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12/02/2015-James Doyle Nelson

Mr. James Doyle Nelson, age 24, of Tullahoma, TN, passed away at his
residence on Saturday, November 28, 2015. Visitation with the family
will be held from 2:00 PM until 4:00 PM on Wednesday, December 2, 2015 at
Manchester Funeral Home.

James was born in Wichita, Kansas, the son of Robert Nelson of
Manchester, TN and Teresa D. Hall of Booneville, AR. He served his
country in the United States Marine Corps and was employed as an
ironworker for Gilley Construction.

James was preceded in death by his maternal grandfather, Doyle Hall and
his paternal grandfather, Bob Nelson.

In addition to his parents, James is also survived by one son, Owen
Robert Nelson; one daughter, Ava Grace Nelson; the mother of his
children, Tiffany Nelson; two sisters, Kelsea Dianne Nelson and Kascey
Summers of Jerusalem, AR; his paternal grandmother, Katherine Nelson of
Manchester; his maternal grandmother, Elaine Hall of Mansfield, AR; three
aunts, Tyna Martin, Kem Ross, and Kristin Rondolet.

MANCHESTER FUNERAL HOME IS HONORED TO SERVE THE NELSON FAMILY

12/02/15 — Dale Lee Cooke

cookeMr. Dale Lee Cooke, age 57 of Manchester, Tennessee
passed from this life on Saturday, November 28, 2015 surrounded by his
loving
family. Mr. Cooke was preceded in death
by his parents, Palmer and Bonnie Cooke, sister, Kathy Long, brother,
Charlie
Cooke and granddaughter Allyson Wiwi.

He is survived by two daughters, Stephanie Wiwi and
husband Steven of Huber Heights, Ohio, Lora Padilla and husband Mike of
Huber
Heights, Ohio, one son Aaron Cooke of Manchester, Tennessee four grandsons,
Jacob, Joshua, Mason, Carson, one granddaughter, Addison, best friends,
Becky
Williams and husband Tom of Manchester, Tennessee, Megan Williams, Dustin
Williams, and Randall Phillips of Tennessee.

Mr. Cooke enjoyed cookouts and watching football. He liked to work
around his home and enjoyed
time and fellowship with friends and family.
He will be dearly missed by all who knew him.

Funeral Services for Mr. Dale L. Cooke will be
conducted on Wednesday, December 2, 2015 at 6:00 PM at the Coffee County
Funeral Chapel with Mr. Russ Rogers officiating. Visitation will be held
on Wednesday,
December 2, 2015 from 4:00 PM until 6:00 PM at the Coffee County Funeral
Chapel, Manchester, Tennessee. Mr. Cooke
will be cremated honoring his wishes.

In lieu of flowers, the family requests memorial
donations be made to the Forest Mill Church of Christ, 3388 McMinnville
Highway,
Manchester, Tennessee 37355. The family
is grateful for all the help from the Forest Mill Church of Christ during
their
time of need and the sickness of their loved one.

COFFEE COUNTY FUNERAL CHAPEL IS HONORED TO SERVE THE FAMILY
OF DALE L. COOKE.

18-Wheeler Catches On Fire Thanksgiving Day

Photo taken by Rob Clutter

Photo taken by Rob Clutter

Three Coffee County Volunteer Fire Departments assisted the Rutherford County fire department with a semi fire on Interstate 24 Thursday.
The fire occurred at mile marker 96 close to Beechgrove around 1:50 p.m. According to the Tennessee Highway Patrol the right lanes were blocked to westbound traffic and drivers were diverted to alternate routes. Drivers along the busy interstate experienced delays in traffic due to the fire.
The North Coffee, Summitville and New Union Fire Departments along with fire departments from Bedford County assisted the Rutherford County Fire Department. Officials said that there were some 15 firefighters involved in battling the fire in the 18-wheeler.
Cleanup crews needed several hours to not only extinguish the fire but to also clean up the debris from the truck itself.
No one was injured in the incident.

Manchester Fire and Rescue Control MTEK Fire

Fire at MTEK was quickly controlled by MFD... Photo provided

Fire at MTEK was quickly controlled by MFD… Photo provided

Manchester Firefighters responded to MTEK in the Interstate Industrial Park for a structure fire on Wednesday. The fire was contained to the area of origin, the sprinkler system activated in that area of the facility and contained the fire until Manchester Fire and Rescue could extinguish it. An onsite investigation was accomplished and the cause of the fire was determined.
Off duty firefighters manned the main fire station in the city and provided additional manpower on scene to extinguish and investigate this incident.
Coffee County EMS and Coffee County EMA provided assistance.

