Author's posts

12/04/12

Birthdays:

Sheila Staton – Pizza Winner!

Stephen Landers – 57,  Shirley Bland – 60.

12/7/12 —- Pamela Kay Dickerson Hambrick

 

 Pamela  Kay   Dickerson Hambrick, age 56 of Tullahoma, Tennessee, passed away on December 1, 2012.
She  had formerly worked as an Accountant at Temco, Inc. and was a member of the  Prairie Plains Baptist Church.
She was born in Manchester, TN to her parents,  the late Virgil R. Dickerson and Avaree J. Certain Dickerson and was also  preceded in death by her brother, Joseph Jody Dickerson.
She is survived by  her husband, David J. Hambrick of Tullahoma, TN; step-children, Teresa Hambrick  Abdellatif and Brian Hambrick both of Tullahoma, TN; two grandchildren,  Bryce Tripllete and Aiden Konner Hambrick; sister, Carolyn Bearden of Hillsboro,  TN; brother, Donald Dickerson and his wife Christine of Franklin County,  TN;  and a host of other relatives and friends.
Visitation will be on  Thursday, December 6, 2012 from 5:00 – 8:00 p.m.
The Funeral Service will be  conducted on Friday morning, December 7, 2012 at 11:00 a.m. from the Chapel of  Central Funeral Home with Pastor Eddie Miller officiating.
Burial will follow at  the Prairie Plains Church of Christ Cemetery in Hillsboro, TN.
Arrangements with  CENTRAL FUNERAL HOME of Manchester, TN.

Coffee County Rocks Rebels

Red Raiders inbound the ball in upset win on Tuesday in Winchester... Photo by Dennis Weaver

Last night was a night dominated by the Coffee County Lady Raiders as they traveled to Winchester and defeated Franklin County 44-24.
Senior Ginny Clayborne had a big night pumping in 20 points for the Lady Raiders. Alaina Lusk had 9 and Katie Reid added 7 to go along with 5 steals and 7 assists. Clayborne and Reid were named the Co-Gateway Tire and Service Center players of the game.
Coffee County improved to 4-3 on the season.

Lance Crismond had a huge night as he hit for 27 points helping to propel the Raiders to a 51-36 upset win over the Rebels. 8 of Crismond’s points came in the 4th quarter. He earned the player of the game.
Coffee County ups it record to 3-4.
Coffee County will travel to Smyrna on Friday night airtime is 6:20pm and tipoff is set for 6:30pm.

The Coffee County Red Raider basketball teams would like to invite you to a chili supper and silent auction on Dec. 14. The cost of the chili supper is $5. Also that same night the basketball teams will be giving away 2 pairs of tickets to the MTSU basketball on Dec. 18 against Tennessee St. in Murfreesboro. The tickets will be given away during the 2 halftimes of the Lincoln County games at Joe Frank Patch Gymnasium.

Download Thunder Radio’s broadcast

Lady Bucks Will Be In Action Friday and Saturday

The Motlow Lady Bucks will have their hands full Friday night when they attempt to break a six-game losing streak against the nation’s seventh-ranked Walters State Lady Senators.
Tipoff is scheduled for 6 p.m. Friday at Copperweld Arena. The Lady Bucks (3-6, 2-3) will get another shot at a Tennessee Community College Athletic Association (TCCAA) rival on Saturday when they host Roane State (1-8, 1-4) at 2 p.m. Saturday’s contest will be broadcast live on our sister station WHMT radio 105.1 FM and tullahomaradio.com

Brewer To Head Manchester City Schools

Dr Keith Brewer

Monday night the Manchester City School Board met and voted to hire Dr. Keith Brewer as its new Director of Schools for the 3 school system. In a 4-1 vote, the board approved a four-year contract appointing Dr. Keith Brewer as the Director of Schools. His contract will begin July 1, 2013.
Brewer previously spent 12 years with the system and before that was superintendent in Grundy County.
Mike Lewis was the lone “no” vote.
Brewer’s approval came after discussions about his salary that was approved at $115,000 plus $5,000 for travel plus benefits per year
In comparison to one local school system Coffee County Schools Director Dr LaDonna McFall makes a base salary of $108,000. McFall oversees 9 schools.

