’s mountain.’
    ”Lynchburg is one of those cities that, in the Roman tradition, claim to be built on seven hills, and Jerry Falwell, who died on May 15 at age 73, was a man of many mountains. He’s probably best known for founding the Moral Majority in 1979 and quickly growing it to 6.5 million members: It played a major role in electing Ronald Reagan but faded in the late 1980s.
    ”Liberty University is another Falwell mountain: It began as Lynchburg Baptist College in 1971 and … now claims almost 10,000 students in residence, with 15,000 more in distance learning programs. He hoped some day to have Liberty play Notre Dame in football and joked … that he was officially Liberty’s chancellor but primarily its athletic director.”
    – Marvin Olasky, writing on “Jerry’s Mountains,” in the May 26 issue of World

 From Facebook.com

More on Falwell Funeral May 23, 2007

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Here is the story by Pam over here at The Roanoke Times on the funeral.

 Excerpt:

In the late 1980s, when donations to his ministry dropped precipitously, Liberty University had racked up $73 million in debt and was on the brink of bankruptcy. Falwell’s “Old Time Gospel Hour” was $16 million in debt. But by 1997, an anonymous businessman had repaid creditors and staved off financial ruin.

Today, trustees say the university is on solid ground by any measure — enrollment or revenues — but critics wonder what shape his legacy will take in the future.

“The sentiment is Falwell Ministries … is going to do the same thing as Jerry: Focus on core, hot-button issues like abortion and gay rights,” said the Rev. Barry Lynn of Americans United for Separation of Church and State. “I think Liberty University could face trouble without him. It now has an accredited law school and a significant endowment that will allow it to stay around for a while. But without the figure of Jerry Falwell, it simply won’t be as attractive a place to go.”

Falwell Aviation correction May 23, 2007

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In an earlier post I implied that Falwell Aviation was owned by Falwell Sr. himself. Although I intended to articulate the fact that the business was in the family, I failed to do so.

Falwell Aviation is owned by the late Jerry’s cousin, Calvin, who is also part-owner of the Lynchburg Hillcats, the minor league baseball team in the ‘Burg, and Lawrence Falwell.

It is not clear how much, if any, financial interests Sr. had in the company.

About face May 16, 2007

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I will be changing my banner shortly. Although Falwell Sr. has passed, I still plan on covering the expansion at Liberty, which will surely continue through Jerry Jr.

Breaking News! May 15, 2007

Posted by atjohnson in About Jerry, Business, Jerry Falwell, Liberty University, Uncategorized.
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Falwell Sr. was found unconscious in his office this morning

LYNCHBURG, Va. (AP) — The Rev. Jerry Falwell was hospitalized in “gravely serious” condition Tuesday after being found unconscious in his office Tuesday, a Liberty University executive said.

Ron Godwin, executive vice president of Falwell’s university, said Falwell was found unconscious after missing an appointment Tuesday morning.

Falwell, a television evangelist who founded the Moral Majority, became the face of the religious right in the 1980s. He later became president of the conservative Liberty University. Falwell was hospitalized twice in early 2005 for heart and lung problems.

“Falwell Aviation: 32,000 feet closer to God.” April 13, 2007

Posted by atjohnson in About Jerry, Business, Expansion, Jerry Falwell, Liberty University, Technology, Uncategorized.
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I had no clue Falwell (ACTUALLY HIS FAMILY –HIS OWN INVOLVEMENT IS NOT YET KNOWN) had his own plane service. But, alas, Falwell Aviation is located in Lynchburg, is privately owned, has a flight school and charter’s planes to business professionals and other individuals. The business has been around for 50 years, according to the snazzy Web site, and has a private airport off Route 460.

Andrew Kantor, technology reporter at The Roanoke Times, has decided the motto for the company should be: “32,000 feet closer to God.”

Checking in March 28, 2007

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Not much has been going on about LU in the news.

I was driving U.S. 460 the other night and was curious if LU was thinking of putting lights on the monogram to make it more visible at night. The red brick shows through pretty well, but lights might enhance the affect.

Thomas Road Baptist Church March 4, 2007

Posted by atjohnson in Business, Expansion, Financial, Jerry Falwell, Liberty University, Religion, Uncategorized.
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Here is a more in depth look at Thomas Road Baptist Church from Pamela Podger, who covers religion at the Roanoke Times.
“With frenetic energy this week, workmen bustled inside the Thomas Road Baptist Church before its rebirth Sunday.

Cords snaked down the main hall. Ladders littered corridors. The place buzzed as hundreds of workers laid bricks, arranged lighting and painted columns.

The Rev. Jerry Falwell’s church will mark its 50th anniversary Sunday in a new 6,000-seat sanctuary. From the church’s humble beginnings inside a sticky, abandoned Donald Duck bottling plant, the new structure culminates Falwell’s dream to have all of his ministries in one location.

“The church is the fulcrum, the heartbeat of the ministry,” said Falwell, 72. “This means the future Thomas Road Baptist Church will never have to build again. It’s unthinkable that you could overflow a 1-million-square-foot building. This is all in the Lord’s hands.”

The founder of the defunct Moral Majority is unapologetic about his mission, fanning the flames of evangelical causes and helping politicians who share his worldview. Presidential candidates make pilgrimages here, with Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., giving the Liberty University commencement address in May and Sen. George Allen, R-Va., expected as a speaker Sunday.

Falwell is excited about his new church with its air-conditioned pulpit, high-definition screens and video cameras that will zoom in on worshippers during services and baptisms. The new church is housed in a complex that offers Christian education from preschool to doctorate degrees.

The son of an agnostic bootlegger, Falwell founded his church when he was 22, after years of listening to Christian radio at his mother’s bidding.

He was saved at 18 and, at his pastor’s urging, went to Baptist Bible College in Springfield, Mo., instead of Notre Dame, where he planned on studying journalism. In 1967, he spread his message with his Old Time Gospel Hour show, first by radio and then on television.

But he candidly admits to playing hookey from Sunday school as a youngster.

“Oh yes, many times,” Falwell said. “There was a fire escape just outside our Sunday school room. And when the teacher was praying, we would all — two or three of us — just disappear.”

With his Texas-size ambitions, Falwell has combined all his educational, recreational and worship amenities on one campus that includes his Liberty Christian Academy, with about 1,000 students, as well as his seminary, law school and university. All but the church sanctuary were recycled from the former 888,000-square-foot Ericsson cellphone plant. He acknowledges a bittersweet aspect of Sunday’s milestone, giving tribute to now-deceased people who encouraged him in 1956 when he knocked on 100 doors a day and invited residents to his new church.

“There are so many people, including my mother, who invested so much in me and this church and who will not be there Sunday. They’re gone,” Falwell said. “The people who heard me talk about this, but who won’t see it. That’s a disappointment.”

Falwell’s two sons, Jonathan and Jerry Jr., help run Liberty University and Thomas Road Baptist. The church, which started with 35 members, now claims 24,000 people on its rolls.

Jerry Falwell Jr., general counsel and vice chancellor at Liberty, said the last time the church moved into a new sanctuary was on its 14th anniversary.

“I was 8 years old in 1970 and I remember being so awestruck by the sheer size of the 3,000-seat auditorium that I spent more time staring at the distant ceiling than listening to the sermons,” Jerry Falwell Jr. said. “My kids will probably be similarly distracted on Sunday.”

Jonathan Falwell, who is the church’s executive pastor and shares pastoral duties with his father, tested the sound and lighting systems in the new sanctuary one day last week. The new church has an indoor and outdoor playground with biblical themes — from Noah’s Ark to Jonah and the whale. A long hall that they’ve dubbed “Main Street” offers worship opportunities, wireless Internet access and a coffee shop and restaurant called The Lion & The Lamb Cafe.

“It’s like a Christian Starbucks,” said Jonathan Falwell, who got his seminary degree from Liberty University in 1996. “We built this for people who live in the community and we want to reach with the gospel. We believe it is all part of God’s plan.”

Church members have painted murals or made tapestries, such as “I Am the Vine” and “Thy Will Be Done,” that adorn the new complex’s walls. It also has formal spaces for funerals and weddings, both inside and out.

The new church also has private places, such as a prayer chapel with the wood floors from the original church.

The Falwells have said they’re not sure if they’ll sell the former church facility that encases the abandoned bottling plant. “We’re not actively listing it; we’re playing it by ear,” said Jonathan Falwell.

Over the years, people have given Jerry Falwell Sr. about a dozen soda bottles from the Donald Duck plant. Those items adorn his office, along with photos of his eight grandchildren and a photo with the Rev. Billy Graham after Falwell officiated at a wedding.

Falwell, a portly preacher who was hospitalized twice in March 2005, has rolled back on his political and sometimes polarizing statements. He credits the Moral Majority with helping propel Ronald Reagan to the presidency. But years later, he was forced to apologize for partly blaming the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks on groups that “tried to secularize America,” including gays, feminists and the American Civil Liberties Union.

Falwell said his desire is to focus on his ministries, while growing his Liberty University legacy from the current 9,600 students to 25,000 students in the next decade or so. He said he plans to continue preaching for years, while allowing his son Jonathan to do more of the five Sunday services.

“He’ll begin doing two and I’ll do one sometime next year, and at some point in time I’m going fishing,” Falwell said. “I’ll never retire, but somewhere I’ll get off the treadmill.”

How they measure up

2,440 – Seats in the Roanoke Civic Center Performing Arts Center

2,500 – Seats in the sanctuary of First Baptist Church on Third Street in Roanoke

6,000 – Seats in the new Thomas Road Baptist Church sanctuary”

Following LU February 23, 2007

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I have been trying to keep an eye on possible development at Liberty via planning commission meetings. The problem is, the city does not post the agendas online, so how is one supposed to know what will be put forth?

Regardless, here is the schdule of meetings for February and March.

Physical Development Committee Meeting 2/27/2007 10:30 AM – 12:00 AM
City Council Work Session 2/27/2007 1:00 PM – 12:00 AM
City Council Meeting 2/27/2007 5:00 PM – 12:00 AM
Finance Committee Meeting 3/6/2007 8:30 AM – 12:00 AM
City Council Budget Work Session 3/6/2007 1:00 PM – 12:00 AM
City Council Budget Work Session 3/13/2007 1:00 PM – 12:00 AM
Lynchurg Parking Authority 3/13/2007 5:00 PM – 12:00 AM
City Council Meeting 3/13/2007 7:30 PM – 12:00 AM
City Council Budget Work Session 3/20/2007 1:00 PM – 12:00 AM
March on Litter 3/24/2007 9:00 AM – 12:00 PM
Physical Development Committee 3/27/2007 10:30 AM – 12:00 AM
City Council Work Session 3/27/2007 1:00 PM – 12:00 AM
City Council Meeting 3/27/2007 5:00 PM – 12:00 AM
City Council Budget Public Hearing–Moved from April 3 3/27/2007 7:00 PM – 12:00 AM