Tennessee Board of Regents Receive Grant

grant_moneyThe Tennessee Board of Regents says it will invest a $2 million grant received from the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation into programs that will help increase graduation rates, especially among first-generation and low-income students. According to The Tennessean, the board said in a statement that the grant would help expand and improve services offered at schools. The board includes the state’s 46 public colleges that aren’t part of the University of Tennessee system.
In a statement, TBR Chancellor John Morgan says the money will go toward workshops and training that will encourage faculty and staff across the system to make the most of existing programs.
Each program that the funding will support was developed around Gov. Bill Haslam’s Drive to 55 initiative, aimed to increase the number of college graduates in the state.

 

More Tennessee Students College-Bound

The size of Tennessee's freshman class increased by 10 percent this year, largely because of the Tennessee Promise scholarship program, which provides free tuition to eligible students. Credit: camelo/morguefile.com

The size of Tennessee’s freshman class increased by 10 percent this year, largely because of the Tennessee Promise scholarship program, which provides free tuition to eligible students. Credit: camelo/morguefile.com

College students across Tennessee are relishing a break this week because of the holiday, and this year there are more of them, thanks in part to the state’s new Tennessee Promise program. The free-tuition program increased the number of first-time freshmen to more than 50,000 this year, an increase of about 10 percent in the first year of the program. Mike Krause, executive director of Tennessee Promise, said the program is helping to shift post-secondary education in the state in a way that nothing else could. “There was no way we could ever produce more college graduates in Tennessee if the same number of Tennesseans were going to college,” he said. “We needed to grow that number. This data indicates that we have, dramatically.” Tennessee Promise also came in under budget in its first year, costing $2 million less than what was allocated for the program. Krause said that’s largely because many students who applied were eligible to receive federal financial aid, reducing the demand on state funds. In addition to providing tuition, Tennessee Promise also provides a mentoring program to participants. While Tennessee Promise is having an immediate impact on the future of students and their families, Krause said, it ultimately will have a positive impact on the entire state. “For us, the starting point is the economic development effects that it has to have a more educated populace, because that leads to a better workforce. We can recruit different industry to the state,” he said. “It really is kind of an incredible set of second- and third-order benefits that emerge.” The Tennessee Promise scholarship provides two years of tuition-free education at any of the state’s 13 community colleges and 27 technical colleges. Any high school senior who graduates from an eligible Tennessee high school or completes a home school program can apply. The program is available to students regardless of socioeconomic status. More information is online at tennesseepromise.gov.

Eight Red Raider Football Players Tabbed for All-Region Honors

CCEight members of the Coffee County Red Raider football team were named to the Region 2-6A All-Region team which was announced on Saturday morning’s Coffee Coaches Show. Five Red Raiders were selected to the 1st team, while 3 players from Coffee County received honorable mention honors.
Sophomore QB Alontae Taylor headlines the Raider selections. Taylor led Coffee County in total offense as he accounted for more than 2,300 yards on the season. Junior Tyrese McGee was also selected. McGee was the 2nd leading receiver and the 3rd leading rusher for Coffee County and accounted for more than 600 yards of offense and 5 touchdowns. Senior fullback/linebacker Mill Harner was also honored as he rushed for nearly 800 yards and 8 touchdowns on the season for the Red Raiders. Senior lineman Jacoby Lowe and freshman lineman Nathaniel Horne were also recognized for their outstanding play. Junior offensive lineman Silas Vaughn, senior cornerback Boone Riddle and freshman lineman Elijah Norton received honorable mention to the squad as chosen by the Region 2-6A coaches.

Saros Makes NHL Debut, Preds Fall to Sabres

Pete Weber’s postgame report

Nashville Predators center Mike Fisher

Nashville Predators center Mike Fisher

Juuse Saros stopped 20 shots in his NHL debut, but it wasn’t enough as the Buffalo Sabres defeated the Nashville Predators by a 4-1 final on Saturday night at Bridgestone Arena.

Buffalo scored four unanswered to finish the contest, including two goals on a five-minute power play in the second period after Nashville forward Viktor Arvidsson was penalized for cross checking.

