The Laconia Daily Sun, December 15, 2011

Page 1

THURSDAY, DECEMBER 15, 2011

THURSDAY

Kiln-dried firewood operation doubling capacity to meet demand BY ROGER AMSDEN FOR THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

VOL. 12 NO. 139

LACONIA, N.H.

527-9299

FREE

Documents filed in case of Gilmanton police sergeant suing to get his job back might have caused Grace Metalious to blush BY GAIL OBER

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

GILMANTON — Paperwork filed recently in Belknap County Superior Court suggests a high level of sexual preoccupation in the Police Department and provides details of what led to the March firing of the second in command. The documents, filed as

BELMONT — A kiln-dried firewood operation which turns trees which had been standing in the woods on Monday into cut, split and dried wood by Friday is about to double its capacity in order to keep up with growing demand. A second kiln will soon be going up at Province Road KilnDried Firewood, which see KILN page 12

addendum’s to a wrongful termination suit launched by former Police Sgt. Dennis Rector against the town after he was fired for sexual harassment, details allegations of sexually explicit text messages being circulated between department members, crude references to body parts and the ostracizing of one police officer

by some of her colleagues. “I am subjected to disrespect, offensive remarks, and, when my peers deliberately segregate me, this would contribute to the reasons why I feel as uncomfortable as I do,” wrote a female officer in her statement to independent attorney Daniel Schwartz during his investigation of Rector last February.

The alleged problems within the police department surfaced during a snowstorm in late January of 2011 after Rector asked Chief Phil O’Brien to reprimand a female officer who he said swore at him during an inspection of her cruiser. During the cruiser check, statements say Rector chassee GILMANTON page 10

LHS holds special holiday music concert for seniors and seniors

Laconia High School Music Director Debbie Gibson leads in the playing and singing of “Feliz Navidad” as part of special concert of holiday music performed Wednesday morning just for members of the Class of 2012, and for senior citizen guests. Refreshments were served for both sets of seniors after the concert. (Karen Bobotas/for The Laconia Daily Sun)

House redistricting plan cuts Ward 4 away from rest of city BY MICHAEL KITCH

the House Special Committee on Redistricting yesterday. And Ward 4 voters would be away from the rest of the city and lumped in with Belmont and Gilmanton. Furthermore, the plan fails to honor a provision in the state Constitution designating each municipality with a cient population as a House www.carolynsamazingdiscounts.com suffi district with at least one seat. 24/7 ONLINE SHOPPING SOLUTION A public hearing on the plan will be held today in room 306-308 of the Legislative Office Building

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

CONCORD —Laconia would be reduced from five to four seats in the New Hampshire House of Representatives according to the plan adopted by a sub-committee of

OIL & PROPANE CO., INC. Laconia

524-1421

3.59 99**

Fuel Oil 10 day cash price* subject to change

beginning at 1:30 p.m. The full committee is scheduled to vote on the plan, which is cast as an amendment to House Bill 592, on Tuesday, December 20 at 10:30 a.m. The federal and state constitutions require that the boundaries of all federal, state and municipal electoral districts be redrawn every 10 years to embody changes in population reported by the United States Census. This year, for the first time, lawmakers have struggled to square two consee REDISTRICTING page 8


Page 2 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

Could U.S. drivers ever abide by cellphone ban?

DALLAS (AP) — Junior Woods has a wellpracticed routine for conducting business on the road: While driving throughout rural Arkansas, the electronics salesman steals a glance at his cellphone every so often, checking for text messages and emails. “I can keep both hands on the steering wheel and just look down my nose and read in 10-second intervals,” Woods said in a phone interview from Rogers, Ark. “I’m actually doing that right now.” Like millions of other Americans, Woods uses his car as a mobile office, relying on his phone almost every hour of every workday to stay productive and earn a living. So would drivers ever abide by a proposed ban on almost all cellphone use behind the wheel, even if it is hands-free? Could they afford to? Those are just a few of the questions looming over a federal recommendation that seeks to rein in what has become an essential tool of American business. Woods said the ban, if adopted, would devastate his sales. Because he lives in a rural state, his minimum drive is see CELL BAN page 13

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– DIGEST––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

THEMARKET

3DAYFORECAST

Today High: 46 Record: 52 (2006) Sunrise: 7:12 a.m. Tonight Low: 31 Record: -3 (1976) Sunset: 4:10 p.m.

Tomorrow High: 38 Low: 20 Sunrise: 7:13 a.m. Sunset: 4:10 p.m. Saturday High: 29 Low: 19

WINDY

DOW JONES 131.86 to 11,823.48 NASDAQ 39.96 to 2,539.31 S&P 13.91 to 1,211.82

records are from 9/1/38 to present

TODAY’SJOKE

“I got into a car accident — not my fault. Even if it’s not your fault, the other person gets out of their car and looks at you like it’s your fault. ‘Why did you stop at a red light and let me hit you doing 80?’” — Dane Cook

TODAY’SWORD

cleave

verb; 1. To adhere closely; stick; cling. 2. To remain faithful. 3. To split or divide by or as if by a cutting blow, especially along a natural line of division, as the grain of wood. — courtesy dictionary.com

–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––TOP OF THE NEWS–––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––

Dems drop millionaire tax idea in effort to reach accord WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats backed away from their demand for higher taxes on millionaires as part of legislation to extend Social Security tax cuts for most Americans on Wednesday as Congress struggled to clear critical year-end bills without triggering a partial government shutdown. Republicans, too, signaled an eagerness to avoid gridlock and adjourn for the holidays. With a bipartisan $1 trillion funding bill blocked at the last minute by Democrats, GOP lawmakers and aides floated the pos-

sibility of a backup measure to run the government for as long as two months after the money runs out Friday at midnight. With time beginning to run short, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., met with President Barack Obama at the White House, then returned to the Capitol and sat down with the two top Republicans in Congress, Speaker John Boehner and Sen. Mitch McConnell of Kentucky. Taken together, the developments signaled the end game for a year of divided government — with a tea party-flavored

majority in the House and Obama’s allies in the Senate — that has veered from nearcatastrophe to last-minute compromise repeatedly since last January. The rhetoric was biting at times. “We have fiddled all year long, all year,” McConnell complained in a less-than-harmonious exchange on the Senate floor with Reid. He accused Democrats of “routinely setting up votes designed to divide us ... to give the president a talking point out on the campaign trail.” see MILLIONAIRE TAX page 8

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House passed a massive $662 billion defense bill Wednesday night after last-minute changes placated the White House and ensured President Barack Obama’s ability to prosecute terrorist suspects in the civilian justice system. The vote was 283-136 and reflected the strong support for annual legislation that authorizes money for the men and women of the military as well as weapons systems

and the millions of jobs they generate in lawmakers’ districts. It was a rare instance of bipartisanship in a bitterly divided Congress. The Senate is expected to pass the measure on Thursday and send it to Obama. The House vote came just hours after the administration abandoned a veto threat over provisions dealing with the handling of terrorism suspects. Applying pressure on House and Senate

negotiators working on the bill last week, Obama and senior members of his national security team, including Defense Secretary Leon Panetta and Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton, had sought modifications in the detainee provisions. Negotiators announced the changes late Monday, clearing the way for White House acceptance. In a statement, press secretary Jay see DEFENSE page 5

U.S. House passes $662B defense bill that’s to Obama’s liking

Fallout from college band hazing scandal reaches into Georgia high schools

ATLANTA (AP) — The fallout from the death of a Florida A&M University drum major broadened Wednesday to nearly two dozen high schools in Georgia, where marching band activities were suspended over concerns of “inappropriate physical activity” between band mates.

A metro Atlanta school district began investigating after Robert Champion died Nov. 19. The Southwest DeKalb High graduate was found unresponsive on a bus parked in front of an Orlando hotel after a university football game, and authorities said his death involved hazing.

Meredith Cinema Meredith Shopping Ctr. • 279-7836 www.barnzs.com

Ring in the New Year

Tuesday (12/13) - Thursday (12/15)

New Year’s Eve (PG-13) 4:30; 7:15 Anonymous (PG-13) 4:00; 6:45 Twilight: Breaking Dawn Part 1 (PG-13) 4:15; 7:00

E B R AT C E L E Y E A R ’ SAT NEW EVE

Prime Rib Baked Stuffed Shrimp or Choose From Our

Limited Mexican Menu PARTY FAVORS CHAMPAGNE TOAST 2 CELEBRATION COUNTDOWNS Early Bird countdown at 10 and again for the night owls at 12!

DESIGNATED DRIVER PROVIDED Music from 8 til 1 — DJ Sarah

$45 person

Includes all of the above plus Tax & Tip on Meal

Purchase your tickets now! Gift Certificates Available

306 Lakeside Ave, Weirs Beach • 366-4411

Another Florida A&M student, Bria Shante Hunter, who also attended Southwest DeKalb, told police she was severely beaten in a hazing ritual about three weeks before Champion’s death. Hunter, a freshman and clarinet player, see HAZING page 15

at Laconia Elks December 31 Dinner Dance

PLUMBING & HEATING SERVICE & REPAIR

MOST REPAIRS CHARGED BY THE JOB NOT BY THE HOUR! *SENIOR CITIZEN DISCOUNT HEATING • GAS PIPING WORK ENTS FOR: • REPAIRS & REPLACEM R SYSTEMS • GAS FORCED HOT WATE R SYSTEMS • OIL FORCED HOT WATE

DON MORIN ASSOC., INC. 524-6014

NH LICENSE #331C, GAS FITERS LIC. #GFE0701070

6:00 pm Cocktails 6:30 pm Dinner Shrimp Cocktail, Salad with Rolls, Prime Rib or Baked Haddock, Dessert

7:30 pm - 12:30 am Dance the Night Away with Roger Main $20 per person (in advance) Tickets available at the bar. Members & Guests Only


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 3

Standoff in Manchester Northern Pass pays $2.35M for Franklin campground apparently leads to suicide By AnnmArie Timmins CONCORD MONITOR

FRANKLIN — Northern Pass paid $2.35-million late last week for a 118-acre Franklin campground where it would build a massive converter station if its proposed hydropower line from Canada is approved. The station, which would convert direct current from Canada into alternating current, would take up between 30 and 40 acres of the former Thousand Acres Family Campground, Northern Pass spokesman Martin Murray said Friday. The rest of the property will be left undeveloped, Murray said, to create a buffer around the building. “You won’t see it from ground,” he said. “Not from the road or the neighboring properties.” The campground’s owner, Marian Kolbe, told the Monitor in October she was retiring and closing the campground, which her father started in the 1960s. But she declined to confirm speculation at the time that Northern Pass was the buyer because she had not closed the deal. Kolbe’s lawyer, Jim Sessler of Franklin, said Friday that Northern Pass officials approached Kolbe about buying her land, and that the purchase allowed her to retire. The 118-acre parcel at 1079 S. Main St. has an assessed value of $653,300, according to the city’s assessing office. Many of Kolbe’s seasonal campers are relocating to the Cozy Pond campground in Webster, according to its owner, Jim DiPrima. He and his wife, Liz, were Thousand Acres regulars until they bought Cozy Pond about a year ago, he said. Northern Pass’s proposed $1.2-billion hydropower

MANCHESTER (AP) — Police in Manchester, N.H., say a bank robbery suspect apparently shot himself to death after telling them he wouldn’t leave his apartment to be arrested. Police said they found 35-year-old David Griffin dead at Waterford Place Apartments early Wednesday. see STANDOFF page 13

Mom’s ashes returned to Rochester woman who’d been taking them to bingo for luck

ROCHESTER (AP) — A stolen urn containing the ashes of her mother has been returned to a New Hampshire woman, who had been taking the container to bingo games for good luck. WMUR-TV reports (http://bit.ly/v6yuN2) police said the urn was returned to Diane Bozzi sometime between Monday night and Tuesday morning. They have no suspects. Police said the urn was stolen from Bozzi’s van last week in Rochester by someone targeting unlocked cars. She said the urn was in a bag she was planning to take to a bingo game. Bozzi pleaded for the urn’s return. She and her mother loved playing bingo together. Before her mother died in 2002, Bozzi promised her she would take some of her ashes with her to play. Her mother agreed, saying she would bring Bozzi luck.

TLC Jewelry Can Help with All Your Holiday Shopping

project still needs federal and state approval, but officials have been buying property along the 180mile route since May. The new high-voltage line would run through New Hampshire to Deerfield, where it would deliver power to New England. The project is facing fierce opposition in the North County, where Northern Pass must clear 40 miles of new rights of way for its lines. But its been celebrated by Franklin officials for its tax benefits, which Northern Pass officials have projected at $4.2-million annually. The campground paid the city about $14,000 a year in taxes. In addition to the 118-acre parcel, Northern Pass bought two other smaller parcels from Kolbe, each less than four acres, according to the deed. Those properties together are assessed at about $80,000, according to the city’s assessing office. Murray said the campground was an ideal location for Northern Pass because it sits along the existing right of way the project would use to run its new line. “It’s a win-win situation,” Murray said. “The sellers seem to be happy. Franklin comes out ahead. And campers are getting referred to another local (campground).” Not only is the Northern Pass power line at least a year away from possible approval, it also has a fight to win. Groups like the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests and the Appalachian Mountain Club have joined individual opponents in challenging the project on several grounds. One issue has involved Northern Pass’s plans to use the 140 miles of existing rights of way from Groveton to Deerfield for its new line. Opponents see NORTHERN PASS page 13

Co o l D e a ls

2001 Ford F150 4X4 w/plow

$$$ Need Extra Holiday Cash? $$$ Come See Us for

Gold Rush Bonus Weekend Wed. Dec. 14 - Sat. Dec. 17 10am - 6pm

Trade in Your Unwanted Gold Jewelry

On Top of the Highest Price Guaranteed We Will Give You an Additional 10% Bonus for Shopping with Your Trusted Local Jeweler • Gold at Wholesale Prices • Reflection Beads • Sterling Silver Jewelry • Custom Made Jewelry • Earrings, Rings • Men’s Stainless Steel Bracelets • Engagement Rings, Wedding Bands

20% off Citizen Watches This Week

$99.00

$10,900

Picture Pe

ndants

TLC Jewelry

279 Main St., Tilton, NH 603-286-7000 Open Tues.-Sat. 10-6, Sun. 10-3

Now Authorized Dealer of Citizen Eco-Drive Watches

36k Miles

Stock # 20115uc

2009 Ford Flex Stock # 9069

$15,995

18k Miles

$23,995

2009 Ford Focus SEL Stock # 1208a

58k Miles

2007 Ford F350 Diesel 4X4 Stock # 1273a1

$14,995

74k Miles

$25,995

2010 Ford F 150

86k Miles

32k Miles

$12,995

2009 Ford Focus SEL

14k Miles

2005 Ford Freestyle SE Stk#01225a

2001 Ford Ranger SC 4X4

Stk#1133a

Stock # 1263a1

$20,995

$5,995

2003 Ford Expedition XLT 4X4

14K Gold Diamond Pendants Starting at

36k Miles

Stock # 1093a1

Stock # 9041a1

$8,995

126k Miles

Call today for our great deals!

M EREDIT H

Route 3 North, Meredith

603-279-4521

Tenney Mtn. Hwy., Plymouth

603-536-4521

VEHICLES ARE FOR ILLUSTRATION PURPOSES ONLY


Page 4 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

Cannoli, Cannoli, Cannolis Vito from Anna’s Bakery

832-4345

Inter-Lakes Middle Tier ‘Eco Challenge’ team wins $10k fighting milfoil, has chance to win a lot more By AdAm drApcho THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

Great Stocking Stuffers Custom Holiday Trays Gift Baskets 10% OFF Bagged Coffee & Teas Now Through December 24th

Organic Coffees & Teas 62 Canal Street, Laconia 524-1201

www.thewoods

om hedrestaurant.c

Gift Certificates Available 128 Lee Road, Moultonborough, NH 603-476-2311 Hours: Tue - Sun 5 pm - 8:30 pm Fri and Sat 5 pm - 9:30 pm

MEREDITH — “I couldn’t be prouder than I am at this moment,” Inter-Lakes Middle Tier Principal Everett Bennett said at a reception held yesterday at the school’s library. The celebration was held to recognize the “Weed Busters,” a team of five seventh graders who entered a national “Eco Challenge” sponsored by Lexus. The team described and addressed the invasion of the aquatic weed milfoil and in doing so was selected as one of a handful teams from across the country eligible to compete in the final round. By succeeding through the first round, team “Weed Busters” earned a $10,000 prize, which Team “Weed Busters,” comprised of five seventh graders from Inter-Lakes Middle Tier, were one of includes $3,000 to be eight middle school teams from across the country selected to compete in the final round of the spent on the school’s sci- “Eco Challenge” sponsored by Lexus. They have a chance to win a prize package totaling $30,000. ence program and the bal- Shown here, Joshua Schmalle presents a graph measuring student awareness of milfoil, while team ance to be divided among members (left to right) Jackson Williams, Tristan Smart, Matthew Sundius and Brianna Knauss listen. team members. In the Standing are team advisors Kay Anderson (left) and Lisa Merrill. final round, which will take place during January including some of its most treasured, such as Lake and February, the team will have the opportunity Winnipesaukee. to compete for one of eight “first place” prizes of The campaign included interviews with hospital$15,000 or two “grand” prizes of $30,000. ity magnate Edward “Rusty” McLear and real estate As Bennett explained at the reception, the “Weed businessman and milfoil activist Stewart Lamprey. Busters” story goes back to August, when school The interviews, recorded by volunteer Chris Mega, board member Lisa Merrill asked Bennett to allow were aired on Lakes Region Public Access televiher to form a team. She persuaded him by promission. The team also prepared and submitted press ing that the subject matter would be germane to the releases to a local newspaper. Middle Tier’s curriculum, especially for the seventh Additionally, the students invited Rebecca Hanson graders who focus on environmental science. from the Squam Lakes Association, who presented Working on a short timeline that ran out at the a lesson on milfoil to seventh grade science classes. end of October, a team of five seventh graders The students, with help from the school’s art teacher, embarked upon a public information campaign to also recorded a theme song based on the theme from help thwart the spread of aquatic milfoil, which is see next page present in dozens of New Hampshire water bodies

NEW! STUFFED CHEESY BREAD

CHEESE ONLY

SPINACH & FETA

Join Us for New Year’s Eve, with Brandon Lepere, a musician, song writer & vocalist

starting at 9:30pm!

Soup

BACON & JALAPENO

mé with Chicken

Salad

Vegetable Consom

Dumpling

ied esan Cheese, Cand ots, Tomato, Parm amic Mixed Greens, Carr r Ring Drizzled with Maple Bals mbe Walnuts in a Cucu

Entrees

MEDIUM 2-TOPPING PIZZA

CHOOSE ANY 2

• MEDIUM 2-TOPPING PIZZAS • STUFFED CHEESY BREADS

O ALSW! NE

5

$ 99

EACH

TWO ITEM MINIMUM

Parmesan Bread Bites 16pc ... $2.99 32pc ... $5.00

585 Union Ave., Laconia, NH • 528-4820 DOMINOS.COM

la Cheese, Served usted with Gorgonzo sh Filet Mignon Encr tto Topped with a Tomato Reli with Spinach Riso or with Coconut Rice ed Serv ass, Pan Seared Seab ter Salsa Topped with a Lobs

Dessert with Raspberries

Chocolate Lava Cake

Drizzled

$35/Person* Make your Reservations now for 5pm, 7pm and 9pm! * Tax and gratuity not included.

2667 Lakeshore Road • Gilford

directly behind Ellacoya Country Store

293-8700 ~ www.barnandgrille.com


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 5

cally for Shop Lo Value! st Your Be

$$ NEED EXTRA CASH FOR THE HOLIDAYS $$ Top Dollar Guaranteed! for your Unwanted Jewelry

TLC Jewelry • 279 Main St Tilton • 603 286-7000 • tlcjewels.net

Laconia recycling on track to top 1,200 tons by end of year — up about 20% By Michael Kitch THE LACONIA DAILY SUN

LACONIA — In the third round of the “Recycling Challenge” the tonnage of recycled materials collected at the curbside rose again, but because the total amount of trash also increased, recycling as a share of all solid waste merely inched from 13.7-percent to 13.9-percent. The Recycling Challenge pits each of the five daily trash collection routes against one another in a contest to determine which can increase its percentage of recycled waste the most. During the third round recycled tonnage grew from 27.07 tons to 29.75 tons as four of the five routes — Tuesday through Friday — posted increases while recycling decreased only on Monday. Every ton taken out of the waste stream and recycled reduces the cost of collecting, transporting and disposing of solid waste, which is funded by property from preceding page the movie “The Ghost Busters.” They ain’t afraid of no milfoil. Other components of the project included creation of a web site and a 15-slide PowerPoint presentation. “I felt privileged to work with these kids,” said Kay Anderson, who along with Merrill and teachers Norm Roulx and Dot Hartson advised the team. Speaking to parents present at the reception, Anderson praised the students for their unusual dedication and maturity. “You sent us great raw materials,” she said. Jackson Williams didn’t know the other members of the team before joining. He said, “Now I’m good friends with all of them. I’m proud of what we accomplished – because we won. I think we had great teamwork.” For Tristan Smart, his proudest achievement was raising awareness about milfoil among his peers. “Milfoil is extremely dangerous. Milfoil can grow as much as an inch per day,” he said, explaining that its rapid growth chokes out native plants and fish. “If you just take a cutting and drop it in the lake, it can re-root and spread all over the lake,” said team member Brianna Knauss, who said she didn’t know

New Hampshire Intertribal Native American Council

taxes, by more than $150 per ton. In announcing the challenge in October, City Manager Scott Myers said that the goal was to recycle 25-percent of all solid waste by March 1. Since the challenge began, curbside recycling has risen from 26.31 tons to 29.75 tons virtually matching the 13.4-percent increase in the total volume of solid waste, which rose from 196.44 tons to 214.3 tons. Consequently, curbside recycling represents slightly less than 14-percent of all the solid waste collected at the curbside. In addition, 56.63 tons of recyclable materials have been collected from the three remote collection points since the challenge began. Ann Saltmarsh of the Department of Public Works, who manages the recycling program, said that recycling is on track to top 1,200 tons by the end of the year, an increase of almost 20-percent over 2010, the

about milfoil before the project. “I helped many other people learn about milfoil,” she said, hoping to start a “chain reaction” of awareness. Joshua Schmalle helped write and administer the surveys which were given to students before and after the publicity campaign to gauge the team’s effectiveness. “The results were staggering,” he said. “We can’t stop the threat of milfoil but we can control it. We can control it through public awareness.” Matthew Sundius was most proud of the team logo, which he created with help from the school’s art teacher, and for the ceramic ornaments the team made and sold, proceeds from which were donated to the New Hampshire Lakes Association’s effort to halt the spread of the weed. “We raised more than $300 to be donated to the cleanup of milfoil,” he said. Though eager to start work on the next round, the team has not yet received the specifics of the final challenge. Whatever the outcome is, the “Weed Busters” are already champions, especially in the eyes of the school officials and community members who worked with them. “These kids,” said teacher adviser Norm Roulx, after pausing to collect his emotions, “they warm my heart.”

Now through Christmas!

Come and sample traditional and home cooked Native American dishes including, moose, venison, buffalo, fish, vegetables, desserts and more!

$10 per person to benefit our book fund nhinac.weebly.com

nhinac@gmail.com

DEFENSE from page one Carney said the new bill “does not challenge the president’s ability to collect intelligence, incapacitate dangerous terrorists and protect the American people.” Specifically, the bill would require that the military take custody of a suspect deemed to be a member of al-Qaida or its affiliates and who is involved in plotting or committing attacks on the United States. There is an exemption for U.S. citizens. House and Senate negotiators added language that says nothing in the bill will affect “existing criminal enforcement and national security authorities of the FBI or any other domestic law enforcement agency” with regard to a captured suspect “regardless of whether such ... person is held in military custody.” The bill also says the president can waive the provision based on national security. “While we remain concerned about the uncertainty that this law will create for our counterterrorism professionals, the most recent changes give the president additional discretion in determining how the law will be implemented, consistent with our values and the rule of law, which are at the heart of our country’s strength,” Carney said. Uncertainty was a major concern of FBI Director Robert Mueller, who expressed serious reservations about the detainee provisions. Testifying before the Senate Judiciary Committee, Mueller said a coordinated effort by the military, intelligence agencies and law enforcement has weakened al-Qaida and captured or killed many of its leaders, including Osama bin Laden and Anwar al-Awlaki, the U.S.-born radical Islamic cleric.

Do You Have Trouble Hearing In Noise?

NEW, computerized Speech In Noise test finds out how well you understand speech when in the presence of background noise. The results identify whether you have more difficulty than other folks, when listening in difficult situations and; how much louder you need to hear speech above the level of noise. It is particularly helpful to confirm which strategies and instrument features will provide the most assistance for your communication needs. Come and enjoy a comfortable office that listens to your needs. Let us help you revive your hearing and reconnect to those around you. Call for your appointment today.

Native American Dinner

Friday, December 16th 5:00pm-8:00pm Laconia VFW 143 Court Street

first year the city recycled 1,000 tons. The 1,200 tons represents 8.5-percent of the approximately 14,000 tons of solid waste collected annually, of which some 8,400 tons, or 60-percent, could be recycled. Saltmarsh said that although demand for recycling bins has been brisk, supply remains plentiful with about 200 bins on hand. Alternatively, she said that any firm container can be used to recycle and stickers identifying them as recycling bins are available at the Department of Public Works on Bisson Avenue.

Buy 3 Beads, Get 1 Free! 639 Main Street Laconia, NH 03246


Page 6 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

Susan Estrich

Putting fame to good use Former first daughter Chelsea Clinton’s debut on NBC’s “Nightly News” is drawing plenty of attention, as well it should. Since her father’s election nearly 20 years ago, the Clintons set an example of real family values by doing everything they could to keep Chelsea out of the spotlight and allow her to live as normal of a life as possible. By all outside indicators, it worked. She has grown up to be a young woman of intelligence, character and commitment. The press, for its part, pretty much left her alone. Until she became one of them, sort of. When NBC announced her three-month contract, Clinton was roundly criticized both for joining the ranks of those she had studiously avoided and for not making herself available for interviews when she did. The first criticism seemed silly. Politicians and their kids are a fixture on television news, even those who once complained about how unfairly they were treated by the media and even by the very networks for whom they now work. Meghan McCain’s father, former presidential candidate Sen. John McCain, never has been a fan of MSNBC, which didn’t — and shouldn’t — stop his daughter from working there. I am sure George W. Bush tunes in whenever his daughter Jenna appears on NBC’s “Today” show, although he has been skewered more times than he might choose to count by the network that produces “Saturday Night Live.” Former Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm is prepping her new show at Current TV; while Sarah Palin and “Huckabee” are staples at Fox. Clinton probably did make a mistake in not appearing at a press conference when her hiring was announced — not because she would have said any more than the press release, but because it gave the media something more legitimate to complain about. So be it. But her first report on Monday night demonstrated why her decision makes perfect sense. It was a report on a woman in President Bill Clinton’s home state of Arkansas

who has devoted herself to providing after-school support for at-risk kids. It was the kind of story that networks do now and again — the “hero of the week” type of thing — and that gets almost no attention. Because Chelsea Clinton did it, it got plenty of attention. That is precisely the point. Some people seek out celebrity. Others are born into it. What troubles me, frankly, is when parents use their children to make celebrities of themselves (you can fill in the names here) or push their children to take on the trappings of celebrity that they aren’t able to handle (another easy fill-in-the-blank exercise). But Clinton is no longer a child, and she will always be a celebrity. The question that matters now that she is an adult is how she will use it.In explaining her decision to go public, as if she weren’t already, Clinton said her grandmother, Dorothy Rodham, who died last month, urged her to do more with her fame. Taking her advice, Clinton decided to lead a “purposefully public life.” Let’s be honest here. Chelsea Clinton is famous and will be for some time to come. She could use that fame to get a front-row seat at the fashion shows, to get invited to the best Oscar parties, to get designers and jewelers to lend her their baubles. She could sell pictures of her private life for a pretty penny to any magazine or tabloid in the world, as so many celebrities do. She could turn her life into a reality show. Being famous gives you power that others don’t have. It gives you the power to set an example, good or bad. It gives you the power to be noticed, for better or for worse. It gives you the power to tell a story that will (only) be noticed because you tell it. That is the kind of power Chelsea Clinton has chosen to exercise. And I say more power to her for that. (Susan Estrich is a professor of Law and Political Science at the University of Southern California Law Center. A best-selling author, lawyer and politician, as well as a teacher, she first gained national prominence as national campaign manager for Dukakis for President in 1988.)

Please visit the Belknap Mill’s Holiday Bazaar on December 17 To the editor, I encourage your readers to purchase gifts and locally produced items on Saturday, Dec. 17 at the Historic Belknap Mill at their annual Holiday Bazaar. What will be offered? Everything from jams and jellies, soap, fudge, quilted ornaments, wooden toys and furniture, jewelry, boxwood trees, wall hangings, embroidered items, glass art, painted tins and centerpieces. Handmade angel ornaments will be

available, with proceeds to benefit Maddy’s Meds helping seniors and sick people afford medicine. So stop by the Belknap Mill, right next to Laconia City Hall at 25 Beacon Street East, between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. to support local crafters, enjoy the Trees for the Holidays exhibit, and bring home some affordable gifts. Thank you and Happy Holidays to All! Judi Taggart Gilford

LETTERS Why do non-millionaires vote to support the like of Koch brothers? To the editor, If you are a millionaire you may want to stop reading right here. I think it is time that the non millionaires stopped being run over by those who control Washington with their money. Congress needs to pass an increased tax on them. They are using their money to control Washington. What follows is the true story of how the billionaire Koch brothers use their money to manipulate our entire government to do their bidding. The brothers own, or control, major oil, ethanol, paper and fertilizer plants in the us. They paid $400-million in environmental fines for air and water pollution between 1999 and 2003. They are considered one of the top 10 air polluters. In a study by U. Mass they are mentioned as a major denier of climate change. They want the pipeline from Canada to Texas to bring the tar sand crude to their refineries there. They stand to make billions from it. With their pollution record it is not surprising that the people in the path of the pipe line are against it. Obama’s environmental agenda through the EPA is one of the major reasons that the Republicans are determined to eliminate it. The EPA protects our air and water. This

explains their support of the Tea Party with money, and education meetings for the leaders. They chose the Tea Party to push their agenda in Washington and in the state houses. It is easy to connect their businesses with the Republican agenda in Washington and New Hampshire. When the Tea Party says they want smaller government, what they mean is get rid of the regulations that protect us from the wealthy agendas. They want Obama defeated in the worst way, and will pay plenty to Republicans to get their way. What I cannot understand is why non millionaires are willing to vote for the agenda of these brothers. It is time that voters started questioning what the Republicans are feeding them through their propagandists. They vilify Obama because he stands in the way of the wealthy running the country for themselves, not for the 99-percent. It is not easy to connect all the dots, as I have tried to do. Do the thinking for yourself. My info comes from recognized public sources, such as Wikipedia. I will be happy to answer any disagreement with what I write. Kent Warner Center Harbor

N.H. Constitution lists right of conscience before all others To the editor, There is evidence that our level of conscience was well seated nearly 12,000 years ago, as it is often associated with religion, at a site known as Gobekli Tepe in Turkey. Only in the N.H. Constitution is it listed by itself before other rights, second comes religious freedom. James Madison wrote an essay regarding property and liberty in which he declared that, “(The right of) conscience is the most sacred of all property.” It wasn’t just the general population in N.H. which understood the foundational importance of this unalienable right. The foundation of the absurd idea that people could govern themselves is based on that singular unalienable right. For the states and especially the federal constitution(s) to have been written and approved and to have lasted these 225+ years speaks not only to their

understanding of governance but of themselves. Their honesty amongst so many other men of conscience would not have been hard to come by, especially as in the writing of the federal Constitution with George Washington presiding. It is not by accident that the U.S. is the oldest national government in the world, and the N.H. Constitution is older still. It is not something to be forgotten or set aside to collect dust, nor is it something for our government to take charge of or to control or dole back to us as they see fit. Thus the foundation of our rights, of our government is also the charge by which those in government are given. The argument that has been playing out in our nation’s politics is not about the governing of the nation but the shape of government itself. That shape is already well formed: The state govsee next page


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011 — Page 7

LETTERS Obama’s omission puts him at odds with George Washington

Flawed treatment of veterans will continue because we allow it

To the editor, President Obama’s omission of God in his Thanksgiving address to the nation has been criticized by many conservative and religious groups. By the same token, judging by the numerous counter responses from liberals and atheists, many are quite happy with the omission. I am sure the ACLU is quite pleased. Rather than bash our president for this obvious and purposeful exclusion, I offer, as a comparison, the following historical Congressional request made by our First Federal Congress to George Washington for a national day of public Thanksgiving and prayer. His response follows: On September 25, 1789, The first Federal Congress, the very same Congress that created the Bill of Rights and the First Amendment, and on the very same day they put the finishing touches on these Constitutional Amendments, the true meaning of which could not have been more freshly imprinted on their minds, unanimously requested that President Washington “recommend to the people an official day of public thanksgiving and prayer, to be acknowledged, with grateful hearts, the many signal (extraordinary) favors of Almighty God, especially by affording them an opportunity to establish a Constitution of government for their safety and happiness.” President George Washington responded with the following official proclamation: “Whereas it is the duty of all nations to acknowledge the providence of

To the editor, Mr. Sellew’s letter expressing outrage at the recent Air Force admission of their “disposal” procedures of troop remains (heroes). . . too disgusting or need to go any further. The disgrace of Arlington National Cemetery that had gone on for years and NOW “is it” being taken care of? These are two of the latest instances of “National Failures” when it come to recognizing those that have served and those that have “paid the ultimate price” a term we hear when an American soldier offers his/her life on behalf of the country/people they serve on the orders of the leadership of the country, elected by the people. We could “remember” Walter Reed and the eight oversight committee’s that were to be responsibly under a number of administrations. We could discuss the issue of Agent Orange and the number of Vietnam veterans who suffered and died before it was even accepted as an “Agent Of Death”. Many of those at first were told “all symptoms related were anxiety related, imaginary”. Today Agent Orange is known to the Viet Vet as “The gift that keeps on giving”. We could discuss

Almighty God, to obey His will, to be grateful for His benefits, and to implore His protection and favor…I do recommend and assign the 26th of November next, to be devoted by the people of the United States for His kind care and protection of the people of this country to the service of that Great and Glorious Being who is the beneficent author of all the good that was, that is, or that will be…” Washington then continued on by imploring the people to give “humble thanks” for the “favorable interpositions of His Providence in the course and conclusion of the late war…for the civil and religious liberty with which we are blessed…and also that we may then unite in most humbly offering our prayers and supplications to the Great Lord and Ruler of nations, and beseech Him to pardon our national and other transgressions…to promote the knowledge and practice of true religion and virtue…” “Given under my hand, at the city of New York, the 3rd of October in the year of our Lord, 1789.” G Washington Many who read this account may have the opinion that President Obama has the correct vision for our country. Others would say that our First Federal Congress and George Washington, the “Father of our Country,” has it right. But one thing we can all agree on is that the visions of the two men are exactly the opposite. Who is right? Obama or Washington? They cannot both be right. You choose. George Brunstad Meredith

Girl Scouts brought enthusiasm to wreath-laying ceremony To the editor, On Saturday, Dec. 10, approximately 50 volunteers gathered to lay wreaths on the graves of veteran’s who served our country, in Bayside Cemetery. This was part of “Wreaths Across America”, which is a nation wide project that Laconia Rotary has brought to this city. I would like to personally thank all of the donors and the volunteers who

came out in the cold to help, especially the Girl Scouts of Troop 13158. The girls were very enthusiastic to help and were excellent listeners during the ceremony that followed the laying of the wreaths. Without everyone’s help this gesture would not have been possible. Thank you very much! Charlie Bullerwell Laconia Rotary Club

from preceding page ernment prohibiting a local establishment from serving locally produced turkey to its patrons just because it was locally grown and didn’t have the FDA’s stamp of approval. The farmer, restaurant, and customers are all prohibited from interaction. All lacking conscience in dealing with each other such that the state needs to be their conscience, to safe guard the contents of a sandwich? This is not what self governance is about, it is the absolute opposite. (Ref: Laconia Daily Sun article page 8, 11/23/2011) “Colleen Smith, a food defense and safety specialist working for the Food Protection office, said the rule that foiled the Bassetts’ plans for a local Thanksgiving burrito is there to protect consumers while providing a space for small-time producers. All meat producers have to be inspected by the USDA, unless they sell very few

birds or if they sell direct to consumers. When it comes to meat, you want to be sure it comes from a licensed farm. Smith said the thinking behind the rule is that consumers have the opportunity to visit the farm and meet the farmer face-to-face, with the implication that the consumer can decide if the conditions are sanitary and trust- worthy.” Then again, according to the “rules” the consumers could all visit the farm one day or another through the summer, face-to-face and decide if the person is honest and farm worthy, jointly pay for one or more turkeys, then contract with the restaurant to prepare the bird for lunch. If there is a rule against that, the restaurant needn’t charge a fee for cooking or preparing, but the patrons could tip generously — exercising their good conscience, of course! G.W. Brooks Meredith

send your letters to: news@laconiadailysun.com

the remains removed from the “Vietnam Tomb of the Unknown” because those remains were known to be those of Lt. Michael L. Blassie from the first day they were entombed. Closing the chapter was more important than the “truth”. We could discuss the American soldier being held captive in Afghanistan this day but unknown to most Americans because the term ‘POW’ is not used because WE are not really at WAR. So, why does this president, OUR Congress members and senators continue to discuss the War in Iraq and the War in Afghanistan but FAIL to protect Sgt. Bowe Berdghal with the term “American POW”? More important, WHY do WE allow it? Ignorance of administrations following flawed policies at DOD and the Pentagon will not change disgraceful things from happening. Let us not forget . . . leave no man behind? You believe that? Presidential candidates running all over N.H. How many know who Sgt. Bowe Bergdhal is? Bet you ten dollars or ten thousand dollars, not a one! That’s a shame and a disgrace! Bob Jones Meredith

Radical environmentalists influence Obama to kill job creation To the editor, President Obama complains about a “do nothing” Congress and says Republicans prevent him from creating jobs. That is false. If the president were honest, he would complain about the “do nothing” Democrat-led Senate. The Republican-led House has passed over 20 jobs bills, most with bipartisan support, which await action in the Democrat-led Senate. Tuesday, the House passed a bill to extend the payroll tax cut and create 20,000 shovel ready, privately funded jobs by authorizing the Canadian (Keystone) pipeline. The Senate refuses to act to protect President Obama from alienating one of his major special interest groups. The unions want, but the extremist environmentalists oppose the pipeline, so the president postponed the decision until after the election. As a

result 20,000 families wait another year wondering when their funds run out, whether they will lose their homes, where their next meals will be coming from. The Canadian pipeline is just one example how radical environmentalists have influenced this administration to kill off and prevent creation of millions of American jobs in energy, mining, farming, manufacturing, etc. How can President Obama claim to care about jobs when he continues to pursue failing policies and refuses to take actions that even many Democrats think will actually create American jobs? President Obama should demand that the Senate pass the House bills so he can sign legislation putting Americans back to work. Don Ewing Meredith

Winnisquam School District Budget Committee seeks members To the editor, The Winnisquam School District Budget Committee still needs members. As we approach an important part of the school district budget cycle, the committee is still lacking full membership. Due to the resignation of Selectman Dave Nickerson of Sanbornton on December 1 and the long standing open seat in Tilton, the Budget Committee is seeking interested persons from these communities to step forward to join the Budget Committee. An interested individual should submit a letter in writing to Chairperson, WRSD Budget Committee c/o the Superintendent’s Office, 435 West Main Street, Tilton, N.H. 03276. Deadline for submission of the letter is December 21 or you may appear in person with a letter of interest at our meeting on December 22 at 6:30 P.M. in the High School Media Center. To be considered for the position you must be a resident

of the community which you would represent and a registered vote on the checklist. It is helpful if you describe your interest in the position and a bit about your background. The important work of the Budget Committee begins in earnest on December 23, when the budget is passed from the School Board to the Budget Committee. Our plans are to meet each Tuesday and Thursday evening throughout the month of January with a target of a completed budget on February 1. If you have the time and interest and are looking for a meaningful way to serve your community, please consider this opportunity. After December 22 the Budget Committee will begins it work on the budget with whatever members we have seated. For the Winnisquam Regional School District Budget Committee Nina C. Gardner, Chair Sanbornton


Page 8 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

REDISTRICTING from page one stitutional principles in redrawing the House districts. First, the districts must comply with the federal constitutional principle of “one person, one vote.” Since the population of the state in 2010 was 1,316,470, the ideal size of each of the 400 House districts is 3,291. Acknowledging that federal constitutional principles trump state constitutional principles, Representative Paul Mirski (R-Enfield), chairman of the House Special Committee on Redistricting has insisted that districts deviate no more than five-percent above or below the ideal. Second, in 2006, the New Hampshire Constitution was amended to provide that “when the population of any town or ward, according to the last federal census, is within a reasonable deviation from the ideal population for one or more representative seats, the town or ward shall have its own district of one or more representative seats.” Since the population is distributed unevenly across towns and wards, the “one person, one vote principle” leaves most towns and many wards to elect more or less than a whole number of

members, which is impossible. The amendment required lawmakers to turn to so-called “floterial” districts composed of contiguous towns and wards whose fractional representatives add to a whole number. In “floterial” districts, voters of each town elect their own representatives as well as share representatives from the district elected at-large. But, the committee apparently concluded, on the advice of legal council, that “floterial” districts are at odds with the “one person, one vote” principle unless all the towns of the district have virtually equal populations, which is seldom if ever the case. Instead, the plan combines towns in districts with multiple seats where representatives are elected at-large, with no assurance that each town will be directly represented. The plan offered by the subcommittee would divide Belknap County into eight House districts, two more than presently constituted. Two districts would remain the same and three of the other six — two into which Laconia is divided and another combining Gilford and Meredith — are controversial. In Laconia, the City Charter divides the city into six wards for the pur-

MORTGAGEE’S NOTICE OF FORECLOSURE SALE

By virtue of a power of sale contained in a certain mortgage deed given by TIMOTHY E. SCRIBNER, now deceased, to MEREDITH VILLAGE SAVINGS BANK, 24 NH Route 25, P.O. Box 177, Meredith, Belknap County, New Hampshire, 03253, dated December 30, 2004, and recorded on January 5, 2005 in the Belknap County Registry of Deeds at Book 2130, Page 0115, (the “Mortgage”) the holder of said mortgage, pursuant to and in execution of said powers, and for breach of conditions of said mortgage deed, (and the Note secured thereby of near or even date, and related documents) and for the purpose of foreclosing the same shall sell at PUBLIC AUCTION On January 6, 2012 at 1:00 o’clock in the afternoon, pursuant to N.H. R.S.A. 479:25, on the premises herein described being located at 211 Highland Street, Laconia, Belknap County, New Hampshire, being all and the same premises more particularly described in the Mortgage. TERMS OF SALE: Said premises will be sold subject to (i) all unpaid taxes and liens, whether or not of record; (ii) mortgages, liens, attachments and all other encumbrances and rights, titles and interests of third persons which are entitled to precedence over the Mortgages; and (iii) any other matters affecting title of the Mortgagor to the premises disclosed herein. DEPOSITS: Prior to commencement of the auction, all registered bidders shall pay a deposit in the amount of Five Thousand Dollars ($5,000.00). At the conclusion of the auction of the premises, the highest bidder’s deposit, if such high bidder’s bid is accepted by the Bank, shall immediately be paid to the Bank and shall be held by the Bank subject to these Terms of Sale. All deposits required hereunder shall be made in cash or by check to the order of the Bank, which is acceptable to the Bank in its sole and absolute discretion. WARRANTIES AND CONVEYANCE: The Bank shall deliver a Mortgagee’s Foreclosure Deed of the Real Estate to the successful bidder accepted by the Bank within forty-five (45) days from the date of the foreclosure sale, upon receipt of the balance of the Purchase Price in cash or check acceptable to Bank. The Real estate will be conveyed with those warranties contained in the Mortgagee’s Foreclosure Deed, and no others. FEDERAL TAX LIEN: If the property to be sold is subject to a tax lien of the United States of America Internal Revenue Service, unless said lien is released after sale, the sale may be subject to the right of the United States of America to redeem the lands and premises on or before 120 days from the date of the sale. BREACH OF PURCHASE CONTRACT: If any successful bidder fails to complete the contract of sale resulting from the Bank’s acceptance of such successful bidder’s bid, such successful bidder’s deposit may, at the option of the Bank, be retained as full liquidated damages or may be held on account of the damages actually suffered by the Bank. If such deposit is not retained as full liquidated damages, the Bank shall have all of the privileges, remedies and rights available to the Bank at law or in equity due to such successful bidder’s breach of the contract of sale. Notice of the election made hereunder by the Bank shall be given to a defaulting successful bidder within 50 days after the date of the public auction. If the Bank fails to notify a defaulting successful bidder of which remedy the Bank has elected hereunder, the Bank shall be conclusively deemed to have elected to be holding the deposit on account of the damages actually suffered by the Bank. Upon any such default, Meredith Village Savings Bank shall have the right to sell the property to any back up bidder or itself. AMENDMENT OF TERMS OF SALE: The Bank reserves the right to amend or change the Terms of Sale set forth herein by announcement, written or oral, made prior to the commencement of the public auction. NOTICE TO THE MORTGAGOR, ANY GRANTEE OF THE MORTGAGOR AND ANY OTHER PERSON CLAIMING A LIEN OR OTHER ENCUMBRANCE ON THE PREMISES: YOU ARE HEREBY NOTIFIED THAT YOU HAVE A RIGHT TO PETITION THE SUPERIOR COURT FOR THE COUNTY IN WHICH THE MORTGAGED PREMISES ARE SITUATED, WITH SERVICE UPON THE MORTGAGEE, AND UPON SUCH BOND AS THE COURT MAY REQUIRE, TO ENJOIN THE SCHEDULED FORECLOSURE SALE. For further information respecting the aforementioned foreclosure sale, contact James R. St. Jean Auctioneers, 45 Exeter Rd., PO Box 400, Epping NH 03042, 603-734-4348. Dated this the 9th day of December, 2011. MEREDITH VILLAGE SAVINGS BANK By Its Attorneys Minkow & Mahoney Mullen, P.A. By: Peter J. Minkow, Esq. 4 Stevens Ave., Suite 3 P.O. Box 235 Meredith, NH 03253 (603) 279-6511 Publication Dates: December 15, 22 & 29, 2011.

pose of constituting the city council composed of a councilor elected in each ward and a mayor elected atlarge. During the 1990s the city also returned six state representatives — all elected at-large. But, between 2002 and 2010 the city’s population warranted only five House seats and by 2010 dwindling numbers entitled it to 4.85 representatives. Moreover, none of the six wards has enough people to qualify as a separate electoral district. The sub-committee’s plan splits Laconia into two House districts. One would consist of Wards 1, 2, 3, 5 and 6 where voters would elect four representatives. The other joins Ward 4 with Belmont and Gilmanton to elect four representatives at-large. Representative Frank Tilton (R-Laconia) said yesterday that several plans dividing the city were proposed and he strongly advised against all of them. One, he said, combined three wards with Meredith in a five-member district, another added Ward 6 to Gilford in a three-member district and a third joined Wards 4 and 5 with Belmont in a four-member district. “I think 4.85 is close enough to five to entitle the city its five seats,” Tilton said. “What concerns me,” Tilton explained, “is that the committee is treating wards like towns.” Wards, he explained, unlike towns, are not governmental units, but lines on the electoral map for electing the city council, which is the governing body of the city. Acknowledging that the amendment to the state Constitution refers to both towns and wards, he insisted that cities, like towns, should not be divided between House districts.”If the House voted on a school funding plan that benefited Belmont and disadvantaged Laconia,” Tilton wondered, “how would a someone representing both be expected to vote?” Representative Alida Millham (R-Gilford), who chairs the Belknap County Hosue delegation, shared Tilton’s reservations about joining Ward 4 with Belmont and Gilmanton. “It’s outrageous to take a ward out of the city. You’re disenfranchising every voter in Ward 4,” she said. Moreover, she pointed out that it would be possible for two of three components of the district to be left without representation, despite the constitutional amendment. She likened the prospect to the last election when, but for the sudden retirement of one representative from Alton, in

the district consisting of Alton, Barnstead, Gilford and Belmont four of the seven representatives would have been from Alton, two from Barnstead and one from Belmont, leaving Gilford without a representative. Tilton said that last week he expressed his misgivings in plain terms to Mirski, who assured him he would “look at ways of keeping Laconia together.” The sub-committee divided other cities — Manchester, Keene, Franklin, Dover, Somersworth, Portsmouth and Concord — much like Laconia, leading Tilton to say that “if we have to go to court, we won’t be alone.” The third controversial district would combine Meredith and Gilford, which are contiguous only by water, in a single district with four representatives elected at-large. All four reps could be elected from either town. Meredith, with a population of 6,241, qualifies for less than the two representatives it has elected since 2002. Gilford, on the other hand, has been among four towns that together return seven House members, but with 7,126 people, warrants more than two seats on its own. Millham said that “if your entitled to two, you should have two.” She claimed that deviation was one of several factors to consider in drawing electoral districts and the courts have not insisted on strict numerical standards in the face of reasonable grounds for stretching them. “You have to look at the circumstances,” she said. The plan designates Alton and Barnstead as separate districts, each with one seat, as well as combines them in a district where one representative would be elected at-large. Two districts — New Hampton and Center Harbor and Sanbornton and Tilton — would remain unchanged. With a combined population of 3,261 just 30 shy of the ideal, New Hampton and Center Harbor would continue to elect one representative. Likewise, with 2,966 people Sanbornton deviates too far below the ideal of 3,291 while Tilton, with 3,567 people, deviates too far above it for either to elect its own representative. Consequently, they would remain one district electing two representatives. Tilton said that he expected today’s hearing and next week’s vote to be the first shots in what will become a long, bitter struggle over redrawing the 400 House districts.

MILLIOINAIRE TAX from page one Reid shot back that McConnell had long ago declared Obama’s defeat to be his top priority. And he warned that unless Republicans show a willingness to bend, the country faces a government shutdown “that will be just as unpopular” as the two that occurred when Newt Gingrich was House speaker more than a decade ago. It was a reminder — as if McConnell and current Speaker John Boehner of Ohio needed one — of the political debacle that ensued for Republicans when Gingrich was outmaneuvered in a showdown with former President Bill Clinton. At issue now are three year-end bills that Obama and leaders in both parties in Congress say they want. One would extend expiring Social Security payroll tax cuts and benefits for the long-term unemployed, provisions at

Another is the $1 trillion spending measure that would lock in cuts that Republicans won earlier in the year. The third measure is a $662 billion defense bill setting policy for military personnel, weapons systems and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, plus national security programs in the Energy Department. After a two-day silence, the White House said Obama would sign the measure despite initial concern over a provision requiring military custody of certain terror suspects linked to al-Qaida or its affiliates. U.S. citizens would be exempt. The measure cleared the House, 283-136, with a final vote expected Thursday in the Senate. Officials said Democrats were drafting a new proposal to extend the payroll tax that likely would not include the millionaires’ surtax that Republi-


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011 — Page 9

LETTERS Local environment will be ‘beneficiary’ of Republican jobs bill To the editor, Who to vote for this time around will be argued by us until next November. To vote for a progressive Democrat, Republican or third or fourth party is the question. Hopefully we can agree on one thing, getting the bribery and money out of Washington and politics. Both sides are guilty of this and no wonder they will spend millions to get elected — better than owning IBM stock. I doubt the framers had this in mind. Bribery and free speech are NOT the same thing — at least in spelling. Who will or can clean up politics? That’s what the OWS movement is all about and they are fighting for all of us. Most politicians will say or do anything to get elected. I remember Lowell Wicker in Connecticut years ago. He ran on a no state income tax platform, was elected, and first thing he did was to institute a state income tax. So, why do we bother with elections at all? This is why I voted for Obama and will do so again. I believe he is being as honest as a politician can be and still walk the wire. Yup, there are WS fund raising, Solyandra and other questionable moves but I still believe he is our best choice. Will Obama be able to get any Republican to help him pass some creative bills in either the House or Senate? The Consumer Finance Protection Bureau was created by Elizabeth Warren in Mass. and passed by both houses. Then why can’t a leader of this bureau be confirmed? Lindsey Graham feels it will lead us to a Stalinistic era — YIKES. Does that mean that up to 30 million people will be killed by him like Stalin did? Doubt it but I feel the banks and other financial institutes are worried — translates to more campaign donations for less regulations. Lots of anti-left letters lately. It makes me wonder if they come straight from Carl Rove or the Koch

Brothers themselves. Definitely the usual scare tactics and exaggerations. The liberals (or Obama) are to blame for homelessness OR is it the usual refusal by the right to fund social programs. Keystone pipeline jobs — 200,000 or less than 5,000 jobs will be created — take your pick as there are arguments for both. Being a pacifist is invitation, etc — just ask Gandi Steve and by the way I heard the Cain infidelity might have been an inside job. I respect Newt for being so honest about both Freddy and Fannie. And, according to Jack Stephenson, it’s all is about sex. Makes for a good book. Next, just google filibuster & Norm Ornstein, and you will see a graph on how the use of the filibuster has increased the last 10-20 years. Very little has been accomplished in Congress — why? Because Obama wants it so the elected Republicans don’t. Sometimes even they might have a good reason to vote against a bill but the majority is just being stubborn. The Republican jobs bill is still only a group of bills to eliminate environmental regulations, EPA etc. Now I believe in clean air, water and air quality and the regulations to keep them clean. If all businesses were honest then we wouldn’t need all the regs. But they aren’t. We all remember the movie with Julia Roberts as Erin Brockovich against PG&E and water contamination years ago. The problem STILL exists today some 10-20 years even after the “clean up & fix”. Remember one thing, all the dirty air, acid rain and nasty stuff flows this way so if the west eliminates any clean air regulations WE will be the “beneficiary”. So, one other question: if you don’t care about the environment why the hell are you living in north/ central New Hampshire? Outside of our residents the environment is our BIGGEST asset. Jon Hoyt Bridgewater

Those were the days, my friends, I thought they’d never end To the editor, Thinking back on Christmases years ago and one in particular when I received a pair of blue knee-socks and I wore them to school to show them off. My parents could only afford one gift per child but the Campello Fire Station (Brockton, Mass.) gave us toys, also. Another Christmas, I remember receiving a sled and I used it for many winters to come. I used to drag it about a mile to French Hill, where many others went to coast. The snow was beautiful. We got sprayed and got a mouthful now and then. When I was married and had children, Santa Claus brought of couple of double runners. You could fit two or three people on them. We would take the kids and the sleds in my old station wagon and to Tower Hill in Field’s Park in Brockton. Afterwards we all had hot chocolate when we got home. A few years later I purchased a sled

from an antique store and painted it red. When Christmas came I would stand it with colorful lights all around it on the front lawn. Those were the days my friends. I thought they’d never end. But they did. Now my children are grown up and have gone their separate ways. My husband lives alone and I am in the Belknap County Nursing Home. It’s a beautiful place. I have many friends and receive excellent care. My husband comes to visit me nearly every day. Soon it will be Christmas time again and the nursing home has many things planned for the residents to do. We are going to have a party, a Chinese buffet, and entertainment and I am looking forward to it. Don’t forget that Christ was born on Christmas Day. Liz O’Neil Belknap County Nursing Home Laconia

Thank You To All of Our Sponsors for the 2011 TRIATHLON SEASON! We had a great year of training, racing and even some trips to the podium! Thanks for helping us to grow the sport of triathlon in the lakes region of NH!

Presenting Sponsors:

Gold Sponsor:

Silver Sponsor:

Bronze Sponsors:

Contributing Sponsor:

Endorfun Sports Breakaway Athletic Coaching Drink Skinny Margarita LPL Financial Kennell Orthodontics Patrick’s Pub & Eatery ENT Physicians & Surgeons Skate Escape Misiaszek Turpin Architecture Planning Performance Health Spine & Sport Therapy RFS Engineering Stamping Technologies Steele Hill Resorts

The Irwin Zone

In Kind Sponsors: Xeterra Wetsuits Den Brae Golf Course Centaur Massage Towne Place Suites Marriott The Common Man Restaurants

www.lakesregiontriclub.com

$75 SAVINGS! Ashleigh F. Jones, D.M.D. ~ B. Chandler Jones, D.M.D.

This Holiday Season we ask for your help as we proudly support the Gilford Community Church Food Pantry. All New Patient Comprehensive Exams completed before December 25, 2011 will receive a Credit of $75 for donating a non-perishable food item on their first visit.

About Us

Drs. Ashleigh and Chandler Jones, formerly Air Force dentists, have brought their advanced training and experience permanently to the Lakes Region. Their goal is to provide the highest quality dental care possible and establish lifelong relationships with you and your family. We are dedicated to listening to your needs and building a mutual trust through open and honest communication. Offering Full Service Family And Cosmetic Dentistry • Root Canals • Implants • Wisdom Teeth Extractions • Invisalign Orthodontics • Porcelain Veneers & Crowns Nitrous Oxide Sedation Available!

524-8250

Major Credit Cards and Insurance Accepted.

25 Country Club Rd. Financing through Village West One Care Credit Building 4 available. Gilford, NH 03249 www.lakesregiondentalcare.com


Page 10 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

The Direct Merchant Offers:

Now open Saturdays for the Holiday Season, 9am-2pm Located at: 570 Union Avenue, Laconia (Next to NAPA) 603-528-4002

Order Placements Order Pick-Ups Returns/Exchanges Gift Cards Credit Payments Sale Flyers

We have some new faces! Although still seeing patients, Dr. Charles Lambert has decided to reduce his administrative duties and brought on a trusted colleague. Please welcome Dr. Joseph Cariello as the new owner and dentist. A little bit about Dr. Joe: He graduated from the State University at Buffalo in 2000. He has five small children, four boys and one girl. He knew he wanted to be a dentist when he was eight. We’re also pleased to introduce Dr. Karin Lamar and Dr. Joseph Williams. Dr. Lamar was named one of New Hampshire Magazine’s Top Dentists in 2010. Dr. Williams taught at Tufts University, and earned a Master of the Academy of General Dentistry. We now provide Invisalign, Zoom Whitening, and multiple implant systems. For your convenience we have family scheduling and extended hours. Learn more at our new website, www.interlakesdental.com. As always, please call us at (603)253-4363 or stop in any time. You’re in great hands at Interlakes. 60 Whittier Highway Moultonborough, NH 603-253-4363 www.interlakesdental.com

Kin worried about missing Barnstead man

BARNSTEAD — Police tall and weighing about here are searching for a 160 pounds. He has long 54-year-old man who has brown hair that is usually not been seen since Decemworn in a pony tail, a beard ber 10. Paul Barnet lives by and brown eyes. He may be himself in the Locke Lake walking with the aid of a Colony area of town and cane and might be wearing the last confirmed spotting his favorite denim jacket, of him was on Saturday, with a patch on the back. when neighbors saw him Anyone with knowledge working in his yard. of Barnet’s possible wherePhoto of Paul Barnet proFamily members told vided by Barnstead police abouts is asked to conauthorities they have not tact the Barnstead Police heard from Barnet since December 6. Department at 269-4281. Barnet is described as being 5’ 9” GILMANTON from page one tised her about the dirt on the floor of her cruiser and he says she called him a couple of words that can’t be printed in the newspaper. He said he told her to go inside and later asked the chief to reprimand her for insubordination. She denies calling him that and said if she did she would deserve to be written up for insubordination. After the altercation, the female officer inked a written complaint against Rector detailing a pattern of sexual harassment that led O’Brien to take the matter to the Selectboard. Six days later, on January 31, O’Brien placed Rector on administrative leave while an independent lawyer investigated the complaint. All of the investigation including a transcript of the selectmen’s interview with Rector became public as the result of Rector’s lawsuit. By way of a time line, Selectmen hired Portsmouth law firm Jackson/ Lewis to do an investigation. Atty. Daniel Schwartz conducted it and filed his report to the Board on Feb. 8. On Feb. 15, selectmen provided a copy of the report to Rector and he was asked to come to a non-public session on February 22. Selectmen voted to fire Rector on March 8 and he filed suit against them saying he wasn’t given a formal hearing. Schwartz’s report said the officer’s complaints about Rector fall into two categories: his comments directed at her and the lack of respect he showed her, which he said encourages other male officers to also disrespect her. Both Rector and the female officer

agree he often called her “babe,” and “hussy” to her face but he said it was part of the way they typically spoke to each other. She said he also called her a “slut,” which he denied. Rector said their “banter” only became an issue after the argument about the dirty floor and this was the way they typically addressed each other. The female officer said it was a pattern of sexual harassment that left her feeling uncomfortable. “This has been building and building in me and I am made to feel humiliated on a daily basis,” she wrote. The female officer also said she protested to O’Brien more than a year before her final argument with Rector — but the offending words continued. The officer’s list of complaints against Rector date back to 2009. She said she was offended by the nickname Rector had for a male co-worker and stated he regularly made comments about her weight and the size of her buttocks. The female patrol officer also said after she showed Rector a picture of her 19-year-old daughter, he put the picture in his lap, commented on the daughter’s chest, and said he would “hit that”. Rector’s responses to the complaints say the suggestive verbal behavior went both ways and that she, in fact, started it during her probationary period. His statements to Schwartz said he considered the female officer a friend and that he only spoke to her in this way because he thought it didn’t see next page

When In Doubt. . .

Since 1976

A Gift Certificate The perfect answer to a ‘gifting quandary”. Use it for anything we rent, sell, service or repair. (Like snowplows). Or how about a new tonneau cover or tool box for his (or her) pickup? Bedliners and running boards too and oodles of other truck goodies! We have an almost endless list of practical, useful things for which a gift certificate is a very sensible idea. Come in. Check it all out. You’ll have a very happy recipient! Route 3 • Belmont, Just S. of the Belknap Mall

524-5553


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011 — Page 11

from preceding page bother her. “I do this to keep the work place light and carefree,” he wrote adding he considered the woman to be like a sister. He also added she referred to herself as “frisky.” The woman also said she learned that before she was hired, Rector and another male police officer went to O’Brien and told them hiring a woman would “break up the camaraderie” in the small department of five. In his affidavits, Rector acknowledges making that statement but said he later told O’Brien his assessment of her was that she “was a very good officer.” Rector also told the investigator how when the chief overheard the argument about the dirty cruiser, he suggested that Rector “ease” into the car inspections. He said the chief advised him that the female officer had some issues at home with some frozen pipes and had not slept or showered that day. O’Brien’s statements to Schwartz say he tried that day to get Rector to calm down and ease up on the female police officer. O’Brien also told the investigator that Rector’s personality is “quite sexually oriented” and “everything comes back to sex.” O’Brien also said he spoke to Rector in 2009 about his comments regarding the female officer’s daughter and his language but said he didn’t formally document it. O’Brien also said his impression was that Rector was harsher to her than he was to the other two male officers and his sense was “he didn’t really want her here.” The chief’s statement also said that he had been away tending to a family matter for much of 2010 and during those times Rector was acting chief. Since his return, O’Brien told Schwartz that Rector was “much more confrontational with him” than before he was gone. O’Brien admitted he received sexually explicit photographs depicting some women in town from Rector and he showed them to the female officer, but said he didn’t know why and the pictures “just came up in conversation.” Included in the female officer’s statement was the allegation she thought Rector aspired to be police chief and was working to undermine O’Brien’s authority. She said his alleged machinations with the two other male police officers and her refusal to participate in them, led them to conclude she wasn’t a team player.” Schwartz also interviewed a female civilian employee and two other male police officers. Both male officers said they told

him working with the female police officer was like “walking on eggshells.” The two male police officers admitted they and Rector exchanged sexually explicit text messages and pictures but both said neither of them ever shared the texts of pictures with the female police officer. The two backed Rector’s accounts and said they never heard Rector refer to the female officer in any inappropriate manner. Both said Rector had made efforts to include the female officer in their off-duty activities but neither she or the chief went to any of them. The female civilian interviewed recalled the argument between Rector and the female officer and she had called Rector what he claimed she called him. She said the female officer claimed Rector “was constantly riding her ass” and that it was about time the chief did something. She also recalled O’Brien telling Rector how the female officer had had some problems with her house that morning and Rector should “cut her some slack.” A final interview was conducted with a neighboring police chief where the woman worked before Gilmanton. He described her as a good officer, said she left his department for more money, and added if he had a space he would “hire her back in a minute.” The Board of Selectmen’s actions and discussions were also made public as part of Rector’s lawsuit. On March 8 the board wrote Rector “failed to understand how his behavior might be a sexual harassment violation” and didn’t understand until he read her account from Schwartz’s investigation. In their recommendation to dismiss Rector, selectmen wrote they were “especially disturbed by what (the board) heard directly from Sgt. Rector... “ The board bemoaned his lack of “comprehension of this behavior by a superior supervising officer might be intimidating to a subordinate officer and might suppress an otherwise normal ability to respond by telling someone to stop that offensive behavior.” They wrote that a superior officer should set the example in the Police Department and that Rector not only didn’t dispute the allegations but instead tried to make it seem like it was the woman officer’s fault. The vote to fire him was unanimous and all three selectmen signed the recommendation. O’Brien and Rector were both contacted for this story but both declined to comment. The Daily Sun has also learned the see next page

Lowest Prices ... Guaranteed! All 20% Off y Chimne Masonry Repairs! & s ld Rebui

20% Off Stoves/F All irep & Access laces ories!

Custom Stone and Chimney Services

Stove Shop

Wood / Pellet / Gas Stoves & Fireplaces • Installations • Inspections Chimney Sweeps • Chimney Lining • Chimney Repairs • Full Masonry Natural & Cultured Stone • And Much More....

(603) 293-4040 www.fireNstone.com

539 Laconia Rd. Tilton, NH

Hair & Nails Retail & Tanning

Mill Falls Marketplace Meredith, NH Hours: M-Fri 8-8, Sat 8-4 OPI is thrilled to announce Katy Perry nail lacquer colors. Four dazzling shades inspired by the rock star.

279-7011

Advanced General Dentistry

Jean-Paul Rabbath DMD, MAGD, PLLC Master Academy of General Dentistry NH AGD Delegate & Membership Chair • Member AGD, ADA, CDA, NHDS, MDS

• Restorative, Preventive & Implant Dentistry New • Cosmetic (Veneers, Whitening & More) Patients Welcome • Invisalign (Clear Alternative to Braces) (Adults & Children) Call Today To Schedule • Dental Surgery (Extractions) An Appointment! • Gum Surgery (Laser) 286-8618 • Immediate Full & Partial Dentures • Same Day Emergencies

Dentist also speaks French & Spanish! 468 W. Main St., Tilton, NH 03276 www.rabbathdental.com

Major Credit Cards & Insurance Accepted

CLOTHING OUTLET

Gou tino fg o ss! Busine

• Jackets • Hoodies • Youth Jackets $15 • Polo Shirts • Hats $1 • Holiday Gifts • Pet Accessories • Camping Chairs • Hydration Packs $5 • NOTHING OVER $20!

HUGE SAVINGS

Turn down towards Meadowbrook Pavillion 21 Meadowbrook Lane, Gilford, NH Bayview Business Park Store Hours: M-F, 10-5 Sat, 9-4 Sun, 10-3 Closed December 23


Page 12 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

Don’t forget to make your 2011 IRA contribution.

GRAND NEW YEAR’S EVE PARTY Big Prime Rib Buffet with Music Call For Reservations 528-3244

88 Ladd Hill, Belmont • Serving Lunch & Dinner Daily

Auto Boats Health

MOTORCYCLE

Home Condo Life

COMPARE A QUOTE INSURANCE

S R 22 Issued Today

Laconia - Ryan

Tilton - Joe

135 Weirs Blvd. 603-528-1854

315 Main St. 603-286-8900

Phone Quotes 7 Days a Week, 10am - 8pm MERRIMACK VALLEY Flu Shot Clinics Still Available

OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH

Nancy Lake, APRN 614 Laconia Road, Route 3, Unit 2 • Tilton, NH Ph: (603)717-7020 • Fax: (603)717-7011

A metal cage filled with a cord of firewood is moved into the kiln at Province Road Kiln-Dried Firewood. (Roger Amsden/for The Laconia Daily Sun)

KILN from page one now turns out about 1,000 cords of wood a year and is so busy that all of its current production is already spoken for into February. “We’re going to double our production, provided we’re able to get the wood to do that,’’ says owner Mark Mooney, who says that he already has a second boiler on site and has poured a foundation for the new kiln and expects to start work soon on the new building. Mooney says that some of the logs he uses come from his own wood lots but the bulk of them are supplied by local loggers., who have had trouble getting out into the woods this year due to wet conditions. “It’s been a difficult season. We had a wet spring and fall and loggers lost a lot of days out in the woods. A little while ago we ran out of logs altogether,’’ says Mooney. He said that the decision to build the kiln-dried firewood processing center came in the winter of

2007-08. Several years before that he had bought a wood-processing system and brought it to a sandpit at the former Province Road Sand and Gravel operation where maintenance workers from his Briarcrest Estates development were kept busy during the winter months by turning out firewood, as many as 400 cords per year. “We’d been talking about doing something like this for quite some time. But that winter, when we were pulling firewood out from under 40 inches of snow, I decided we’d have to move the operation under cover,” says Mooney. So he built a large dome-like shelter for the processed firewood capable of holding as much as 600 cords and put up a large building with a kiln which can hold between 16 and 18 metal cage-like buckets filled with a cord apiece of loosely stacked processed firewood. see next page

from preceding page town has engaged the services of a Maine Public Safety Consulting Firm.“We have been asked to consult in the realm of management and to offer thoughts on concepts of management in matters of contemporary law enforcement,” said Central Intelligence owner and founder Michael Pardue yesterday afternoon. Pardue said his company has been asked to be a

resource to the town and to O’Brien. Selectmen are meeting in a posted non-public session to discuss a personnel matter Friday morning at 8 a.m. When reached late yesterday afternoon, Town Administrator Tim Warren said he couldn’t comment on the meeting but said he would look up the expenses for Central Intelligence’s services and the Schwart’s report and make them public today.

Occupational Health Services Physicals & Evaluations • Worker’s Comp. Injuries Immunizations • DOT Physicals • Drug Testing • Sports Physicals

Trends

of Belmont

CAPS & ACCESSORIES 10% BONUS ON ALL

Gift Certificates Purchased Now through Christmas! info@trucktrendsnh.com Route 106, Belmont, NH • 603-528-0888

Pine Gardens Manufactured Homes Sales & Park

2000 Victorian

28x64 Double Wide - 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, K-11

$26,900

LOCAL EXPERIENCED BANKRUPTCY ATTORNEY

Atty. Stanley Robinson is designated as a Federal Relief Agency by an act of Congress & has proudly assisted consumers seeking debt relief under the US Bankruptcy code for over 30 years.

Your Computer Service Center With over 18 years of experience, we specialize in: • Hardware & Software Diagnostics • Repairs • Data Recovery • Virus & Spyware Removal • System Clean-ups • Networking • Hardware & Software Installation & Setup • Business Tech Support • New, Used & Custom PC’s & Laptops • Upgrades • And More Ask us about our new Virus Protection Insurance Plan

52 Canal St. Laconia

603-527-4141 Monday-Friday 9 am-5 pm www.aacnh.com

603-286-2019 • shrlawoffice@gmail.com ICE 1/2 PR * DINNER

Closed Mondays

WOODBURNER’S DINNER SPECIAL Park Rent is $390/Month and includes water and sewer. Office: (603) 267-8182

Bottomless Cup of Soup with Lunch! Bring in a piece of fire wood, or this coupon and get the second dinner entrée 1/2 Price!* 8 Plymouth Street, Meredith, NH 279-4631 • www.mamesrestaurant.com

* Not valid with other promotions, $11 entree specials, or on holidays. Expires 12/30/11. Maximum party of six. One coupon or piece of wood per 2 guests. LDS

Easy Listening…Live Music, Every Friday & Saturday.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 13

NORTHERN PASS from page 3 have pledged to fight any efforts by Northern Pass to widen those rights of way or run high-voltage lines along the existing power lines. Murray said the project does not need to widen the route, but doing so would mean the power poles could be shorter. He also disputes arguments that the easements giving Public Service of New Hampshire the right to use the rights of way don’t extend to new, high-voltage lines. The 40 miles north of Groveton have presented Northern Pass officials a different challenge. They dropped an initial route from the Canadian border to Groveton earlier this year after landowners objected to its location. Officials are trying now to buy land along a more easterly route for the line. Murray said he expects the new route will be announced within the first three months of next year. Opponents fear Northern Pass will get the land through eminent domain. State law already prevents developers from using eminent domain for private projects, which Northern Pass is. And lawmakers will consider legislation next year that further clarifies the issue. Northern Pass officials have fueled fears of eminent domain by saying they’d use it only as a “last STANDOFF from page 3 A police SWAT team made contact with Griffin Tuesday night. Police said he declined to surrender, made suicidal statements and said he was armed. Residents were evacuated. Police fired tear gas into the apartment at 4:30 a.m., but did not observe any reaction from Griffin. They sent in a bomb-detection robot two hours later and then entered. The FBI was offering $10,000 for information leading to the arrest of a man who robbed the Bank of America in Hooksett at gunpoint on Oct. 6. They identified him as Griffin. from preceding page And he bought a new wood processor which takes whole logs: maple, beech, ash, and other hardwood species, and saws them into 16-inch chunks, which drop into a chute where a hydraulic ram pushes them into a four-way splitter. The split wood is then carried upwards by a conveyor belt which drops them into the metal cages, which are moved to a storage area once they are filled. Heart of the system is a custom-built one million Btu wood-fired boiler which heats the kiln to between 180 and 200 degrees, reducing the moisture content of the wood from 54 percent to less than 20 percent in a three or four-day period. Brian Hutchins, general manager of Province Road Kiln-Dried Firewood, says that the operation has become year-round and that the system actually works better during the summer months. “Drying time changes with the weather. In the winter it can take four or five days. The wood is frozen and you have to unthaw it to start driving the moisture out. Summer is the best time. You can put two loads a week through the system,’’ says Hutchins. He says that the boiler, which is fired by a scrap wood, has a propane backup and is in continuous 24-hour operation with a backup generator in case of power outages so that the heated water will continue to flow. The kiln itself has three giant fans near the roof which provide the exhaust needed for the moisture drawn from the wood, which is periodically released through vents near the roof. Hutchins says that in the past he’s tried to keep enough firewood in storage so that customers could drive in and pick up a small truckload to tide them through until a delivery could be made but that’s proved nearly impossible this year due to the high demand. “Log prices are going up too. There’s a lot of demand for logs and with the wet weather for loggers it’s been hard to keep enough of an inventory on hand to get the production up to where it should be.” says Hutchins. He says that he’s hoping the logjam will break as winter sets in and frozen ground allows loggers to harvest enough trees to keep both of the kiln-dry

resort.” When asked whether the officials believed they could use eminent domain given the state law, Murray answered this way: “We are dong everything we possibly can to avoid even the need to discuss eminent domain.” The project, he said, intends to buy the land it needs from willing landowners. Asked whether project officials would seek eminent domain power if necessary, Murray said eminent domain “is not something we on the project team are focused on because we are so intent on finding a route that would make that unnecessary.”

He went on to say that the state would have to ultimately decide whether Northern Pass qualified for the use of eminent domain by deciding whether its hydropower project served the “public good,” as the law requires. But he reiterated that the project’s goal is to buy land, not take it. Eminent domain “may be a tool that is in the state’s toolbox, but it’s not one that we are looking to utilize, and we are doing everything we can to establish a route that has the support of the underlying landowners,” he said.

CELL PHONES from page 2 an hour and a half. “If I have a 3½-hour drive to Little Rock, and I’ve got 100 messages to return, it’s going to turn that into a six-hour drive,” he said. “I’ve got no secretary. I’m the administrative assistant. I’m the salesman. I’m the sales director.” The National Transportation Safety Board declared Tuesday that texting, emailing or chatting

while driving is just too dangerous to be allowed anywhere in the United States. It urged all states to impose total bans except for emergencies. The NTSB, an independent agency that investigates accidents and makes safety recommendations, doesn’t have the power to impose regulations or make grants. But its suggestions carry significant weight with lawmakers and regulators. see next page


Page 14 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

Delivery (6 mile radius)

2

LARGE CHEESE PIZZAS

1180

$

including tax!

BUY 1 LARGE ONE TOPPING

500

$

(Of Equal Value)

LARGE 16” PEPPERONI FOR $9.95

GET 1

Must present ad, 1 coupon per customer, not valid with other offers. All Major Credit Cards Accepted

$ NEED EXTRA CASH FOR THE HOLIDAYS $ Top Dollar Paid for Your Unwanted Jewelry from Your Trusted Local Jeweler TLC Jewelry • 279 Main St Tilton 603 286-7000 • tlcjewels.net Expert Repairs & Watch Batteries SHOP LOCALLY FOR YOUR BEST VALUE Open Daily from 12 Noon till 9pm Serving Lunch & Dinner

Dinner Reservations 286-7774 255 Main Street, Tilton, NH 03276

Book Now for New Year’s Eve ... Dinner or Dinner & Stay Package

WildQuest Holiday Camp Features………

WINTER EXPLORERS

Winnisquam school board charges teachers have not bargained in good faith over evaluation process By Molly A.K. Connors TILTON — In part of a protracted disagreement over the way teachers are evaluated, the Winnisquam Regional School District has filed an unfair labor practice complaint against the union representing its teachers. For two years, a group of 11 teachers and administrators worked on a plan for how teachers would be assessed. But in June 2010, a majority of the union’s approximately 100 members rejected the plan. The teachers’ concerns are twofold. They worry their evaluations will be based on how students perform on standardized tests. They are also unhappy that some of them will be forced to participate in a process called a “goal plan,” which is designed to have teachers take the subject matter they study in their recurring three-year recertification process and try to apply it in a documentable way in the classroom. “Some people see it (as) more work being asked of them above and beyond what they’re already doing,” said Brenda Lawrence, president of the Winnisquam Regional Teachers Association. Some of the union’s concerns were noted, the plan was revised and the district’s school board approved it June 20. But some teachers were still dissatisfied, and on the same day the plan passed, the union filed a grievance, which progressed to the school board during the summer. About the same time the evaluation plan was being finalized, the state Legislature passed a bill mandating each board to adopt a teacher evaluation plan. “They (school board members) felt as though they had to review their policy to make sure it complied with this bill,” said James O’Shaughnessy, one of the

district’s attorneys. The new evaluation plan is being put into effect this year, but the teachers asked that the issue be resolved through arbitration, a move the district says is prohibited by the collective bargaining agreement. To that end, attorneys for the district filed the unfair labor practice charge in late October. The Public Employee Labor Relations Board hearing determining whether the issue can go to the American Arbitration Association will take place Jan. 26. Under the previous evaluation plan, which was written and approved by a similar mix of teachers and administrators in 2005, teachers who had been in the district for more than five years who were deemed proficient or better in all their competencies after an evaluation were allowed to choose in subsequent years if they preferred another formal evaluation or if they preferred to do a goal plan. Now, vested teachers are evaluated in the first year of their three-year recertification process, and if considered proficient, participate in a goal plan. Teachers who are not deemed proficient are put on improvement plans. The mandatory goal plans currently apply to about 85 percent of the district’s 145 or so teachers, said Suzan Gannett, the district’s director of curriculum and development. The rest of the teachers have served fewer than five years and therefore undergo a classroom evaluation each year. Lawrence said the problem with the plan - which requires teachers to, among other things, set a goal, describe a timeline by which it will be accomplished and then reflect on the process - is that it is no longer optional. see WINNISQUAM next page

from preceding page Still, a decision rests with the states, meaning that 50 separate legislatures would have to act. And many lawmakers are just as wedded to their cellphones as Woods. “I think all of us have mixed feelings on this issue. How could you not?” said U.S. Rep. Gerry Connolly, whose northern Virginia district has some of the longest, most traffic-choked commutes in the country. Before going to Congress, the Democrat spent most of his career at the county level, driving around Fairfax County with his cellphone. Now he commutes to Capitol Hill by carpool or mass transit so he can use his phone without getting behind the wheel. While he’s sympathetic to the NTSB’s safety concerns, he said, a blanket ban on cellphone use would be unenforceable. But he agrees that hands-free devices offer little improvement over those that are

hand-held. “It’s a cognitive distraction,” he said. “The mental attention shifts ... to that other party, not to the task at hand.” Dallas event planner Debbie Vaughan said she would abide by any ban, but her service to clients would be diminished. “I know many people are frustrated when all they get is voicemail,” said Vaughan, who spends about 10 hours a week on her cellphone in her car. Bruce McGovern said he would have no choice but to defy the law. McGovern, who owns four Massage Envy and four European Wax Center franchises in the Dallas area, said he spends up to four days a week on the road, traveling between his businesses. “My business would go down. We’d have problems see PHONES next page

Bayside Cemetery Association Laconia, NH

Wescott, Dyer, Fitzgerald & Nichols, PA

CONCORD MONITOR

NOTICE: All gates will be closed for the winter, as of MONDAY, DECEMBER 19, 2011; enabling, in the meantime, the placement of current seasonal items, at owner’s risk, as desired. Old, remaining , unsightly, out of season items, may be removed and disposed of by cemetery employees at any time. Existing Rules & Regulations: (in part). Article 1; Open from dawn to dusk daily April through November, as weather permits. Gates will be closed any time the Board of Directors and/or Foreman deems necessary. Article 12; Extra charges will be made in winter months (as necessary) for winter burials, if requested. Article 14; During winter months bodies may be placed in cemetery tomb for spring burial until June 10th without charge. Article 19; Bayside Cemetery will not be held responsible for any damage to lots, nor for the loss or damage caused by frost, vandals or any other cause beyond their control. Article 21; Directors of Bayside Cemetery reserve the right to change the rules or charges whenever a change is deemed necessary. The foreman is authorized to enforce the above rules (and all others); exceptions may be authorized by approval of the Board of Directors. December 10, 2011 Board of Directors, Bayside Cemetery Association.

attorney

Shawn E. Nichols

HURT AT WORK? snichols@wdfnlawyers.com

K now your rights in Workers’ Comp No fee charged unless recovery

28 Bowman Street • Laconia • www.wdfnlawyers.com

524-2166


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 15

WINNISWUAM from preceding page But Superintendent Tammy Davis said the new system helps to ensure that the workshops, classes and other efforts teachers undertake to keep their certification works in the best interests of the students in the classroom. “The bottom line is, how are my kids responding?” Davis said. “We could use all the best research strategies in the world, but if students aren’t learning from it, we have to learn . . . what needs to be modified.” The new evaluation plan says that “when appropriate,” the professional area in which a teacher is evaluated “will focus on evidence of student growth.” That evidence can include “district-wide, schoolwide assessments or other assessments,” language that makes some of the teachers uncomfortable, Lawrence said. “This could be a focus on test scores, even though it’s written in a way that doesn’t specify test scores. . . . People were concerned that it would come down

to, ‘Your students aren’t making appropriate growth on tests,’ “ she said. That’s a concern Davis said is specifically addressed by the new evaluation plan, which calls for three different “sources of data to show student growth” and takes into account the learning styles of the district’s roughly 1,500 students. The district has been identified as “in need of improvement” under the federal No Child Left Behind law because math and reading standardized test scores did not improve at a satisfactory rate. Davis said both the goal plans and the No Child Left Behind law are about “increasing student learning achievement.” Despite the ongoing disagreement about the evaluations, both Lawrence and Davis said the relationship between teachers and administrators is a healthy one. “Administrators and teachers are professional and are moving forward in a collaborative way,” Davis said.

PHONES from preceding page we couldn’t solve. My employees wouldn’t be able to reach me and get timely answers,” McGovern said. “Customer issues that only I can resolve would have to be delayed. And in this day and age, customers want instantaneous results for things. They’re not willing to wait three or four hours,” he said. McGovern, who said he uses hands-free technology 90 percent of the time, said he’s been conducting business from his car for more than 20 years, starting with an early “bag phone” that predated today’s much smaller cellphones. “It’s a total overreach of the government. It’ll be enforced erratically. They can’t even enforce the speed limits,” McGovern said. Boston attorney Jeffrey Denner said he racks up at least 25 billable hours each week while driving. “I probably spend three hours a day on the phone in the car — minimum. In an hour, I can talk to 10 people. On my way to court, I call people to make sure witnesses are lined up. It’s become a part of my life.” Besides, he said, there’s plenty of other distractions modern drivers deal with. “If you want to talk about distraction, you should talk about how the whole notion of technology is distracting. Let’s look at the command centers in

cars right now, with the GPS, climate control, satellite radio with 9,000 options, looking down, getting directions. There are 20 different things we’re playing with in our cars all the time.” J.R. Maddox of Minneapolis, another attorney, said it makes no sense to ban hands-free devices. “If they wanted to go that far, they should also ban speaking to anyone in the car,” Maddox said. His hands-free device allows him to keep both hands on the wheel, maintain his field of vision and look over his shoulder. “The fact of the matter is we have to travel to work. It would reduce the amount of time I could actually communicate with clients and, hence, billing time.” The federal government last year banned texting while driving for commercial truck and bus drivers. The ban was extended to all hand-held cellphone use last month, although commercial drivers can still use hands-free devices. The chairman of a South Dakota trucking company said he doesn’t understand why people need to be talking on the phone while driving in the first place. “There’s nothing so important that they need to run somebody over because they couldn’t stop,” said Larry Anderson, of A & A Express Inc., a Brandon, S.D., company that hauls refrigerated products.

HAZING from page 2 said she was repeatedly hit in her legs by members of the “Red Dawg Order,” a band club for Georgia natives. Authorities have said Champion was hazed, but have not described how. Three band members were arrested in Hunter’s case and charged with hazing. Two were also charged with battery. Meanwhile, Florida authorities looking into Champion’s death opened a new investigation after they uncovered possible employee fraud and misconduct at the university, according to documents

released Wednesday. In Georgia, Walter Woods, spokesman for the DeKalb County school district, said they were investigating marching bands at the district’s 21 high schools after two problems over the summer. He declined to say whether the incidences involved hazing and said the students involved were not injured. “Our interest is in protecting students, the safety of the students,” said Woods. “We have notified schools to be vigilant of our existing policy, which is zero tolerance for harassment of any kind.”

NEW YEAR’S EVE

Bash

VFW Post 1670 143 Court St., Laconia

Saturday, December 31st Dinner Dance 6-8pm Duet with Tom & Josh Groleau 8-Midnight Big City Nites Band $10 Bring A Dish RIDES HOME WILL BE AVAILABLE

The perfect Christmas tree is waiting for you!

$3 OFF OF ANY TREE with this ad!

Unique Gift Ideas Fresh and Silk Arrangements NH Grown Trees • Centerpieces Fresh Wreaths • Holiday Decor Hostess Gifts Stop in and visit, you are sure to find something for everyone!!

253-7111• dionsplantplace.com 63 Whittier Hwy Moultonboro

Lose up to 30 pounds in 30 days

CR500 Diet

Weight Loss Consultants Change your eating habits with whole foods. No shakes or boxed food. Visit www.cr500dietconsultants.com to get started

30% Off Gift Certificates

Center For Therapeutic Massage Serving The Lakes Region Since 1992 LeeAnn Fay-Ellis LMT

1/2 Hour $28

1 hour $45

offer expires 12/24/11

order online at www.leeannfayellis.com or call 393-9120

S ANBORN ’ S A UTO R EPAIR “Where the customer is always number one”

“Lucky”

S TATE I NSPECTION $ $ .95 29 .95

316 Court Street Laconia, NH 03246

603-524-9798

W ITH C OUPON Tune-ups, Brakes, Exhaust, Struts, Tires, Road Service, Oil Changes, & Mobile Oil & Gas

offer expires 12/31/11

Happy Holidays “Axis Band” Saturday Night December 17 8:30pm $2 Cover

(No cover if dinner was purchased that evening)

Like Us On

Thursday All You Can Eat Prime Rib Buffet $13.95 Fresh Seafood Char-Grilled Prime Rib

Rt 3/Weirs Blvd • Laconia • 366-4664


Page 16 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

OBITUARY

“Off the Beaten Path, But Worth Finding!”

Barbara M. Bennett, 85

Open: Mon-Thur & Sat, 6am-2pm Fri, 6am-8pm & Sun, 7am-1pm

Specials Vary Daily • Children’s Menu Full Liquor License

All You Can Eat FRESH FRIED HADDOCK or WHOLE BELLY CLAMS or PRIME RIB Every Friday Night!

Taste the Difference

141 Water Street, Downtown Laconia • 603-524-4144

www.water-street-cafe.com www.facebook.com/waterstcafe

Working Class Music & Minerals Holiday Guitar Packages Starting at $99 • Amps • Accessories • Service Custom & Pre-Set Jewelry at Holiday Prices

Gift Certificates In December Available by Phone

HURRY! Book Your Christmas Party! Now Taking Reservations! New Year’s Eve

528-3244 ~ 88 Ladd Hill, Belmont ~ Serving Lunch & Dinner Daily

The Thrifty Yankee New and Used Goods

Do you Need Cash for Christmas? Clean out your jewelry box and bring us your old gold, silver and coins to trade in for CASH. Offering Highest Prices Paid in the Lakes Region. a FREE necklace Across from Interlakes High School, with every on Rte. 25 just 1/2 mile east of the lights purchase in beautiful downtown Meredith over $25 121 Rte. 25 #4, Meredith • 279-0607

C

Barbara was predeceased by her husband of sixty-two years, Robert D. Bennett, who died in September of 2007 and a grandson, Jonathan Bennett, who died in 1974. She is survived by her sons, Steven R. Bennett and David L Bennett, both of Meredith, grandchildren David II and Michele Lee, 3 great grandchildren, 1 great great granddaughter , brother, Richard Landris of Brockton, MA, nieces and nephews. A graveside service will be held in the Meredith Village Cemetery, Meredith, on Friday at 11am. The Rev. Edward J. Charest, pastor of the Plymouth United Methodist Church, will officiate. The Mayhew Funeral Home and Crematorium, in Meredith and Plymouth, is in charge of the arrangements.

Saturday is last day of Christmas Angel program

73 Main St., Meredith, NH (across from P.O.) 677-7082 www.workingclassmusic.com www.customblackopals.com

20% OFF

MEREDITH — Barbara Mildred Bennett, 85, of Daniel Webster Highway, died December 14, 2011, at Lakes Region General Hospital, in Laconia. Born in Meredith on February 1, 1926, she was the daughter of Olin C. and Mildred (Dow) Lund. Barbara grew up in Meredith and was a life-long resident. She graduated Valedictorian of her class at Meredith High School. Barbara worked for many years as a teller in several banks such as; the former Meredith Bank, Laconia People’s Bank and Laconia Savings Bank. She was a member of the Ellacoya Chapter #43 Order of Eastern Star, Meredith and the Lakeside Rebeccas. She was also a past member of the InterLakes Band Boosters.

LACONIA — The last day for the Children’s Foundation Christmas Angel Program will be Saturday, December 17 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Applications will be taken and packages will be handed out at the St. Vincent de Paul’s Thrift Store, located at 1269 Union Avenue in Laconia. This program is available to families with children ages birth to 18 years old. An outfit of clothing, socks, and underwear/diapers will be given for each child. The SVDP Children’s Foundation is a beneficiary of the WLNH Children’s Auction and has provided children in the Lakes Region with necessities - cloth-

ing, socks, underwear, diapers and personal hygiene items, for over 20 years. Working with local school nurses, guidance counselors, and case managers, the Children’s Foundation helps provide needed items on a year round basis, so that a child will have a positive self esteem and achieve a complete educational experience. Anyone wishing to make a donation of cash or clothing, can stop by the St. Vincent de Paul Thrift Store, at 1269 Union Avenue, Laconia (next to McDonald’s) or by mail to SVDP Children’s Foundation, PO Box 6123, Laconia, NH 03247.

GILMANTON — The Gilmanton Year-Round Library has an idea for those looking for that perfect gift for someone who has everything. For a gift of $25 the librarian will select a book to add to the library’s collection. A bookplate will be placed inside the front cover with the name of the donor or the person they designate. The “Buy A Book” program is a great way to support the Library and receive recognition for that support. The program supplements the library’s modest budget for books, DVDs and audio books, allowing the library staff to develop the collection to meet the interests of its patrons.

For information, pick up a brochure at the library, or contact the librarian at 364-2440 or gyrla@metrocast.net.

‘Buy a Book’ program boosts library’s collection

Charged with a crime? Tough case?

hoose your attorney the old fashioned Call Emily McLaughlin, way - by experienced criminal trial attorney. reputation! 501 Union Avenue, Suite 2, Laconia, NH 03246 603.828.7789 ~ www.mclaughlinlawoffice.com

Service of Remembrance Friday at LRGH

LACONA — The LRGH Auxiliary is once again celebrating the holidays with their annual Tree of Love and Remembrance Service. A Service of Remembrance conducted by LRGHealthcare’s Spiritual Care Coordinator Festus Kavale will be held on Friday, December 16, at 1 p.m. in the lobby at LRGH. All community members are welcome to attend. Proceeds from the sale of angels will benefit the LRGH Auxiliary to help fund ongoing projects and programs that enhance patient care at LRGHealthcare.

Meat bingo on Saturday

MEREDITH — American Legion Post 33 is hosting a Meat Bingo event on Saturday December 17 at 3 p.m. at the Post at 6 Plymouth Street in Meredith. All proceeds from this event will directly benefit the Veterans Fund. The public is invited to come and see how Meat Bingo works and have some fun. There is no smoking at this event. Just Good! Food

GEORGE’S DINER Plymouth Street, Meredith • 279-8723

NIGHTLY SPECIALS

MONDAY

All U Can Eat Fried Chicken Chef Special

THURSDAY

Chicken Pot Pie NE Boiled Dinner Chef Special

SUNDAY

Chicken Pot Pie Country Fried Steak & Pork Baked Ham & Beans All U Can Eat Fish Fry

TUESDAY

Roast Turkey Dinner Roast Beef Dinner Meatloaf

FRIDAY

All U Can Eat Fish Fry Fresh Seafood Fried or Broiled

WEDNESDAY

All U Can Eat Spaghetti Roast Pork Dinner Chef Special

SATURDAY

Prime Rib Shrimp Scampi Chef Special

Daily Blackboard Breakfast & Lunch Specials Open Daily 6am- 8pm

*** BREAKFAST ALL DAY ***


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 17

293-0841 www.patrickspub.com Jct. Rts 11 & 11B Gilford

Holiday Gift Card and Merchandise Sale Buy One Item at Full Price Get a 2nd Item at

20% Off

31 Canal St. | Laconia, NH

Call 528-7651

www.fratescreates.com

DeCesare wins Gilford bicentennial T-shirt contest

• For the “Fine Art of Giving” • Art & Dance Classes • Caricatures • Gift Certificates Available

Art Supply Shop Open to Serve You

A Laconia woman who owns a business in Gilford has been named the winner of the Gilford Bicentennial T-Shirt Design Contest. Joanna DeCesare, owner of The Hair Factory Salon & Day Spa submitted art work the Bicentennial Committee found “so wonderful” it used in on the cover of their 2012 Bicentennial Calendar as well. Committee Chair William Bickford says DeCesare put nine months of research, layout, sketching and painting into her winter-theme design. In addition to being an accomplished artist, she has been in the salon business for 40 years, 13 in Gilford. Both of her daughters and a son are also artists. Both the T-shirt design and the calendar are available at The Hair Factory (55 Gilford East Drive), at Kitchen Cravings, the Public Library and the Department of Public Works. Full size prints of her winning design are also available for purchase. (Courtesy photo)

We Now Offer ON LINE BOOKIN G www.lrairportshuttle. com Toll Free

LRCC Student Discount program off to a good start LACONIA — Lakes Region Community College is off to a good start in getting discounts from local businesses to be offered to students using college ID’s according to LRCC President, Dr. Scott Kalicki, “More than a 1,000 students are expected for the spring semester starting January 18 and there is formidable buying power in those numbers. College personnel have always appreciated the support of the central New Hampshire business community; thanks are in order for those responding favorably to the student discount offer,’’ said Kalicki. Businesses now offering discounts to LRCC students with valid ID’s include My Coffee House, Water Street Café, Frates Creative Arts Center, Prescott’s Florist, Lakes Region Party & Gift, Winnisquam Dental, Winnisquam; The Insurance Outlet, NAPA Auto Parts and the Irwin Zone. “All types of discounts are welcome,’ says Kalicki, who is entering his fifth month as LRCC president. “LRCC is proud to be an active member of the Lakes Region and central New Hampshire community.” Businesses interested in offering a discount to LRCC students may fax (524-8084), e-mail (rproven-

“Studio 23” Residential Hair Salon

$10 Haircut 1

st st

time in!*

*(With this coupon, through 12/31/11)

Regular Pricing: Women $20 ~ Men $15 ~ Children $12

CALL 527-8980 NOW

for Appointment & Directions. ~ Close to downtown Laconia ~

Open Tues, Wed, Fri ~ 9am-5pm • Thurs ~ 9am-8pm & Saturday ~ 9am-2pm

cal@ccsnh.edu), or mail the information to Randi Provencalat Lakes Region Community College, 379 Belmont Road, Laconia, NH 03246. A new brochure for the 2012 Spring Semester will be put together and distributed to students including prior and new businesses. Company logos should be included if businesses would like their logos to be used in LRCC’s marketing of the new student discount program.

1-888-386-8181

Help Us Celebrate our 10th Anniversary with a donation to our Food Drive Please call or email and we will pick up now through Jan. 31.

GILFORD GIFT OUTLET

Celebrating Our 25th Anniversary!

25% Off

Any One Item with Coupon

No Restrictions!* *Expires 12/24/11. One coupon per customer, per visit.

Quality Greeting Cards, Gift Wrap & Bags 1/2 Off Everyday! • Yankee Candles (we accept Yankee coupons) • Willow Tree • Scarves • Boxed Christmas Cards - 1/2 Off • 16-Month Calendars - 1/2 Off

Enter drawing for a

FREE Willow Tree “The Christmas Story” nativity figurine set! ($80 value) Drawing to be held 12/19/11. Do not need to be present to win.

Next to Patrick’s & the Liquor Store Open 7 Days • 293-0338


Page 18 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011 Kelsey’s at the Grant presents . . . . . . . . .

15 Kimball Rd. Gilford, NH (Intersection of 11B & 11C)

293-0577 ~ Always Auditioning New Entertainers ~

WE A R E O PEN !! Tuesday & Wednesday, 4pm-1am Thursday-Saturday, Noon-1am

Closed Sundays

18+ NH’s Premier Adult Entertainment Juice & Soda Bar

Check Out Our Upcoming Bourbon Street Non-Alcoholic Lounge!! Events! NH’s Newest 18+ Dance Club Thursday-Saturday 10pm ‘Til the Party Stops!!

T-Bones hosts chamber ambassadors

The Lakes Region Chamber of Commerce Ambassadors and Staff (standing) enjoyed a Holiday luncheon on December 6, hosted by T-Bones Great American Eatery. Management and wait staff (front row) were on hand to join the festivities. (Courtesy photo)

MOULTON FARM Farm Market ~ Garden Center ~ Greenhouse Grower 279-3915 ~ Route 25, Meredith ~ Daily 8am-5pm

UPCOMING EVENTS

Still Picking From Our Field Growing Tunnels Our Own: Lettuce, Beets, Fresh Assorted Greens, Greenhouse Tomatoes ll Specials A hi le and more! A re W Last

December 18th

“Christmas On The Farm” 11am-3pm - Wooden birch reindeer making (table top size) - Ginger bread house decorating - Wooden snowmen ornaments - Chistmas story reading @ 2:30 “Christmas Farm” - Animals From Kindred Spirits Farm - Santa Will Visit From 1:00pm -3:00pm for Kids To Have Pictures Taken! - Free Tractor Rides Around The Farm!

Cider Bellies Doughnuts

Fresh NH Balsam & Fraser Christmas Trees 4’-14’ Fresh Balsam Wreaths 8”- 48” ~ Plain or Decorated Poinsettias - 4” - 8.5” ~ Great Selection of Colors

Supp

lie s

Fri. 8-2 and Sat. & Sun. 8-4 “Watch these tasty warm doughnuts being made right in front of you.” Now Taking Holiday Orders Gift Certificates Available

FARM STAND SPECIAL

20% off All Glass Container Items For The Holiday Season!

Dressings, Pickled Items, Preserves, Jellies, Salsa, Sauces and More! Bring this coupon to the farm and take advantage of our FARM STAND SPECIAL! Also you will be eligable to be entered in our drawing for a chance to win a farm share package of (8) shares for 2012 , a value in excess of $112. To be drawn on December 23rd at noon! Don’t Miss Out On Great Saving and Your Chance To Win!

Sal’s food Sea Saturday & Fresh , Friday ay

Thursd

Taking

s pm 8am-5 r The Holiday

Fo Orders

Visit our website for more information on upcoming events!

www.moultonfarm.com

“ PainCare helped me get my life back. back.”

PainCare means Pain Relief. Our providers have success in treating a number of ailments including:

Arthritis Sciatica RSD Back Pain Herniated Disks Migraines Neuropathies Fibromyalgia Shingles Spinal Stenosis Degenerative Disc Disease

1976 White Mountain Hwy North Conway, NH 03860 603.356.5335

PainCare supports House Bill 332, the prescription monitoring program. It’s time to put an end to prescription drug abuse in NH. Achieve. NAME: Priscilla AGE: 68 HOME: Rye CONDITION: Knee pain DIAGNOSIS: Post-operative pain STATUS: Getting back to cross-country cycling

Learn more at: 800.660.4004 www.PainMD.com facebook.com/PainCare

Free Internet classes at Sanbornton library SANBORNTON — The first series of Computers 101 sessions at the Sanbornton Public Library are complete and “graduates” and new students are encouraged to sign up for the next class in the series. Computers 102 will cover basic internet, internet security, and beginning email. This class is for you if have basic typing and mouse skills and if you’ve ever wondered what this fuss about the online world was all about. Participants will learn how to: get online and visit different websites; understand basic terminology and functions of internet browser software; use search engines to find information; stay safe online, even when making online purchases; and, create and use a free email account. If interested, sign up at the library or contact the library at 286-8288 or SPL@metrocast.net, noting any preference for days and/ or time of day. Once there is a critical mass of participants -- usually capped at 5 or 6 per session -- firm dates and times will be

scheduled for the sessions. All classes are free and last about an hour to an hour and a half. Note also that all classes run concurrently, so contact the library at any time to take Computers 101, which covers computer basics (overview of hardware, using a mouse, copying and pasting text, file management, etc.) The library is also seeking instructors for future classes. A few potential topics which might be offered are: Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, etc. -- beginner & advanced); online job searching; online genealogy research; advanced internet searching; saving money online; social networking (Facebook, etc.); website design; DIY computer building, upgrades, and maintenance; desktop publishing; digital scrapbooking; finding and using free software. These classes would not be possible without the sponsorship of the Risley family of Sanbornton. The Aaron Robert Risley Computer Lab is a mobile classroom comprised of six state-of-the-art large-screen laptop computers.

MEREDITH — ‘’The Homecoming: A Smoky Mountain Christmas’’, opens tonight at the Inter-Lakes Community Auditorium and runs through Sunday. It is the 12th annual One Voice Christmas celebration in music, dance

and drama in the Lakes Region. Admission is free. Dates are Thursday and Friday at 7 p.m., Saturday at 2 p.m. and 7 p.m. and Sunday at 4 p.m.

LACONIA — The Faith, Hope and Love Foundation will be awarding is 5th Annual $1,000 College Scholarship to a deserving high school senior. Applications should be received by February 14, 2012 and will be reviewed by the Scholarship Committee. Completed application and requested documentation should be sent to: The Faith Hope and Love Foundation Attn: 2012 Scholarship Committee PO BOX 64

Laconia, NH 03247. After reviewing all applications, the top five will be chosen by February 15, 2012 and then be notified via email and phone to be interviewed by the scholarship committee on March 21, 2012 at 7 p.m. The award recipient will be honored at the annual Benefit Dinner on Saturday, April 28, 2012. Applications can be found at www. faithhopeandlovefoundation.org.

Smoky Mountain Christmas opens at Inter-Lakes Auditorium tonight

Faith, Hope and Love offers scholarship


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 19

Attention Business Owners & Contractors.... Hard to Find Money Makers!! ‘07 GMC 1 Ton 4x4 Dump with Plow

‘09 GMC 3/4 Ton 4x4 Utility Body

INCREDIBLE! Only 12k miles

$28,881

$21,991

OR ON LY

$445/mo

. @ 6.99% (72 mos

down) w/2999

OR ON LY

V8, Auto, Air, Detana Utility Box, AM/FM Stereo with CD, Trailer Tow, 55k miles, Red, Stock #7973

V8, Auto, Air, AM/FM Stereo, 9’ Western Plow, 2-3 Yard Dump, 12k miles, Red, Stock #7946

$349/mo

. @ 6.99% (72 mos

‘08 Ford F350 Diesel Crew Cab w/Dump

‘08 Ford F350 XC Diesel Dump w/Plow

$34,990

$24,900

OR ON LY

$545/mo

. @ 6.99% (72 mos

down) w/2999

down) w/2999

6.4L V8 Turbo Diesel, Auto, Air, Running Boards, Power Windows, Power Locks, 39k miles, Red, Stock #7930

OR ON LY

6.4L V8 Turbo Diesel, Auto, Air, Power Windows, Power Locks, Running Boards, Dump, 9’ Fisher Stainless Steel V Plow, Blue, 102k miles, Stock #7972

$379/mo

. @ 6.99% (72 mos

down) w/2999

4-Wheel Drive!

Fat Ride!

Fresh Trade In!

New Arrival!

‘02 Isuzu AXIOM 4x4

‘04 Chrysler 300M Sedan

‘05 Chevy Silverado 1500 2WD

‘05 Chevy Colorado LS 4x4

$5,995 OR ON LY

$129/mo

wn) w/999 do @ 7.99% (48 mos.

6 Cyl., Auto, Air, Power Windows, Power Locks, Cruise, Tilt, Alloys, Trailer Tow, Blue, 106k, Stock #7916

$5,990 OR ON LY

$128/mo

@ 7.99% (48 mos.

wn) w/999 do

V6, Auto, Air, Power Sunroof, Leather Chrome Wheels, Loaded, 89k miles, Blue, Stock #7950

$6,880 OR ON LY

$125/mo

wn) w/999 do @ 7.99% (60 mos.

PROFILE MOTORS w w w. p r o f i l e m o t o r s . c o m We Service All Makes And Models

V6, 5-Speed, Air, AM/FM/CD, Bedliner, 68k miles, Red, Stock #7971

Rte 16 & 112 (Kancamagus Hwy)

OR ON LY

$189/mo (60 mos.

@ 7.99%

wn) w/999 do

• Factory Trained Technicians • Free Shuttle Service • Early Morning/Late Night Drop Off • We use genuine factory parts

603-447-3361• Conway, NH Sales Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-7pm, Sat 8am-4pm; Sun. 11am-3pm

$9,990

4 Cyl., Auto, Air, Z71 Off Road, Alloy Wheels, AM/FM/CD, Soft Tonneau Cover, Tube Steps, Black, 84k miles, Stock #7975

BUICK Beyond Precision

Service & Parts Hours

Mon-Fri 7:30 am-5pm; Sat 8am-4pm

S ANou R E ky r

T n ou e! VE Thafor yervic


Page 20 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

Win an Airplane in WinnAero Raffle GILFORD — Santa Claus made a surprise stop at the Laconia Airport recently to pick up the ultimate stocking stuffer for Christmas Eve, a raffle ticket which will enter him in the WinnAero Cessna “Win-APlane Raffle”. The raffle winner will receive a 1966 Cessna 172G airplane plus $1,200 for flight instruction, aviation fuel, a celebration party or whatever the winner wants. Airport Manager Diane Cooper Cooper says that raffle tickets are only $50 each with a maximum of 2,500 tickets to be sold. The drawing will be held at the Laconia Airport, Gilford, on September 29, 2012, or sooner if all tickets are sold.

“These tickets really are the ultimate stocking stuffer for any pilot or would-be pilot in your life” said Cooper. She also pointed out that 100% of ticket sales, after expenses, will go to fund WinnAero’s youthbased educational mission and promote events like last summer’s high altitude weather balloon launch with area high school students and the highly successful ACE Academy, a week-long aviation and aerospace day camp for 12-18 year olds. Anyone interested in this unique stocking stuffer should follow Santa’s lead and contact WinnAero at www.winnaero.org or e-mail billseed@ Winnaero.org and request a ticket order form.

At left: Santa Claus is shown receiving some tickets from Laconia Airport Manager Diane Cooper for the WinnAero Cessna “Win-A-Plane Raffle.” (Courtesy photo)

Time running out to reserve a seat at free Christmas Day dinner in Gilford GILFORD — The First United Methodist Church on Rt. 11A in Gilford will be hosting a Free Christmas Dinner again this year on Christmas Day at 1 p.m. but time is running out to make reservations. A traditional meal of ham, potatoes, carrots, rolls, and homemade pies with all the trimmings will be served to anyone wishing to attend. The church has been putting on this meal for 15 years and it has become a favorite holiday event of many people in the Lakes Region. The fellowship hall of the church is decorated with festive ornaments, carols play and laughter fills the air as people from all over spend the afternoon eating with

one another and sharing tales of holidays past and making new friendships for years to come. There is no charge to attend the meal, but those who would like to join in must call dinner coordinator Jessica Alward at 527-0152 to have a seat reserved. “We have such a great time at this meal,” Alward says, “For us it just wouldn’t be Christmas without it. It truly brings back the meaning of the holiday to see so many people happy and not alone for the day.” The meal is funded by generous donations from individuals in the community, the church and area businesses.

“Without their support year after year,” Alward continued, “I don’t know how I would make this happen. And the folks who come out every year to volunteer are truly wonderful. I call them my Christmas Angels. They show up here on Christmas Eve and Christmas day, giving up a chunk of their holiday to make other people’s just a little brighter. They work so hard cooking, setting tables, doing dishes and spending time with people who are lonely and every one of them will tell you that they got just as much out of the experience as those who came to eat.”

Experience the Magic... Bundle Up and Save!

The MetroCast VIP Bundle! Video • Internet • Phone – One easy bill. One low price. Make movie night amazing with Digital TV featuring MetroCast On Demand and FREE HD**. Be the fastest family on the block with High Speed Internet. And keep in touch with loved ones near and far – for less – with Digital Phone.

Save over

300*

$

off a la carte rates

Get Video, Internet and Phone for only $134.95 per month. Price guaranteed until 2013!* 30-Day Money-Back Guarantee! Get FREE^ installation on a VIP or video package when you bring in a new, unwrapped toy to be donated to a local charity.§ (Toys must be valued at $15)

Call today. 1.888.395.5203

Everything. And then some.

SM

§Promotional window from 11/15/11 – 12/20/11. Customers may bring in a new, unwrapped toy valued at $15.00 to the MetroCast office or give it to the technician at time of installation. *Savings calculation equal to difference between monthly VIP rate as compared to annual combined standard a la carte rates for the three services. Installation, taxes and franchise fees are extra. ^Free installation available to new VIP or new video customers upon donation of a $15 new, unwrapped toy to a MetroCast designated charity; valid with a standard installation in MetroCast wired and serviceable areas only. Equipment charges not included. $134.95 price includes Digital Basic Cable, 10.0 Mbps Internet, and Digital Phone and is guaranteed through 12/31/12. All new phone subscriptions are subject to a one-time $20 per line phone activation charge. High Speed Internet speeds may vary and are not guaranteed. Digital Phone available in all MetroCast serviceable areas, excluding those where 9-1-1 certification is not available. Offer available to residential customers in MetroCast wired and serviceable areas only. If you are not completely satisfied with any MetroCast service, you can cancel within 30 days and receive our full money-back guarantee. Federal law requires subscription to Basic Service to receive any other level of service. **HDTV Broadcast signals are included with subscription to Basic Service. To receive HDTV signals provided by MetroCast either an HDTV capable television set (not provided by MetroCast) and an HDTV capable digital converter, or an HDTV capable television set with an integrated HD QAM tuner (not provided by MetroCast) is required. In addition, to receive Expanded Basic HD, Digital Basic HD, Digital Plus HD or Premium HD signals, a subscription to that service and an HDTV capable digital converter is required. Access to On Demand may not be available in all areas. Credit check may be required. Other restrictions may apply. 2578NH111-2


B.C.

by Dickenson & Clark

Fill in the grid so that every row, every column, and every 3x3 box contains the digits 1 thru 9.

by Mastroianni & Hart

THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 21

DAILY CROSSWORD TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

by Paul Gilligan

by Darby Conley

Get Fuzzy

By Holiday Mathis issues over the next few days. SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). You aren’t born optimistic. You have to grow into the label by repeating the tendency to look on the bright side until it’s a habit. You’ll take hold of your thoughts and cultivate good will. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). When you hear good news, take it as a sign. This is just the tip of the iceberg. From here on out, things get better and better. Believe and act in accordance, and it becomes true. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Recruiting is an art. Instead of merely asking people to join forces with you, turn it into an event. People are more seduced by celebration and ritual. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’ll see the charm in things that others don’t want to think about. This is what sets you apart as a friendly force and an artistic influence on the otherwise ordinary. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). When someone says “no” to you, you’ll be wise to take this as a good sign. A fast “no” is, after all, so much better than a “maybe” that drags on indefinitely. TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Dec. 15). Entertaining and engaging social happenings will bring several opportunities to make useful connections and enjoy different scenery. You’ll dump old baggage in February. In April, you’ll be a part of a new team. June and July feature professional growth and a greater sense of community and contribution. Gemini and Libra people adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 30, 1, 24, 39 and 41.

TUNDRA

ARIES (March 21-April 19). Life isn’t a popularity contest, but if it were, you would win it today. You seem to have what people are looking for, and you’re willing to share it in just the right amount. TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Avoid experiencing life in hyperbole. Discount exaggerations of the mind and word. When nothing is the best, worst, nicest or meanest, you can see it for what it really is. GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You are constantly issuing statements to the world, even when you don’t realize it. Your attitude and appearance speak for you. You’ll find the response you get in return a little surprising now. CANCER (June 22-July 22). A burden is eased, and the relief you feel about this will bring about a surge of self-control. You’ll work for healthy payoffs instead of settling for unhealthy, temporary benefits. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). You are highly involved in life, and the level of attention you give your interests can be personally demanding and sometimes downright inconvenient. But the joy you feel being in the mix of things makes it all worthwhile. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Everyone shows off when they want attention. You’ll be artful in your attempts to capture interest, and that will make all the difference in the quality of attention you receive. LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). People want to be associated with winners, and yet close contact with big personalities often breeds jealousy and discontent. You’ll be sorting through such

by Chad Carpenter

HOROSCOPE

Pooch Café LOLA

Solution and tips at www.sudoku.com

ACROSS Sheep’s coat Meg and Nolan Ticket’s end Actress Paquin Artist’s stand Easy gait Astonish Plenty Commotions Inns Priests’ talks Shade tree Nonsense Sneezy or Doc Prohibit Goes first Make a salary Actor Cruise Soap opera Grow gray Gang member Wipe dishes Buckingham Palace’s city 43 Afternoon social event 44 Orange rind 1 5 10 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 26 29 30 34 35 36 37 38 40 41

45 Epitome of slowness 46 Upper house member: abbr. 47 Hot __; nightcap 48 __ Day; holiday in September 50 Actor’s signal 51 __ cavity; lung encasement 54 “...bells on __ ring, making spirits bright...” 58 Huge defeat 59 Large pig-shaped animal 61 Red Muppet 62 Villain 63 Arctic or Pacific 64 Baseball’s __ Musial 65 Actor James __ 66 Like a letter full of juicy info 67 Melody 1

DOWN Launder

2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 21 23 25 26 27 28 29 31 32 33 35 36

Not fooled by Burden Portable light Empire Sweet potatoes Deadly snake Ozzie, Harriet, David or Ricky Smooth and glossy Jail __ list; paper full of chores “Once __ a time...” Mrs. Truman Leprechaun Measuring stick Small pet Good buys Covered __; pioneer vehicle Sports building Go up & down Lent a hand Was bold In a crafty way 2000 pounds Body of water

38 39 42 44 46 47 49 50

Back tooth Caesar’s X Watered down Dickinson or Angelou Comfort in grief Bather’s spot __ Rouge, LA Like jokes that elicit groans

51 52 53 54 55 56

Bow of a ship Trademark Dollar abroad Slant; prejudice Singing voice “__ old cowhand...” 57 Lengthy 60 Church seat

Yesterday’s Answer


Page 22 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

––––––– ALMANAC ––––––– Today is Thursday, Dec. 15, the 349th day of 2011. There are 16 days left in the year. Today’s Highlight in History: On Dec. 15, 1961, former Nazi official Adolf Eichmann was sentenced to death by an Israeli court for crimes against humanity. (Eichmann was hanged 5½ months later.) On this date: In 1791, the Bill of Rights went into effect following ratification by Virginia. In 1890, Sioux Indian Chief Sitting Bull and 11 other tribe members were killed in Grand River, S.D., during a confrontation with Indian police. In 1911, jazz musician, composer and bandleader Stan Kenton was born in Wichita, Kan. In 1938, groundbreaking for the Jefferson Memorial took place in Washington with President Franklin D. Roosevelt taking part in the ceremony. In 1939, the motion picture “Gone With the Wind” had its world premiere in Atlanta. In 1944, a single-engine plane carrying bandleader Glenn Miller, a major in the U.S. Army Air Forces, disappeared over the English Channel while en route to Paris. In 1965, two U.S. manned spacecraft, Gemini 6A and Gemini 7, maneuvered to within 10 feet of each other while in orbit. In 1971, the Secret Service appointed its first five female special agents. In 1989, a popular uprising began in Romania that resulted in the downfall of dictator Nicolae Ceausescu (chow-SHES’koo). In 1991, an Egyptian-registered ferry, the Salem Express, hit a reef and sank in the Red Sea; at least 470 people died, although some estimates are much higher. One year ago: The U.N. Security Council gave a unanimous vote of confidence to the government of Iraq by lifting 19-year-old sanctions on weapons and civilian nuclear power. Time magazine named Mark Zuckerberg, the 26-year-old co-founder and CEO of Facebook, its Person of the Year. Today’s Birthdays: Actor-comedian Tim Conway is 78. Singer Cindy Birdsong (The Supremes) is 72. Rock musician Dave Clark (The Dave Clark Five) is 69. Rock musician Carmine Appice (Vanilla Fudge) is 65. Actor Don Johnson is 62. Actress Melanie Chartoff is 61. Movie director Alex Cox is 57. Actor Justin Ross is 57. Rock musician Paul Simonon (The Clash) is 56. Political strategist Donna Brazile is 52. Country singer Doug Phelps (Brother Phelps; Kentucky Headhunters) is 51. Movie producer-director Reginald Hudlin is 50. Actress Helen Slater is 48. Actress Molly Price is 46. Actor Michael Shanks is 41. Actor Stuart Townsend is 39. Figure skater Surya Bonaly is 38. “Crowdhyper” Kito Trawick (Ghostown DJs) is 34. Actor Adam Brody is 32. Actor George O. Gore II is 29. Actress Stefania Owen is 14.

THURSDAY PRIME TIME 8:00

Dial 2 4

5

The Big

Rules of EngageTheory ment (N) A Charlie Brown ChristWCVB mas (In Stereo) Å WBZ Bang

DREENG A: A

Yesterday’s

Charlie Rose (N) Å

Person of Interest The Mentalist “Fugue Detective Carter faces in Red” Jane loses his fallout. (N) Å memory after an attack. The Year With Katie Couric Newsworthy events of 2011. (N) (In Stereo) Å

Community Parks and The Office Whitney

WBZ News Late Show (N) Å With David Letterman NewsCen- Nightline ter 5 Late (N) Å (N) Å Prime Suspect Investi- News Tonight gating a diamond dealer’s Show With death. (N) Å Jay Leno Prime Suspect (N) News Jay Leno

WCSH (In Stereo) Recreation (In Stereo) “A Decent

Proposal” Å The Office Whitney

8

WMTW Charlie Brown

The Year With Katie Couric (N) (In Stereo) Å

News

Nightline

9

WMUR Charlie Brown

The Year With Katie Couric (N) (In Stereo) Å

News

Nightline

Å

10

WLVI

11

WENH

Å

The Vampire Diaries The Secret Circle Spirits of the dead invade “Slither” Cassie wrestles Mystic Falls. Å with secrets. Å Roadside Windows to Nature The elephant maStories Å the Wild Å triarch Echo. (In Stereo) Å (DVS) Without a Trace Without a Trace “Once “Wanted” Searching for a Lost” Undercover cop 13-year-old girl. goes missing. Å Big Bang Rules Person of Interest (N)

12

WSBK

13

WGME

14

WTBS Fam. Guy

15

WFXT Results” The contestants rity guard’s remains are

16 17

Fam. Guy

The X Factor “Live

face elimination. (N) CSPAN Capitol Hill Hearings WBIN The Office 30 Rock

Big Bang

Big Bang

7 News at 10PM on Friends (In Everybody CW56 (N) (In Stereo) Å Stereo) Å Loves Raymond Frontline (In Stereo) Å Jerusalem: Center of the World History of Jerusalem. Å WBZ News The Office Seinfeld The Office “Happy “The Fi“Customer Hour” nale” Å Survey” The Mentalist (N) Å News Letterman Big Bang

Big Bang

Law Order: CI

News 10

Cash Cab Excused

ESPN High School Basketball

29

ESPN2 Wm. Volleyball

Women’s College Volleyball

30

CSNE Tailgate

World Poker Tour: Sea Sports

32

NESN English Premier League Soccer

Daily

33

LIFE Project Accessory

Project Accessory (N)

35 38 42 43

E!

Sex-City

Quick

Sex-City

High School Basketball

Project Accessory

FNC

Beavis

The O’Reilly Factor (N) Hannity (N)

45

CNN Anderson Cooper 360

50

TNT

CSI: NY “Holding Cell”

Beavis

TMZ (N) (In Stereo) Å

’70s Show

SportsCenter (N) Å Football SportsNet Sports Inside N.D. Daily

E!: Fatal Teen Triangle E! Investigates

MTV Ridiculous. Ridiculous. Beavis MSNBC The Ed Show (N)

Conan (N) Å

Bones “Finder” A secu- Fox 25 News at 10 (N) Å Fox 25 News at found. Å 11 (N)

28

Beavis

Greta Van Susteren

SportsNet Dennis

Project Accessory Chelsea

E! News

Good Vibe Good Vibe The O’Reilly Factor

Rachel Maddow Show The Last Word

The Ed Show

Piers Morgan Tonight

Anderson Cooper 360

Erin Burnett OutFront

CSI: NY “The Closer”

CSI: NY Å

CSI: NY Å

USA Law & Order: SVU

Law & Order: SVU

Burn Notice “Fail Safe” Covert Affairs Å

52

COM Futurama

Futurama

Futurama

Ron White: Fix Stupid

53

SPIKE Jail Å

Jail Å

iMPACT Wrestling (N) (In Stereo) Å

Movie: “Damage”

54

BRAVO Housewives/Atl.

Real Housewives

Housewives/Atl.

51

55

Futurama

AMC Movie: ›››› “Miracle on 34th Street” (1947) SYFY Movie: “Resident Evil”

Housewives/Atl.

Daily Show Colbert

Movie: ›››› “Miracle on 34th Street” (1947)

Movie: ›› “Jeepers Creepers 2” (2003) Å

“Wrong Turn 3”

57

A&E The First 48 Å

The First 48 (N) Å

Beyond Scared

59

HGTV House

Selling Spelling Manor Selling LA Selling NY House

60

DISC Storm Chasers (N)

61

TLC

56

D.U.I. Å

Hunters D.U.I. Å

Beyond Scared Weed Wars (N) Å

The Earth Wild

D.U.I. (N)

Cellblock 6

D.U.I. Å

D.U.I. Å

Friends

Friends

D.U.I. (N)

NICK My Wife

My Wife

’70s Show ’70s Show George

65

TOON Regular

MAD

King of Hill King of Hill Amer. Dad Amer. Dad Fam. Guy

66

FAM ››› “Finding Nemo”

67

DSN Random

75

Hunters

The Earth Wild

64

George

Movie: ›››› “Beauty and the Beast” (1991)

Movie: ›› “Santa Buddies” (2009)

SHOW Movie: ››› “The Italian Job” iTV.

Wizards

Shake It

Movie: ›› “The Mechanic” (2011)

Movie: ››› “The Blind Side” (2009) Å

76

HBO Charlie

77

MAX Movie: “Big Mommas: Like Father, Like Son”

Find us on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/jumble

PALWOL

10:00 10:30 11:00 11:30

WHDH Community Parks

by David L. Hoyt and Jeff Knurek

©2011 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved.

9:30

7

THAT SCRAMBLED WORD GAME

CTOIN

DECEMBER 15, 2011

9:00

Live From Lincoln Center (Taped) Å

6

Unscramble these four Jumbles, one letter to each square, to form four ordinary words.

RGMEE

8:30

WGBH Easy Yoga Pain

Zoo

Fam. Guy

The 700 Club (N) Å Random

Good Luck

Teller

Beach

Taxicab Confessions

Movie: ››› “Cedar Rapids” (2011)

Right

CALENDAR TODAY’S EVENTS Sant Bani School in Sanbornton presents “Dark of the Moon” at the Studio Theater. 7 p.m. Play not recommended for younger children. For reservations call the school at 934-4240. Lakes Region Comprehensive Economic Development Strategy Committee meeting. 4 p.m. in the downstairs conference room at One Mill Plaza (Busiel Mill) in downtown Laconia. Open to the public. Pianist Johannes Wallmann at the N.H. Jazz Center at Pitman’s Freight Room in Laconia. 8 p.m. $10. BYOB. Mother/Child Cookie Decorating at the Laconia Community Center. 6 to 8 p.m. all materials supplied and you may take your cookies home with you. $10 per family of 4 ($2 for each additional). To register call 524-5046. Winter Farmer’s Market in at the Skate Escape on Court Street in Laconia. 3 to 6 p.m. Vendors offering local farmraised meats, fresh-baked breads, organic tea, cofree, fudge, pastries, pies, cakes, fresh produce, jellies & jams, local wines, herbs, oils, plants, jewelry, wood workers, and fine art. Al-Anon Meeting at the Congregational Church Parish House (18 Veterans Square) in Laconia. 8 to 9:15 p.m. each Thursday. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518. Chess Club at the Goss Reading Room (188 Elm Street) in Laconia. 2:30 to 4:30 p.m. each Thursday. All ages and skill levels welcome. We will teach. Giggles & Grins playgroup at Family Resource Center in downtown Laconia (635 Main Street). Free group for parents children from birth through age 5. For more information call 524-1741. Preschool Story Time at the Meredith Public Library. 1 to 2 p.m. Downstairs in the function room. Crafter’s Corner at the Gilford Public Library. 6 to 7:30 p.m. Bring your needlework project.

FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16 20th Annual Christmas Concert presented by the Lakes Region Singers. Free. 7:30 p.m. at the First United Methodist Church in Gilford. New Youth Chorus will be performing for the first time. Free will offering will be taken to help cover expenses. Sant Bani School in Sanbornton presents “Dark of the Moon” at the Studio Theater. 7 p.m. Play not recommended for younger children. For reservations call the school at 934-4240. Vegan healthy holiday cooking class and dinner at the Pines Community Center in Northfield. 5:30 p.m. $15. RSVP to louisa@metrocast.net or call 729-0248. Gingerbread House Decorating Party at the Gilford Public Library. 1 to 2 p.m. for preschoolers, 3 to 4 p.n. for K through 4th graders and 5 to 6 for 5th through 8th graders. Space limited. Sign-up please. Native American Dinner hosted by the N.H. Intertribal Native American Council. 5 to 8 p.m. at the Laconia VFW Hall at 143 Court Street. $10. Al-Anon Meeting at the Congregational Church Parish House (18 Veterans Square) in Laconia. 9:30 to 11 a.m. each Friday. Al-Anon offers hope and help to families of alcoholics. No dues or fees. All are welcome. Call 645-9518. Giggles & Grins playgroup at Family Resource Center in downtown Laconia (635 Main Street). Free group for parents children from birth through age 5. For more information call 524-1741. Tot Time at the Meredith Public Library. 9:30 to 10:20 a.m. Ages 1 to 3. Knit Wits gathering at the Gilford Public Library. 1:30 to 2:30 p.m. Open knitting for all. Adult (18+) dodgeball at the Meredith Community Center. 7 to 9 p.m. $1 per session.

Edward J. Engler, Editor & Publisher Adam Hirshan, Advertising Sales Manager Michael Kitch, Adam Drapcho, Gail Ober Reporters Elaine Hirshan, Office Manager Crystal Furnee, Jeanette Stewart Ad Sales Patty Johnson, Production Manager & Graphics Karin Nelson, Classifieds Now arrange the circled letters to form the surprise answer, as suggested by the above cartoon.

” (Answers tomorrow) Jumbles: ROBOT CHUNK LOCKED ROTATE Answer: When Amundsen finally reached the South Pole, all he could do was — LOOK NORTH

“Seeking the truth and printing it” THE LACONIA DAILY SUN is published Tuesday through Saturday by Lakes Region News Club, Inc. Edward Engler, Mark Guerringue, Adam Hirshan, Founders Offices: 1127 Union Ave. #1, Laconia, NH 03246 Business Office 737-2020, Newsroom 737-2026, Fax: 527-0056 News E-mail: news@laconiadailysun.com CIRCULATION: 18,000 distributed FREE Tues. through Sat. in Laconia, Weirs Beach, Gilford, Meredith, Center Harbor, Belmont, Moultonborough, Winnisquam, Sanbornton, Tilton, Gilmanton, Alton, New Hampton, Plymouth, Bristol, Ashland, Holderness.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 23

Laconia Savings Bank awards $116,000 to local United Way organizations LACONIA — Mark Primeau, president and CEO of Laconia Savings Bank, has announced that the bank has donated $116,000 to local United Ways and praised the efforts of the bank’s employees, who raised $55,927, increasing their contribution by 14% compared to last year. “Year after year, the employees of Laconia Savings Bank remain dedicated to the bank’s mission of supporting New Hampshire communities. Our annual United Way contribution is an outstanding example of that dedication. They have demonstrated an unmatched commitment, focus and enthusiasm,,” said Primeau. The $116,000 campaign sets a new high for Laconia Savings Bank. Jack Terrill, president of the Lakes Region United Way, said “I would like to congratulate the United Way committee and employees at Laconia Savings Bank. We sincerely appreciate their support. Laconia Savings Bank is a staple in our community and one of the reasons we have had so much success at United Way.” In addition to employee contributions, the Laconia Savings Bank United Way Committee, consisting of Cindy Bodah, Donna Harris, Candice Carrier, Lindsey Ball, Karen Seymour, Tiffany Benton, Michele Thomas, Maddie Barnaby and Karon Thibault, coordinated fundraisers such as an intranet auction, bake sales and a cutest pet photo contest to raise an additional $3,820. Cindy Bodah, VP - Quality Service and Training and Donna Harris, AVP - Customer Service Center Manager, volunteered to be the campaign co-chairs for the bank. Through creativity and hard work, the employees delivered a record level of funding and employee participation. The United Way mobilizes and invests resources back into the communities with an emphasis on successful children, family stabilization and community engagement.

Laconia Savings Bank has made a $116,000 contribution to local United Ways. Shown, left to right, are aren Seymour, Human Resources Representative for Laconia Savings Bank and United Way Committee Member; Tiffany Benton, Marketing Administrator for Laconia Savings Bank and United Way Committee member; Candice Carrier, Systems Support and Operational Analyst for Laconia Savings Bank and United Way Committee member; Michele Thomas, Bank Services Representative for Laconia Savings Bank and United Way Committee member; Jack Terrill, President of Lakes Region United Way; Karon Thibault, Bank Office Support Manager for Laconia Savings Bank and United Way Committee member; Donna Harris, Assistant Vice President – Customer Service Center for Laconia Savings Bank and United Way Committee Co-Chair; Cindy Bodah, Vice President – Quality Service Manager for Laconia Savings Bank and United Way Committee Co-Chair; Lindsey Ball, Executive Administrative Assistant for Laconia Savings Bank and United Way Committee member. (Courtesy photo)

You Can Get Wireless Internet! Come to Wireless Zone®...

your local Verizon Premium Wireless Retailer to see how easy & inexpensive it is. Get a Mobile Broadband Plan for just

FREE

$

USB Modem

with new 2-yr. activation on qualifying Mobile Broadband plan. ($50 2-yr. price less $50 mail-in rebate debit card). Product shown representative of styles. Models may vary. See store for details.

50

monthly access for 2GB. (Activation fees, taxes & other charges apply.)

Browse the web anywhere you phone has service Check email & download files at Broadband Speeds

YOUR LOCAL WIRELESS PROFESSIONALS

LACONIA • 603-524-1900 • 1010 Union Ave. PLYMOUTH • 603-536-6090 • 594 Tenney Mountain Hwy. Rte 25 www.WirelessZone.com *Our Surcharges (incl. Fed. Univ. Svc. of 15.3% of interstate & int’l telecom charges (varies quarterly), 16¢ Regulatory & 83¢ Administrative/line/mo., & others by area) are not taxes (details: 1-888-684-1888); gov’t taxes & our surcharges could add 6% - 40%[or insert % range for Area] to your bill. Activation fee/line: $35 . IMPORTANT CONSUMER INFORMATION: Subject to Customer Agmt, Data Plan & credit approval. Up to $175 early termination fee ($350 for advanced devices), up to [xx]/MB after allowance. Requires compatible EV-DO Rev. A device (sold separately). [Speeds require an EV-DO Rev. A- capable device. When using an EV-DO device that is not Rev. A- capable or traveling in the Extended Mobile Broadband Rate and Services area, you can expect download speeds of 400-700 Kbps & upload speeds of 60-80 Kbps. Mobile Broadband speed claim based on stationary tests with 5 MB FTP data files w/o compression. Actual throughput speed varies.] Mobile Broadband is available [to more than 285 million people][in 264 major metros] [269 airports] in the U.S. Offers & coverage not available everywhere. Network details & coverage maps at verizonwireless.com. © 2010 Verizon Wireless


Page 24 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

Irwin Group awarded bid for state’s 2012 Ford Fleet

Adam Cote named New England parts specialist of the year

RJL Auto Parts, the NAPA store on Union Avenue in Laconia, announced that store manager Adam Cote has been named the 2012 NAPA Boston/ ASE Parts Specialist of the year, besting competitors from throughout New England. The award recognizes the combination of expertise and customer service. Cote has worked at the NAPA store for eight years. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Adam Drapcho)

LACONIA — Irwin Ford has been awarded the New Hampshire State Bid for the Ford Fleet, including the 2013 Ford Police Interceptor Sedan, as well as the AWD Interceptor and the 2012 Ford Expedition 4 X 4 and 4 X 2. Steve Pouliot, Irwin Fleet sales manager said “Irwin Ford is excited to represent Ford in the state of New Hampshire and have the opportunity to provide Irwin’s exceptional service to New Hampshire municipalities.” Any inquiries or questions can be directed to Steve Pouliot at Irwin Ford via email at steve.pouliot@ irwinzone.com or by calling 581-2945. The Irwin Automotive Group is the largest car dealer in central New Hampshire and has been operating out of its 59 Bisson Avenue location for 60 years. Founded by Robert Irwin as a Lincoln Mercury dealership, the Irwin Automotive Group expanded to include Ford in 1955, followed by Toyota, Scion, Hyundai and Laconia Quicklane Tire and Auto Center.

Franklin Savings Bank announces availability of grants Hand-pressed glass FRANKLIN — Franklin Savings Bank announces For application purposes, the primary market areas grant money available through the Franklin Savings of Franklin Savings Bank include: Franklin, Tilton, ornaments available at Bank Fund for Community Advancement Grant. Northfield, Hill, Bristol, Sanbornton, Belmont, Laconia, Gilford, New Hampton, Andover, Alexandria, Organizations conducting projects that enhance Boscawen, Gilmanton and some other areas surroundthe lives of people in central New Hampshire are the Gilmanton Corner encouraged to apply by January 3, 2012. ing these towns. Information and application packages Categories of support include, but are not limited for the Franklin Savings Bank Fund for Community Public Library to: economic development, affordable housing, educaAdvancement Grant are available by visiting “What’s tion, health care, social services, environment, arts and humanities, human services and programs addressing the needs of children, adolescents, and single parent families. Also of importance are programs and services that address the needs of low to moderate income families and individuals. Eligible organizations are those recognized as tax exempt under section 501(c)3 of the Internal Revenue Code. Public agencies are also eligible to apply for support from the FSB fund.

New” at fsbhnh.com or by calling Dorothy Savery at 934-8316, toll-free at (800) FSB-4445. Connect with them at facebook.com/franklinsavingsbank for their latest news and community updates. The one-million dollar fund, established by the bank in September 1997, was created to provide support to varying community organizations through grants. Since its inception, 121 grants totaling over $673,400 have been awarded.

GILMANTON — To celebrate the Gilmanton Corner Library’s 100th anniversary, New Hampshire hand-pressed glass ornaments in shades of blue, green and amber, each with the design of the historic library building and the date of 1912, are available for sale. Also included with the ornaments will be a history of the library, which will be 100 years old in January, 2012. Chris Salmon, the craftsman, hand presses the ornaments using recycled glass with centuries old techniques that give each piece an odd character not found in machine work. These ornaments enhance the windows of a home as the sun shines upon them casting a sparkle in the room. Stop by the library to purchase ornaments for Christmas or birthday giving. The ornaments are especially thoughtful for those who brought their children or grandchildren to the library as youngsters. The library is open Monday and Wednesday from 3-5 p.m. and Saturday from 10 a.m. to noon.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011— Page 25

ANNIE’S MAILBOX

Dear Annie: My husband and I separated 10 years ago when our children were preteens. He has shown little interest in them and maintains contact only due to my encouragement. My family always includes him when we have family get-togethers. His family, however, decided that being nice to us would be taking sides, so they ignore our existence. Recently, my husband and his family had a big reunion less than a block from us. We have not seen some of these relatives since the separation. They did not let us know they were coming and made no contact, even though my mother-in-law was here for more than a week. Although my children claim they do not care, I can see how painful it is that their grandparents, aunts and uncles have abandoned them. Every time I try to communicate with my in-laws, they subject me to horrible accusations. My kids say I can’t fix everything, but giving up doesn’t seem like the answer. What is? -- Feeling Hurt and Helpless Dear Hurt: Your children sound wise beyond their years, and they are old enough now to handle this as they see fit. Ask if they would like to contact their grandparents and other paternal relatives. Offer phone numbers, email addresses, Facebook pages, whatever you have. In all likelihood, these relatives will treat the children better than they would you, the ex-wife, and they may actually reconsider a relationship. Still, prepare your children for the possibility of rejection. Then allow them to decide whether they wish to initiate any communication. Dear Annie: My father is a very sweet, elderly man, but he has an embarrassing problem. Whenever he speaks, he talks so quickly that he tends to accidentally spit at the person with whom he’s conversing.

I’ve cringed at this so many times. No matter how nicely we tell him to slow down when he talks, he still does it. Mind you, it’s not a dental or medical problem, or age related. He’s done this all his life. How do I deal with the embarrassment of introducing my friends and co-workers to my father -- other than warning them to stand back five feet? -- Beet-Red Face Dear Beet Red: Have you told Dad that he spits, or do you just focus on how fast he talks? He may be unwilling to change his speech patterns if there is no overwhelming reason to do so, and he may be completely unaware that he is spraying his guests. Suggest he discuss it with his dentist and his doctor, because there may be underlying reasons that can be remedied. If nothing changes, there’s not much more you can do. Allow your friends and co-workers to handle it as they choose, and you can apologize to them on Dad’s behalf if you feel it is necessary. Dear Annie: I think you may have overlooked something in your response to “Frustrated and Angry,” who said her 11-year-old daughter stayed at a cousin’s house and the uncle came into her room at night. It doesn’t say in the letter whether the cousin is a boy or a girl, and I’m not sure it matters. The father may be committing acts of incest with his own child. The cousin may be afraid to tell anyone. This is an important reason to do something about what happened. -- Concerned in Texas Dear Texas: Several readers pointed out that the attempt to molest his niece may indicate that the uncle has been molesting his child. And we agree that this is a possibility. We don’t know whether the parents are willing to go to the police, but we hope they will confront the aunt and uncle, inform the rest of the family and do whatever they can to protect that cousin.

Annie’s Mailbox is written by Kathy Mitchell and Marcy Sugar, longtime editors of the Ann Landers column. Please e-mail your questions to: anniesmailbox@comcast.net, or write to: Annie’s Mailbox, c/o Creators Syndicate, 5777 W. Century Blvd., Ste. 700, Los Angeles, CA 90045.

Animals

Autos

Autos

Child Care

AKC Registered West Highlands: 7 weeks, white, m/f, intelligent, affectionate, paper trained, $850. 524-4294.

1995 Ford F-350 Dump- 4X4, plow, good condition. $5,000. 455-6225 Laconia

2000 Ford Taurus SES: 4-door, leather, buckets, moonroof, rear spoiler, 24-valve, loaded, inspected, $2,750. 387-2701.

CHILDREN!S Garden Childcare: Year-round, reliable, clean, structured, pre-K environment, one acre yard, central location. 528-1857.

1996 GMC Jimmy- Well maintained. $1,100 or best offer 387-4511 1996 GMC Sonoma 4x2 Pickup Long Bed: V6, auto, AC, 139k, runs great, $1,850. 387-2701.

ROTTWEILER Pups, AKC Champion Pedigree, tails, shots done, parents on premises, $500-600. 340-6219

1996 Toyota Camry LE Wagon: 1-owner, moonroof, automatic, s.i. and plate, immaculate, $2,950. 387-2701.

Announcement

1997 Honda Accord EX Coupe: 1-owner, V-Tech, 4-cylinder, auto, moonroof, rust-free, inspected, loaded, $3,350. 387-2701.

NEED to go to Ft. Myers, Florida? I will do the driving of your SUV or Van. Want to leave Approx. December 28, weather permitting, arrive January 5th. 40 years driving experience with perfect driving record. You pay for gas. 286-7720 PELVIC/ Transvaginal Mesh? Did you undergo transvaginal placement of mesh for pelvic organ prolapse or stress urinary incontinence between 2005 and present time? If the patch required removal due to complications, you may be entitled to compensation. Call Johnson Law and speak with female staff members 1-800-535-5727.

1997 Mitsubishi Gallant ES 4-Door: 4-cylinder, auto, all power, moonroof, 117k, inspected w/plate, $2,950. 387-2701. 1998 Saturn SL2: 4-door, automatic, AC, CD, all power, inspected, runs excellent, $1,850. 387-2701. 1999 Lincoln Continental: 126k, FWD, V8, leather, moonroof, inspected and plate, mint, $2,950. 387-2701. 2000 Dodge Conversion Van. 85,000 miles, 6-cylinder, good condition. Runs great! $4,400. 524-8092

2002 Pontiac Grand Am SE: V6, auto, 119k, new tires, like new, inspected, $3,450. 387-2701. 2003 Chrysler Concorde- Leather, 24 MPG. Runs/looks wonderful. Great tires. 107K miles. $3,600. densanbean@yahoo.com 569-3290 2003 Subaru Outback Limited: 4-cylinder, 5-speed, leather, 2-sunroofs, 1-owner, spotless, inspected, $4,950. 387-2701. BUYING junk cars and trucks ME & NH. Call for price. Martin Towing. (603)305-4504. CASH paid for unwanted or junk cars and trucks. Same day service possible. 603-231-2859. PRICE Reduced! 2002 Audi A-4 Quantra. Excellent condition. $5,500. 569-9615 TOP DOLLAR PAID for junk cars & trucks. Available 7-days a week. P3!s Towing. 630-3606

Child Care MEREDITH grandmother offering childcare in my child-friendly home. Will transport to and from school. 393-9079

For Rent LACONIA-LARGE 2 bedroom 2nd floor . Quiet, clean, no pets. $800/month, Includes Heat. 556-1310

CLEAN UPDATED studio and one bedroom in Tilton. Heat/Hot Water included. $600-630/Month. 603-393-9693 or 916-214-7733.

LACONIA/LAKEPORT Condo: 2-bedroom, 2-bath. $900/Month, heat & hot water included. Call 603-235-6901.

FRANKLIN: One bedroom 2nd floor quiet area great for single or couple. $500+Utilities Animals? 934-1252

LACONIA: 3 Bedroom Apartment, $950/month, heat & hot water included. Parking provided. Washer/Dryer hookup available for stack unit. Section 8 approved. No dogs. References & security required. 603-387-2600.

GILFORD, 2-Bedroom, 2-Bath, Balconies, no smoking/pets, $950/month plus utilities, Security deposit and references, 603-455-6662 GILFORD - Cute 2 bedroom house. Washer/dryer, garage, brookside setting. $1,000/month + utilities. 387-8433 GILFORD. 3 bedroom home for Lease/ option to buy, Owner financing available. Big yard, oversized garage. 603-393-5756. LACONIA 1 Bedroom- Washer/ dryer hookup, storage, no pets. Security Deposit & references. $600/month + utilities. 520-4353

Laconia 2 bedroom 1 1/2 bath apartment with deck & nice view of Paugus Bay. No pets. Lowered rent for qualified tennant with good credit.

630-2883

Laconia

$1-A-DAY CLASSIFIEDS • CALL 527-9299 DOLLAR-A-DAY: Private Party ads only (For Sale, Lost, Autos, etc.), must run ten consecutive days, 15 words max. Additional words 10¢ each per day. does not apply to yard sales. REGULAR RATE: $2 a day; 10¢ per word per day over 15 words. PREMIUMS: First word caps no charge. Additional bold, caps and 9pt type 10¢ per word per day. Centered words 10¢ (2 word minimum) TYPOS: Check your ad the first day of publication. Sorry, we will not issue credit after an ad has run once, and we do not offer refunds. DEADLINES: noon the business day prior to the day of publication. PAYMENT: All private party ads must be pre-paid. We accept checks, Visa Mastercard and Discover credit cards and of course, cash. $10 minimum order for credit cards. CORRESPONDENCE: To place your ad call our offices at 527-9299 between 9 am & 5 pm, Monday through Friday; Stop by our office or send a check or money order with ad copy to The Laconia Daily Sun,1127 Union Ave, Laconia, NH 03246. You can email ads to ads@laconiadailysun.com, we will contact you for payment. OTHER RATES: For information about display ads or other advertising options, call 527-9299.

BEAUTIFUL puppies. Apricot, red, mini poodles. Champ background. Good price. Healthy, happy and home raised. 253-6373.

For Rent BELMONT: Sunny ground-level one bedroom, private road, deck, quiet country setting. Heat included $695/ month. 455-5848.

3 bedroom 2 bath apartment with deck & single car garage. Quiet area with big yard near hospital. No pets. $1,050/Month, plus utilities

630-2883

LACONIA House for Rent Spacious 3 bedroom 1 1/2 bath with washer/dryer. Completely rebuilt, new everything. Near park & beach. Available mid-December, rent starts Jan. 1st.

$1,300/Month + Utilities

(603) 455-9433

Employment Wanted COMPANION job wanted. Have experience, references, insured vehicle. 603-359-1361, leave message. COMPASSIONATE LNA/Care Giver. 30 years experience. Great references. Will travel, do overnight. 603-875-1232

For Rent ALTON Housemate- Private suite w/use of common rooms in quiet country setting. No drinking/No smoking. $450/Month includes utilities. 875-6875 APARTMENTS, mobile homes. If you need a rental at a fair price, call DRM Corp. Over 40 years in rentals. We treat you better! 524-0348 or visit M-W-F, 12-5, at 373 Court Street, Laconia. AT Weirs Beach. Nice 2 Bedroom/ 1-Bath. Heat/HW incl Laundry hook-ups. $890/month. $500 security. 296-5314. BELMONT 2-bedroom. 1st month half off, $425! + Utilities, References & security. No dogs. 630-1296 Belmont- 2 bedroom, 1 bath duplex. New carpet/paint. Washer/Dryer hookups, porch, deck. Private $850/Month. 617-909-9892 BELMONT-3 bedroom, 1 bath house for rent. Large yard, pets allowed. Oil heat. Washer/Dryer hookup. $1,100 per month plus security deposit. References required. 455-4055. BELMONT: 2-bedroom duplex, washer/dryer hookups, $800/ month, 1st and $500 deposit,

LACONIA Mountain VIew apts. $300 off 1st month!s rent. 2BR 1 bath, $700/mo. 2BR & 3BR townhouses, 1.5 bath and large decks. $775 & $850/mo. Quiet location with laundry and playgrounds. No Dogs. Office on site. 524-7185 LACONIA Province St. 4 bedroom apartment. Private parking, laundry, bright & clean, no pets. $1,000/Month + Utilities. 508-423-0479. LACONIA3 bedroom clean, cozy cape near LRGH. No smokers/pets. $950/Month. 528-3789 LACONIA- 2-bedroom first floor. Onsite laundry, newly remodeled, snow removal. $850/Month, Heat/Hot water included. Call 524-0703 LACONIA- 3 bedroom house. $1,000/Month + utilities. Pets considered, references & deposit. 524-9665 LACONIA- Large Rooms for rent. Private bath, heat/hot water, electric, cable, parking included. Free WiFi Internet. $145/week, 603-781-6294 LACONIA- VERY nice 1-bedroom apartment in clean, quiet, secure downtown building. Recently renovated. $175/Week. includes, heat, hot water & electric. 524-3892 or 630-4771 LACONIA-2 bedroom 2nd floor. $210/Week, heat, hot water & electricity included. Call 603-235-6901 LACONIA-DUPLEX 2 bedroom 1 bath, washer/dryer hookups, garage. $900/month, heat included. References & security deposit. No pets or smokers.

LACONIA: Gail Avenue, 3rd floor, 1BR heat and h/w included, no pets, no smoking. $725. 524-5837. LACONIA: Gilbert Apartments. Call for available apartments. 524-4428 LACONIA: HUGE first floor, 8 room apartment. 4 bedroom, Heat/Hot Water included. Updated, New Hardwood floors, new bathroom, Washer/Dryer hookups, $1,250/Month. 566-6815 LACONIA: Large 3-bedroom apartment. First floor, parking. $850/mo + utilities, security/backgound check required. 603-781-6294. LACONIA: Quality, affordable, spacious two bedroom apartment for rent with heat and hot water included. Rent from $697 to $839 per month. Please call Julie at Stewart Property Mgt., (603)524-6673 EHO. LACONIA: Sunny, small 2-bedroom, 2nd floor no smoking/dogs. $200 per week. includes heat/hot water. 455-5569. LAKEPORT- Freshly painted, big 5-room, 2-bedroom apartment with lake view. Includes washer/dryer, hardwood floors, cabinet kitchen, 2 car parking, plowing and landscaping. Huge, bright and sunny master bedroom overlooking lake. $185/Week + 4-week security deposit. No utilities, no dogs, no smoking. Proper I.D., credit check and background check required. Showings on Friday only. Call Rob, 617-529-1838 MEREDITH– 2 Bedroom, 1.5 bath, 3 story townhouse style Condo. Garage, plowing, washer/dryer included. Non-Smoker. $950/month + Utilities. 603-455-7591 MEREDITH One bedroom apartment on second floor. 16X22 ft. deck, Open concept, cathedral ceiling, very elegant and rustic. Plowing, parking, dumpster & utilities included, $850/month. 455-5660 MEREDITH Room for Rent- Quiet, beautiful home. Laundry, kitchen, cable TV, porch. $125/Week. 603-689-8683 Meredith- 2 bedroom 1st floor, nice apartment. Walk to docks/village. Washer/dryer hookups, Non-smoking, unitlites not included. $750. 279-7887 or 781-862-0123 NEW Hampton- Large 4 bedroom, 3 bath newer home. Finished basement, wood floors and attached 2 car garage. 2 minutes to Rt. 93. $1,400/month plus utilities. 603-455-3762 NORTHFIELD: 1 room efficiency cottage with kitchenette & private bath, plus additional storage space & access to coin-op laundry. $140/week including heat, electric & hot water. 524-1234. NORTHFIELD: 2 bedroom trailer in small park with coin-op laundry on site, $225/week including heat, electric & hot water, 524-1234, www.whitemtrentals.com.


Page 26 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

For Rent

For Sale

For Sale

Free

FREE- BODY by Jake Ab Scissor. Good condition. 677-6528

PRO Mark brush chipper. 16HP. $700 or best offer. 630-0957

FREE Pickup for your unwanted, useful item garages, automobiles, etc. estates cleaned out and yardsale items. (603)930-5222.

BRAND New Harvey Majesty 3-Lite Casement Window with Double Low-E glass and argon gas. All pine inside-Aluminum clad outside. Size 88 1/2” wide X 54 1/4” High with nailing fin. Retails for $2,100, asking $850. Must sell. Call 224-9213

WINNISQUAM: Small efficiency and a cottage including heat, hot water & lights. $150-$175/week. $400 deposit. No pets. 387-3864.

WINTER RENTAL CEDAR LODGE Weirs Beach, Open Year Round ... Studios, 1-bedroom or 2-bedroom condos starting at $575 per month. Please call Wendy at 366-4316.

For Rent-Commercial WAREHOUSE/SPACE Up to 4,000 sq. ft. available with on-site office on busy Rte. 3 in Tilton. Seasonal or long term. Relocate your business or rent a spot for your toys. 603-387-6827

For Sale 2 Mec reloaders, 20 ga. and 28 ga. Complete with owner’s manuals. Call for details (603)476-2271, (508)243-0349. 50% off all wreaths in stock, while they last. Jim Waldron, across from Belknap Tire. 6 qt. Cuisinart Electric pressure cooker $85. Kitchen Aid stand mixer $170. Both never-used. 524-9128 AMAZING! Beautiful pillowtop matress sets, twin $169, full or queen $249, king $399. See AD under “Furniture”. BALDWIN Piano with humidifier unit & bench. $850. Easily accessible. 253-4850

USED Andersen Windows. Hot water heater & other miscellaneous items. Cheap! Call Dave 630-3986

BUYING

MEREDITH: Room for Rent,. $125/Week, utilities included. Smoking OK. Contact 707-9794 WAREHOUSE/SPACE Up to 4,000 sq. ft. available with on-site office on busy Rte. 3 in Tilton. Seasonal or long term. Relocate your business or rent a spot for your toys. 603-387-6827

TENTERS or Tailgaters Christmas- Stainless campers kitchen. Lantern, pans, cook tools & stove. $250 253-4850

Gold, (scrap rings, jewelry, etc.) Silver, (coins, flatware, etc. )

CHRISTMAS TREES: Now Open! Good selection. Union Avenue, across from Belknap Tire. Jim Waldron 279-8066. ELECTRIC Wheelchair: Never used, many extras, $1,500. 524-2877. FULL-SIZE Thule. Good condition. $200 or best offer. 524-3344 GREEN Cord Wood. $190 per cord. Doug 393-5163 or 393-9441 HOLIDAY SPECIAL: GREEN FIREWOOD, cut, not split $130/cord, cut & split $175/cord. Seasoned firewood, $250. Also, logging, landclearing & tree work (All phases). 393-8416. IT!S getting cramped in here ... Office & store furniture for sale: (1) 12! gondola shelf unit, (2) 4! gondola shelf units, (1) 4-drawer filing cabinet, (1) 8-drawer filing cabinet, (1) 9-drawer filing cabinet, (1) 2-drawer filing cabinet, (1) 5! bookshelf (double sided), (1) revolving card/book display case, (2) gas heaters blue flame w/tstat, (2) 3-tier oval display tables w/glass top. Cash and credit cards accepted. ClownSupplies.com, a division of Simplicity!s Wonderful World, 369 Union Avenue, Laconia, NH. 603-435-8812. LAMB -RAISED locally. Hormone & antibiotic free. Vacuum packed, frozen. Custom cuts available. 528-5838 LOOKING to start your own salon? Beautiful furniture, everything you need. 15,000 or BRO. Call Jared, 520-6425.

IMMEDIATE PART-TIME OPENING Delivery Driver 20 – 25 hours per week Seeking a self-motivated, dependable individual to drive morning delivery route Monday-Friday, 5 days a week. Position requires valid drivers license and clean driving record. Forklift certification a plus. Knowledge of electrical supplies helpful but not necessary.

Come join TEAM LE! Apply in person to: Laura Cameron Laconia Electric Supply 935 Union Ave. Laconia, NH 03246

Antiques & Unusual Items Call 279-3087 or Stop In at

Waukewan Antiques 55 Main St. Meredith

Furniture AMAZING! Beautiful Queen or Full-size mattress set. Luxury Firm European Pillow-top style. Fabulous back & hip support. Factory sealed - new 10-Yr. warranty. Cost $1095, sell $249. Can deliver 603-305-9763. COZY Cabin Rustics- Mattress and furniture year end sell-off! All mattress sets 20% off! NH made Shaker furniture by Cedar and Oak 20% off! Log Hickory and Rustic Barnwood Furniture and Artwork 20% off! Recliners, Futons, Bunk Beds, Dining Room, Bedroom, Sofas, Platform Beds, MacMotion Chairs, occasional tables, art work. Unique, Locally made. Great Deals!! Call Jay 603-662-9066 or shop our website and email for special pricing www.viscodirect.com, jayw100@yahoo.com 517 Rte. 25, Moultonboro, NH

Free FREE 6 1/2 ft. pre-lit artificial Christmas tree. 524-5052 FREE firewood- Call 524-3892 or 630-4771

T&B Appliance Removal. Appliances & AC’s removed free of charge if outside. Please call (603)986-5506.

Help Wanted BEYOND the Fringe Salon is looking for 1-2 booth renters with strong client base. 20+ hours/week. Please call 528-7735, leave message.

Help Wanted

Help Wanted

WINTER/ FALL RUSH

LISACHA!S Beauty Lounge in Gilford is seeking fun, friendly professional stylist, 3 NEW booths now available to rent! Contact us today, 603-527-8120.

Permanent and holiday season help. Start immediately. Due to fall/ holiday season our company is experiencing a massive product demand opening various positions in all departments and must be filled this week. No experience required. Must be at least 18. Positions available: Customer Service/ set up and display/ appointment setting/ sales and marketing. Call today for immediate interview (603)822-0219. Or text anytime (603)930-8450.

STYLIST Booth Rental Available. Perfect location, clean, professional, great parking. Relaxed atmosphere. Contact 731-6230 for information.


THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011 — Page 27

LRGHealthcare doctor named one of top ten hospitalists in the country

LACONIA — The American College of Physicians has named LRGHealthcare’s Director of Hospital Medicine Vercin Ephrem, MD as one of the Top Ten Hospitalists in the country. Dr. Ephrem attended Lebanese University Faculty of Medical Sciences, and did his residency at Staten Island University Hospital. As the director of Hospital Medicine at LRGHealthcare, he is known by his colleagues for his strong work ethic and commitment to improving the quality of patient care. In 2009, LRGHealthcare became the first hospital in New Hampshire to participate in Project BOOST (Better Outcomes for Older Adults Through Safe Transitions), a program

Help Wanted

developed by the Society of Hospital Medicine to improve transitions at discharge with the goal of reducing 30-day readmission rates. Under Dr. Ephrem’s guidance, Lakes Region General Hospital was able to reduce readmissions to its Senior Services unit from 7% to 2% in one year. Under BOOST, hospitals identify patients at high risk of readmission based on factors such as diagnosis, problem medications, health education and social support. The hospital team then works to lessen those risks by providing detailed discharge instructions, scheduled outpatient follow-up visits and check–in calls. “Due to the success of the program,

Services

Services

FOOD SERVICE ASSISTANT for Laconia Senior Center Elder Services is looking for a part-time(3 hours) food service assistant with food service experience and the ability to work well with older adults. Ability to assist senior center director with the facilitation and oversight of the day-to-day operations of food service programs at the senior center to include congregate dining and Meals on Wheels service. Must be able to assure compliance with safe food handling to include temping, serving and kitchen cleanliness. Strong organizational skills and a talent for handling multiple activities required. Send resume and letter of interest to: kheyes@bm-cap.org or Karen Heyes, Community Action Program Belknap-Merrimack Counties, Inc. (LSC), PO Box 1016, Concord, NH 03302-1016. E.O.E.

HANDYMAN SERVICES Small Jobs Are My Speciality

Rick Drouin 520-5642 or 744-6277

BLUE RIBBON PAINTING CO. Interior/Exterior Since 1982 ~ Fully Insured

Paper Hanging

279-5755 630-8333

Land

Bus.

Lost

PIPER ROOFING

LOST Female small Tabby Cat named Rosie. Last seen 11/30 at 11am, Near Exit 20 in Tilton. $100 Reward. 603-738-4431

Quality Work Reasonable Rates Free Estimates Metal Roofs • Shingle Roofs

Motorcycles Buy • Sell • Trade www.motoworks.biz

Cell

SAVE 30% on Interior Painting. I nsured, references. Call Troy at Turcotte Painting 455-9179

CONWAY LAKE: Will trade deepwater lot w/tri-dock for commercial property or permitted land. 207-754-1047.

Our Customers Don!t get Soaked!

528-3531 Major credit cards accepted

(603)447-1198. Olson’s Moto Works, RT16 Albany, NH.

Real Estate FOR Sale By Owner: 2-Bedroom house, 1-1/4 bath. 180 Mechanic Street, Laconia. 524-8142. HOUSE FOR SALE-White Oaks Rd., Laconia. Very well maintained, 3-bedroom. 1 car garage, potential in-home business options. Reduced, $145,000/OBO. By Appointment only, 524-3613

CALL THE HUNGRY PAINTER: Painting, small tree work, dump runs, odd jobs, water damage/drywall repairs. 455-6296.

LACONIA- 3 bedroom clean, cozy cape near LRGH. Asking less than assessed value. 528-3789 LONG BAY Mortgage: 207-754-1047.

Snowmobiles

ASSUMABLE No balloon.

Roommate Wanted MEREDITH ROOMMATE: Sunny, clean, spacious, walk to town. Includes washer/dryer. $350/Month. Call 481-0762. REDUCED rental share with eld erly person in return for occaional rides and small repairs. Includes furnished bedroom, kitchen, private bath & utilities. 5 minutes to Wolfeboro. Call 397-2694.

Pemi Valley Fish & Game Club holding New Year’s Day Trapshoot HOLDERNESS — The annual New Year‘s Day Trap Shoot will be held on January 1 at the Pemi Valley Fish and Game Club. Registration starts at 9 a.m. and the shooting gets underway at 10 a.m. It‘s a 125-bird shoot: 25 at 16 yards, 25 wobble, 25 handicap, and 25 doubles. The fee is $30, which covers the match and prizes. And there‘ll be free food and hot drinks. Half the proceeds will be divided between the top shooter and the first place team. The shoot will be held snow or cold unless its 20 below and white out conditions. The event has been a club tradition for over 42 years.

It will be an ATA (Amateur Trap Association) sanctioned shoot but ATA membership is not required to participate. Call either Paul Rheinhardt (7077170) or George Hollingsworth (7453679) if you intend to participate. This will be the last of trap until spring. The range will close right after the New Year‘s Day shoot and will open again April 1t. Trap shooting will continue on Thursdays and Sundays until January. Thursday trap shooting starts at 5 p.m. Sundays run from 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m.

CANS FOR BOY SCOUT TROOP 68! Drop of bins are located at:

HOLIDAY SPECIAL- Stocking fillers 10% off all items in store! Big City Cat House 524-5954

(Former) Old Time Walters Market

SALES, SERVICE, performance parts. New & used parts, complete line of accessories for Snowmobiles & ATV!s. Pre-owned sleds. Lake City Cat House, 283 White Oaks Rd., Laconia. Open 7 days a week. 524-5954.

D'Angelos Sandwich Shop

Storage Space PROFESSIONAL painter seeking homeowners and landlords who are considering a paint renovation. Free estimates, and reasonable rates. 1-802-780-9040

LRGHealthcare was stay and still provide safe, approached by Medicare quality patient care. We to help extend Project are one of only 39 hospitals BOOST into the entire that received the Medicare state,” said Dr. Ephrem. grant, and it is because of “We are modifying and Dr. Ephrem’s efforts.” expanding the program The LRGHealthcare to offer to all patients, Hospital Medicine Proregardless of age.” gram is staffed by nine “Project BOOST provided board-certified, internal a framework for improvemedicine physicians who ment at LRGHealthcare, are available 24-hours-abut it was Dr. Ephrem’s day, seven-days-a-week to leadership that ensured provide coordinated, highits success,” said LRGH quality care for patients Chief Nursing Officer and admitted to the hospital. Vice President of Patient In addition to the main Care & Surgical Services program at Lakes Region Ellen Wolff. “In addition LRGHealthcare’s Direc- General Hospital, the to decreasing readmission tor of Hospital Medicine physicians provide fill-in rates under thirty days Vercin Ephrem, MD, has been coverage for Huggins Hosdue to the discharge plan- selected as one of the Top Ten pital in Wolfeboro, Speare ning that is included in the Hospitalists in the country. Memorial Hospital in BOOST program, he has (Courtesy photo) Plymouth and Mountain also been able to reduce our length of Ridge Nursing Home in Franklin.

CLEAN, dry, secure storage for your cars, motorcycles, boats, household items.24/7 access.Call 527-9229.

St. Joseph Church (parking lot)

For years, our local community has been donating their aluminum cans to Troop 68. Funds from these cans help maintain membership, purchase equipment, support outings, and so much more!

Boy Scout Troop 68, Laconia Thanks you for your continued support!


Page 28 — THE LACONIA DAILY SUN, Thursday, December 15, 2011

2010 Jeep Liberty Limited 4WD A/C, Cruise, Tilt, Heated Leather, Power Locks, Windows & Seats, Keyless Entry, ABS, Alloys, CD, 33k Miles. #10134PA

$23,900 or $396/Mo**

UNWRAP THESE SPECIALS!!

2010 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara 4WD A/C, Cruise, Tilt, Power Locks & Windows, Keyless Entry, Trailer Towing Package, ABS, Alloys, CD, 28k Miles. #11473SB

$28,500 or $483/Mo**

It’s A Certified Christmas! Rates As Low As 1.9%

All Certified Vehicles Have a 12 month, 12,000 Mile Extended Bumper to Bumper Warranty & Balance of 5 Year, 100,000 Mile Powertrain Factory Warranty. 2011 Buick Regal CXL

2011 Chevy Cruze 2LT

2011 Chevy Impala LTZ

2011 Chevy Impala LTZ

A/C, On*Star, Cruise, Tilt, Power Locks, Windows, Sunroof & Driver’s Seat, Alloys, CD, Heated Seats, ABS, 21k Miles.

Heated Leather, Power Locks & Windows, Keyless Entry, Tilt, Cruise, Alloys, ABS, CD, Only 8k Miles!

A/C, Cruise, Tilt, ABS Alloys, Bose Stereo w/CD, On*Star, Power Locks & Windows, Heated Seats, Rear Spoiler, 17k Miles.

Power Locks, Windows, Sunroof & Driver’s Seats, Heated Leather, Rear Spoiler, Tilt, Cruise, A/C, ABS, