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Mon, Sep 6, 2010
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September 1, 2010 In house ed/Interview with returned WCHS Marines one of most compelling
Tuesday morning we heard that four more Americans were killed in Afghanistan. We immediately thought of our local young men enlisted in the Armed Forces. This war is escalating to a fevered pitch and more and more Americans are in the crossfire.

THP seeks possible witness in apparent hit and run pedestrian fatality

Photo courtesy of THP/This vehicle may have a connection to the victim.
THP seeks possible witness in apparent hit and run pedestrian fatality
On line only breaking news update
Investigators have identified the man who was the victim of last Wednesday's apparent hit and run fatality on Interstate 40 and said they have developed a possible witness who they believe may have pertinent information about the incident.


LAURIE EVERETT/Managing Editor

SCAN provides eyes, ears and ... shoulders; WCSO program watches out for citizens in sunset years

PHOTOS COURTESY OF SCAN/SCAN recipient Thomas Harper at this summer's inaugural concert. He's accompanied by SCAN volunteer Bob Rorick. Second photo: SCAN recipient Jerry Duffel's eyes light up and she's sings along while visiting musician Shawn Pody.
SCAN provides eyes, ears and ... shoulders; WCSO program watches out for citizens in sunset years
Like many others, Jerry Duffel's twilight years have taken a path otherwise not intended.
LAURIE EVERETT/Managing Editor - 1 opinion posted

Panel convenes in MJ to discuss child abuse issues; Forum conceived after death of Mt. Juliet girl

LAURIE EVERETT • MT. JULIET NEWS/Child abuse survivor Charlotte Hunt, middle, describes how she's managed to overcome horrendous abuse at the hands of her parents. She's flanked by Deb Daugherty, executive director, 15th Judicial District Child Advocacy
Panel convenes in MJ to discuss child abuse issues; Forum conceived after death of Mt. Juliet girl
MT. JULIET  — A now adult victim of child sexual and physical abuse was an integral member of a panel of experts on the subject held at Rutland Elementary School Monday evening.



LAURIE EVERETT/Managing Editor

City manager's contract expires Sept. 5; has not signed new one
Though Mt. Juliet city commissioners negotiated a new employment contract for City Manager Randy Robertson, he said he hasn't accepted it yet and his current contract expires Sept. 5.



LAURIE EVERETT/Managing Editor

Locked car doors deterrent to burglaries; MJPD urges residents to ‘Park Smart’
In a two-day period the second week of August, 11 cars were broken into in the Brookstone area of Mt. Juliet and that rash of car break-ins continued through Aug. 17.


LAURIE EVERETT/Managing Editor

A 'humbled' Hutto promises to honor county with his best
Outgoing Mayor Robert Dedman administered the oath of office to his successor Randall Hutto before a standing room crowd at the Wilson County Courthouse.


SANDY CAMPBELL/Staff writer

Beginning a new journey
With every turned shovel of dirt, cheers and applause erupted from the gathered sea of blue.


HILARY TRENDA/Staff writer

Durham, Neal both take oaths of offices
The results of Wilson County's elections began to go affect Monday, as a number of elected officials were sworn into their offices.


HILARY TRENDA/Staff writer

A band of brothers, coming home from war; Three local grads saw combat, lost friends and are back from seven month mission

LAURIE EVERETT • MT. JULIET NEWS/Michael Strange, Adam Thomas and Kevin Burns became "brothers" while serving as Marines in the 1st Battalion 6th for seven months in Afghanistan. They all graduated from Wilson Central High School in 2008
A band of brothers, coming home from war; Three local grads saw combat, lost friends and are back from seven month mission
Exclusive
Their eyes look far too wise for their 20 years and express things they are reluctant to share otherwise. They’ve seen things most will never see.


LAURIE EVERETT/Managing Editor - 2 opinions posted

Silent Epidemic Part 2/ Second chances: Dropouts can turn around dead ends

Silent Epidemic Part 2/ Second chances: Dropouts can turn around dead ends

Part 2 in a series
Coming next week: What is the Wilson County School system doing to keep students in school? An investigation of the measures the system has implemented to keep students from falling between the cracks.