“It was tough; it was a low-event game, but we’re holding a 1-0 lead at that point and there wasn’t a lot going on for them up until that,” Predators Head Coach Peter Laviolette said of the Buffalo power-play chance. “I don’t think [Arvidsson] had any bad intentions, he just ran into somebody and the stick got caught a little bit high, but just a tough turn of events.”

The loss was just the second regulation defeat for Nashville on home ice this season, pushing their overall record to 12-7-4 on the season.

Mike Fisher opened the scoring with his third goal in as many games. Fisher’s tally on the power play at 11:42 of the first period was his 250th in the NHL and came courtesy of a slick James Neal feed off the draw to the right of goaltender Chad Johnson.

The 1-0 score held through a majority of the middle stanza until the Sabres received the five-minute power-play chance. Jamie McGinn and Sam Reinhart scored for Buffalo with the man advantage to give Buffalo a 2-1 lead headed into the intermission.

“We were playing a pretty solid game, and then we took the five-minute major; that kind of deflated us,” forward Eric Nystrom said. “It was an opportunity for us to keep the momentum with a big kill, but they scored two goals on that five-minute major. It kind of took the wind right out of our sails.”

Reinhart added his second of the night early in the third and Ryan O’Reilly added an empty netter to seal the victory for Buffalo.

A bright spot on the evening was the play of Saros, who was just recalled earlier in the day from Milwaukee of the AHL. Selected 99th overall by Nashville in the 2013 NHL Entry Draft, Saros fought off a number of shots throughout the evening, masking whatever nerves he may have been feeling.

“I had a couple shots at the beginning that got me going,” Saros said. “I felt pretty good with the pace and everything, and it’s nice to get the first game down.”

“He was good; he seemed like everything was really in control,” Laviolette said of Saros. “He had a couple of tough shots early – there were a couple shots that came in real funny and hard and he was able to make those saves, and then I thought he really settled into it after that.”

The Predators will remain at home to host the Arizona Coyotes on Tuesday night, and after playing six games in a nine-day stretch, Laviolette is hoping some rest will help lead to a notch in the win column.

“I thought we could’ve had more gas… the energy, maybe the second period had something to do with that,” Laviolette said. “The road trip lasted until tonight, whatever it is – it was a long trip and I’m not making any excuses, but I think we can play at a higher tempo. I think that’s when we’re at our best, and I think we had more to push in that area tonight.”

Predators Fall in Overtime to Philadelphia

Preds Logo2Philadelphia Flyers captain Claude Giroux could have a future in coaching. He certainly knows how to draw up a winning play.

Giroux had the idea and defenseman Shayne Gostisbehere executed it, scoring a power-play goal with 52.0 seconds remaining in overtime to give the Flyers a 3-2 win against the Nashville Predators at Wells Fargo Center on Friday.

The game turned when the Predators were called for having too many men on the ice at 2:40 of overtime. The Flyers called a timeout halfway through the advantage and that’s when Giroux commandeered the dry-erase board.

“[Assistant coach] Joey [Mullen] is not on the bench but he prepares the guys really well,” Flyers coach Dave Hakstol said. “That’s all the players and Joey. They did a great job.”

Coming out of the timeout Jakub Voracek carried the puck into the Nashville zone and curled to the point on the right side. He sent it to Gostisbehere in the center of the zone inside the blue line and he moved it to Giroux at the left dot. Gostisbehere cut down the middle and Giroux found him above the hash marks. His one-timer went through a Wayne Simmonds screen and past Rinne.

“We’re just trying to get some traffic, move around, make that forward not really see what’s going on behind him,” Giroux said. “Just trying to get some guys open. Whether it was [Gostisbehere or Voracek] open, I was going to try to make that pass. It worked so it’s good.”

Colin McDonald and Michael Del Zotto also scored for the Flyers (8-10-5) and Giroux had two assists.

It was a play almost exactly the same as the one Gostisbehere scored on in overtime Monday to defeat the Carolina Hurricanes.

“It was actually the same exact play that we were trying the first time around [on the power play against the Predators], but we cleaned some things up and we were a little more patient this time I think,” Gostisbehere said. “It was a great play by [Giroux] to draw that up and great entry by Jake and [Simmonds] got [Rinne’s] eyes.”