Testimony Starts In Murder Trial

Jeffrey Smithson

The testimony in the trial of a Manchester man accused of murdering his 81-year-old aunt got underway yesterday afternoon in Coffee County Circuit Court.
Jeffery Smithson is accused of the murder of Virginia White last August in her Ingram Apartments in Manchester. Investigators allege that Smithson struck Ms White in the face then struck her in the back of the head with an object and then tied panty hose around her neck. Prosecution and defense attorneys spent Monday and Tuesday interviewing prospective jurors in the case. Coffee County Circuit Court Judge stated in court that Assistant District Attorney Marla Holloway and defense attorney Margo Kilgore had questioned some 70 jurors and narrowed the list down to 40 by Tuesday at noon. After returning from lunch the attorneys then narrowed the list down to 12 regular jurors and 2 alternates. Testimony started late yesterday afternoon. The first witness was Manchester Police Investigator Butch Stewart. He was the original investigator on the scene and he described what he found in the apartment. Coffee County District Attorney Mickey Layne is also taking part in the prosecution of Smithson. While Kevin Askren is co-defense counsel in the case. Testimony will continue again today in Coffee County Circuit Court.

Tea Party Puts Pressure On Haslam

Gov. Bill Haslam

Tea partiers are pressuring Governor Bill Haslam to rule out running an insurance exchange. Under the federal healthcare overhaul, Tennessee officials can launch an exchange for the state, but if they don’t, Washington will – and Haslam has been slow to commit.
Tea-party groups and other conservative critics are planning a demonstration at the capitol in Nashville today (Dec 5, 2012). They don’t want the state to play ball with the federal healthcare law by building an exchange. It would be an online store and database to help Tennesseans shop for insurance plans.
A spokesman says while Haslam doesn’t like the healthcare law either, he thinks the state could run its own exchange more efficiently than Washington. But the rules are murky, so Haslam has been holding out for clarity, ahead of a December 14th deadline to decide.

Tullahoma Gets TVA Money

Tennessee Valley Authority provided a record $579 million in tax equivalent payments in fiscal year 2012 to states and local governments where it sells electricity or has power properties, and an estimated $207,000 will be going to Tullahoma. TVA pays tax equivalent payments annually in the eight states where it sells electricity or owns generating plants, transmission lines, substations and other assets and directly to 146 local governments where TVA owns power facilities.

Holiday Safety Event From URMC

Join United Regional Medical Center for our first ever “Here, for You” FREE Kid’s Holiday Safety Event on Saturday December 15th from 9:30-11:30am at the Asbury Community Center.
Enjoy Free…
Pictures with Santa
Exercising with Elves
Emergency Education
Holiday Nutritional Tips
Games & Much More

Save SSA Today (Dec. 5, 2012)

Thousands of Social Security employees at more than 100 Social Security offices across the country and representatives from a 200-plus member organization coalition are taking to the streets today (December 5, 2012) in what the coalition is calling an effort to “save Social Security and Medicare” from extinction .
A recent study by the National Council of Social Security Field Operations Locals (NCSSFOL) on the potential impact of sequestration determined that if mandated, sequestration would require the Social Security Administration (SSA) to reduce its budget by 5.5 percent. As a result of those cuts, SSA would have to institute an agency-wide hiring freeze with the exception of the hearings operations. This would result in a loss of more than 3,500 SSA and DDS (Disability Determination Service) State employees. More than 300 contact stations would have to be closed, eliminating in-person services in many rural and remote sites. SSA would also have to indefinitely suspend mailing out Social Security statements thus eliminating an important link between young workers and the benefits they will receive when they retire. (For more information on the study and a full list of coalition partners go to www.preserveyoursocialsecurity.org)