GED worth more than music awards to Wilson

Mega country music star and ninth grade dropout Gretchen Wilson catapulted to superstar status with her “Redneck Woman” hit. She lives in Lebanon and attained fame and fortune with her popular albums.
Financially, she was rock solid and knew she could provide well for her little girl Grace. However, even with the awards and adulation, Gretchen was missing something.


LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor - 1 opinion posted

Silent Epidemic Part 2/ Second chances: Dropouts can turn around dead ends
Silent Epidemic Part 2/ Second chances: Dropouts can turn around dead ends

Story 2 Adult High School can provide redemption
Brittney Simmons is a very pretty young woman. On this day she was warmly dressed in a sweatshirt, but there was no denying she was very much pregnant.  She attended Lebanon High School, and when she was a senior, she switched to a home school program.


LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor

Silent Epidemic Series Sidebar: Second Chance Profile Juan Rosas

Wilson County Adult High School student Juan Rosas will graduate this spring and hopes to go on to college and become an air traffic controller.
Silent Epidemic Series Sidebar: Second Chance Profile Juan Rosas

Independence cost Rosas chance at high school graduation

Juan Rosas is a bright young man who dropped out of high school years ago.
Now 28 years old, he’s married with a nearly 6 month old daughter. He’s trying to raise a family as a dropout and he’s fed up.


LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor

An aside Editor's Blog....

A toppled Christmas tree in the middle of a living room.


1 opinion posted

December 10 Editor's Blog/Merry Merry any way you please
December 10 Editor's Blog/Merry Merry any way you please

Splayed out Santas sort of make me smile. 


1 opinion posted

Editor's Blog / It just ain't right
Editor's Blog / It just ain't right
There is something insanely wrong with this picture; careening down hills, barely hugging curves while gripping the side of the door and stomping on a non-existent brake. My right thigh is super toned these days.

 
1 opinion posted

Part 1 Silent Epidemic; High School Dropouts/The high cost of high school dropouts
Part 1 Silent Epidemic; High School Dropouts/The high cost of high school dropouts

In early high school, Lyndsay Cline was in the gifted program. One day in the middle of her senior year at Lebanon High School she woke up, but didn’t go to class.
She never went to high school again.

 


LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor

Silent Epidemic Series Sidebar: Second Chance Profile/Everette Hurd

LAURIE EVERETT • MT. JUILET NEWS / Everett Hurd works at Sally's Beauty Supply in Lebanon, a job he got after he obtained his GED. He's also enrolled in cosmetology school.
Silent Epidemic Series Sidebar: Second Chance Profile/Everette Hurd

Rough past leads to smoother future

Nearly every day Everette Hurd can be found working at Sally's Beauty Supply in Lebanon.


LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor

Editor's blog / Sometimes it just takes an image
Editor's blog / Sometimes it just takes an image
I was eager to hear about the stock market, if any news from Mt. Juliet beat me on the newscast and the latest on the Metro school’s director search. So when I glanced at my flickering mini-television stuck on a shelf in my bedroom – while searching for my daughter’s sweatshirt at the bottom of my closet and trying to figure out how a Velcro curler works without getting stuck – I was taken aback.
L. Everett - 3 opinions posted

Sept. 3, 2009 Editor's Blog / A dusty path is fine
Sept. 3, 2009 Editor's Blog / A dusty path is fine
I rarely am infatuated.


1 opinion posted

August 4 Blog update to Vestiges of a vanishing nature blog
August 4 Blog update to Vestiges of a vanishing nature blog
For those of you who managed to slog through the below blog I penned some time around October, you eventually read about the bedraggled turkey hen that appeared out of nowhere on my place.
L. Everett - 1 opinion posted

Part 1 of 4 Fire Alarm: Clearing the smoke on MJ fire protection/Evolution of fire service in MJ
Part 1 of 4 Fire Alarm: Clearing the smoke on MJ fire protection/Evolution of fire service in MJ
Next week: How do comprarable cities provide fire service to citizens and another Firefighter Focus Mt. Juliet's swelling population caused by unprecedented retail and residential growth has fanned the flames of debate regarding whom should provide the city's fire protection. In the past 36 years, since the city was incorporated in 1972, Mt. Juliet leaders have juggled to accommodate a swelling population brought about by this growth.
LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor - 2 opinions posted

Part 2 of 4 Fire Alarm: Clearing the smoke on MJ fire protection/ Ever wonder how comparable cities provide fire protection?
Part 2 of 4 Fire Alarm: Clearing the smoke on MJ fire protection/ Ever wonder how comparable cities provide fire protection?
How Mt. Juliet receives fire service is a volatile issue in Wilson County. In addition to controversy over whom should provide fire protection to Mt. Juliet citizens, the question of how it should be funded is a bone of contention as well.
LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor - 2 opinions posted

Part 3 of 4/Fire Alarm: Clearing smoke on MJ fire protection/At the scene: The real deal on fire protection,Volunteer Fire Force born out of necessity

GEORGE PAGE • Mt. Juliet News / WEMA Director John Jewell works with the new Mt. Juliet volunteer firefighters at one of multiple meetings orchestrated by Mt. Juliet resident and firefighter Shawn Donovan.
Part 3 of 4/Fire Alarm: Clearing smoke on MJ fire protection/At the scene: The real deal on fire protection,Volunteer Fire Force born out of necessity
Lt. David Cross has been a firefighter and emergency medical technician for 32 years. He’s been fighting fires in Wilson County for 20 of those years. He’s seen it all. When he started at Station 3 in Mt. Juliet two decades ago, there were four WEMA personnel working at the station. “We were short handed then and we are short handed today, still with four people, with the only difference is that we have three other stations west of Highway 109 that would respond to us if needed,” Cross said.
LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor - 1 opinion posted

Last in the series/Fire Alarm: Clearing the smoke on fire protection/What now?  An analysis of - and officials weigh in - on fire protection

DALLUS WHITFIELD • A WEMA firefighter continues to fight the flames at a house fire on Belinda Parkway in Mt. Julet.
Last in the series/Fire Alarm: Clearing the smoke on fire protection/What now? An analysis of - and officials weigh in - on fire protection
December 31, 2008 - Two days ago there was a kitchen fire in an upscale home on Noel Drive in Mt. Juliet off Saundersville Ferry Road near the city limits. The homeowner later reported she left the residence, was concerned she may have left the oven on and went back. She arrived back home to face flames in her kitchen. (The probable cause of the fire was later determined to be from a candle left lit and not the oven.) She called 911 and tried to put the fire out with a garden hose while she waited for help to arrive.
LAURIE EVERETT / Managing Editor - 1 opinion posted

December 17 In-house editorial / Now is time to reevaluate need for city property tax for fire protection
This week we present the second installment of our investigative series titled Fire Alarm: Clearing the smoke on MJ fire protection. Five peer cities, similar in size and population to Mt. Juliet were contacted and their city officials interviewed about how they provide fire service to their citizens. Four of the five provide their own fire service and the fifth contracts with a private company to provide this service.
4 opinions posted

FIREFIGHTER FOCUS: In their own words

LAURIE EVERETT • Mt. Juliet News / WEMA firefighter Jamie Luffman takes a breather after fighting a massive two residence fire for about five hours in Mt. Juliet off Saundersville Ferry Road.
FIREFIGHTER FOCUS: In their own words
My name is Jamie Luffman and I am a 44 year old husband, father, son, brother, friend, and Sunday school teacher. I am also a firefighter and an emergency medical technician. I have lived in Mt. Juliet all of my life and truly enjoy raising my family here and providing life safety services for my friends and neighbors.

Firefighter Focus: In their own words

SUMBMITTED • WEMA paramedic/firefighter Brent Dyer and son Nate.
Firefighter Focus: In their own words
My name is Brent Dyer, I am a Paramedic/Firefighter in Wilson County. I began serving Wilson County in June of 2000. Over the past eight years, I have lived in Wilson County for five of them. My wife is a nurse. Fourteen months ago, we were blessed with our son.