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8/6/12 — Freeland Roy “Peg” Terrill, Sr.
Mr. Freeland Roy “Peg” Terrill, Sr. age 88 of Sewanee, Tennessee passed away Friday, August 3, 2012, at Sheltering Arms in Palmer.
Mr. Terrill was born October 6, 1923 in Sewanee, a son of the late James Madison Terrill and Rachel O’Dear Kelly, he was the youngest brother of Claude E. “Crook”, Arthur Lee, J D “Peck”, Donald Preston, Charles Hayden, Walter Mitchell “Crip”, James Edward “Cotton” and Richard Ernest “Zeke” Terrill.
Mr. Terrill was preceded in death by his wife, Irene Elizabeth “Babe” Terrill and had worked many years as an electrician & plumber at The University of the South. He was a U.S. Navy, WW II veteran, he loved sports, especially baseball and horses.
Survivors include his daughter and son-in-law, Tana and Jim Lowrie of Monteagle; son and daughter-in-law, Freeland R. Terrill, Jr. and Denise of Sewanee; grandchildren, Trina Rose, Scotty Coker, Leah Jackson and Ryan Lowrie; great-grandchildren, Tyler Rose, Kobe Coker, Savannah Green, Kylie Coker and Braden Jackson; several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services will be 2:00 P.M. Monday in the funeral home chapel with Reverend Mickey Henley officiating.
Burial will be in Eastern Star Cemetery with full military honors provided by Sequatchie Valley Honor Guard.
The family will receive friends Sunday 3-7 P.M. at the funeral home.
Arrangements are by Cumberland Funeral Home, Monteagle, Tennessee.
Teenager Killed In Friday Crash
Bedford County Teacher Off The Job For Text Message
Stephen Givens, the band and choir director of Community High School was arrested Friday morning on charges of solicitation of a minor.
Detectives said Givens texted a 16-year-old girl, sent her pictures and asked her to send him pictures. Authorities said the student is in one of Givens’ classes. Givens has been suspended without pay.
Sewanee Teacher In Trouble
TVA Losing Money
Hot weather from April to June, including a heat wave that sent temperatures soaring above 100 degrees for four straight days, led to a five percent increase in operating revenues for the Tennessee Valley Authority this quarter. But officials at the federal utility said it still wasn’t enough to overcome the loss TVA suffered earlier in the year amid the mildest winter in decades combined with a sluggish economy. TVA reported a $290 million net loss in the first nine months of 2012. Last year the federal utility reported a $35 million loss during that same time period. The announcement came Friday with the release of TVA’s third quarter report.
Officials said they were committed to low rates but would not be able to say whether there will be plans to increase utility rates until after its board meets later this month.
Tennessee Democratic Party Says No To Candidate
Mark Clayton, a floor installer, received twice the votes of his nearest competitor in a seven-candidate Democratic primary Thursday. Actress Park Overall was one of them.
In a statement released Friday afternoon, the Tennessee Democratic Party said Clayton has only voted in the Democratic Party when he was voting for himself, and only got the most votes because his name was listed first on the ballot.
The party said in a statement Friday that Clayton is associated with a known hate group in Washington, D.C., and the party “disavows his candidacy.”
Clayton is vice president of Public Advocate of the United States, which calls itself a conservative advocacy group.
The Southern Poverty Law Center calls the organization an anti-gay hate group.
Clayton said in an interview before the election that privacy issues are his main concern and that he thinks people are being “over-identified by the government and tracked.”
In the most recent financial disclosures, Corker had more than $6 million remaining, while no other challenger had more than $19,000.
New Base Entry Requirements At AEDC
New base entry requirements have been implemented for the Arnold Engineering Development Complex Mission Area and Arnold Village to comply with revisions to Air Force Installation Perimeter Access Control rules. Everyone driving within the mission area or Arnold Village now must be prepared to show their license, registration and insurance if requested by Arnold Police as a condition of entry. If these documents cannot be produced, the driver will not be allowed to drive on base. Large vehicles, defined as a 15-passenger van or larger, or vehicles towing a trailer or boat, may be subject to additional security scrutiny upon entry. Also, if employees lose or have their common access card or AEDC badge stolen, employees must exhaust all efforts to locate the missing card before being issued a new card. Employees will be required to file an Arnold police report to detail the circumstances associated with the missing card.
New Laser Technique From UTSI
Researchers at the University of Tennessee Space Institute say a new laser technique they developed has several potential applications, especially in the medical field.
The Tullahoma News reports that Dr. Christian Parigger and Professors Jacqueline Johnson and Robert Splinter worked together to develop laser radiation that has accuracy on the molecular level. They say the technique could be used for detailed biomedical imaging and non-invasive surgery.
The nonprofit University of Tennessee Research Foundation says it is interested in commercializing and licensing the technology because it has the potential to overcome risks and limitations posed by traditional surgery.
Parigger and his colleagues said they are seeking investment from the National Institutes of Health to explore long-term research.
Red Raider Football Looking Good
The Coffee Co. Red Raider football team continues to prepare for the 2012 football season. On Friday the Raider starters defeated Grundy Co. in a scrimmage game 2 TD’s to zero, a game played on the mountain. DeAngelo Rozier had 40 yard TD run and QB Peyton Meeker hit Jesse Brown with a 50 yard TD pass with Brown breaking several tackles on his way to the end zone.
The Raiders will host Sequatchie Co. and Ravenwood on Thursday at Carden-Jarrell Field in a 3-way scrimmage. On Saturday Coffee Co. will travel to Lebanon for a jamboree beginning at 5pm.
Two More Raiders To Play College Football
Two football players that played for the Coffee Co. Red Raiders last season will play at the next level. Charles Jones and Brent Wix will take their skills to Cumberland University in Lebanon.
The Cumberland Bulldogs participate in the NAIA Mid-South Conference under former Wilson-Central High School coach DeWayne Alexander.