The goal was Gostisbehere’s third in seven games and second in overtime. He was recalled from Lehigh Valley of the American Hockey League on Nov. 14 to replace defenseman Mark Streit, who is expected to miss another month recovering from surgery to repair a detached pubic plate. But Gostisbehere’s play could force the Flyers into some tough decisions when Streit returns.

“It’s a fun ride right now and I don’t have any plans of getting off it,” Gostisbehere said. “I’ve never scored that many [overtime] winners in my life so it’s a surreal moment. But I’m going to keep going and I’m looking forward to New York [Rangers on Saturday].”

Goalie Michal Neuvirth made 33 saves, including a spectacular post-to-post stop on the Predators’ Eric Nystrom late in the second period with the game tied 1-1. Nystrom had an open net from the left slot on the rebound of Mike Fisher’s shot off a shorthanded rush, but Neuvirth leapt across and did the splits to stop Nystrom with 4:50 remaining.

Filip Forsberg had a goal and an assist, and Fisher scored for the Predators (12-6-4). Goaltender Pekka Rinne, who played his 400th NHL game, made 33 saves.

The Predators, in the final game of a five-game road trip (1-3-1), forced overtime when Fisher jumped into the crease and banged in the rebound of a Forsberg shot with 20.0 seconds remaining in the third period.

But the Predators were unable to carry that momentum into overtime.

“It was a big goal for us at the time,” Predators coach Peter Laviolette said. “We were pressing at the end. Had some chances. [Neuvirth] made some good saves. … Was good to get the extra goal and get to overtime, get the point.”

The Flyers took a 2-1 lead at 4:57 of the third on McDonald’s first goal of the season. Scott Laughton held the puck along the left wing boards in the Predators end and got it to defenseman Evgeny Medvedev at the point. His shot hit McDonald in front, and he fought off Nystrom to get to the rebound and slide it past Rinne.

Forsberg opened the scoring 1:44 into the game with his first goal in 17 games, one-timing a Mike Ribeiro pass into the slot past Neuvirth. It was Forsberg’s fourth goal of the season; he was tied for second among rookies last season with 26 goals. Against the Flyers, he had four shots on goal and three that missed the net, including a shot off the crossbar with the game tied late in the second period.

“I think it was only a matter of time,” Laviolette said. “He had lots of chances and looks in New York; Thought he played a real strong game versus the Rangers [on Monday]. Tonight he was shooting the puck well also. Was good for him to have a good first shift, they were humming in the offensive zone and were able to generate.”

The Flyers tied it at 4:00 of the first on Del Zotto’s first goal of the season. It was their first even-strength goal since the third period Nov. 17 against the Los Angeles Kings, a span of 261 minutes, 58 seconds.

It was the first time six games that the Flyers scored more than one 5-on-5 goal in a game. The Flyers entered Friday 30th in the League at 1.73 goals per game.

Nashville forward Gabriel Bourque missed the final two periods because of an upper-body injury.

The Predators return to Nashville on Saturday night for a 7 PM contest with Buffalo.  Thunder Radio will bring you that broadcast on the Fifth Third Bank/Nashville Predators Radio Network.

11/29/15 — Mary Catherine Fenner Gray

grayMary Catherine Fenner Gray, 84, of Tullahoma passed away on Nov. 26, 2015 at Life Care Center in Tullahoma. Mrs. Gray was a former resident of Lynchburg.
A Baptist by faith, Mrs. Gray loved to cook and take care of her family. She was last employed as a cook at Country Side Restaurant in Lynchburg.
She is survived by sons Randy (Jennifer) Caldwell of Shelbyville, TN; Steve (Andrea) Caldwell of Tullahoma; Tony Caldwell of Christiana, TN and Kenny Caldwell, AL;
Mrs. Gray is also survived by one daughter, Shirley (Wesley) Griffin of Lynchburg, TN.
Survivors also include 14 grandchildren, 20 great grandchildren and two great-great grandchildren.
She was preceded in death by her parents William and Jimmie Gipson Fenner; husbands Oliver Caldwell and Robert T. Gray and son Bennie Jim Gray.
Visitation will be held on Saturday, Nov. 28 from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at Lynchburg Funeral Home. Funeral service will be Sunday at 2 p.m. from the funeral home chapel. Bro Bobby Bates will officiate with interment following at Melson Cemetery.
LYNCHBURG FUNERAL HOME IN CHARGE OF ARRANGEMENTS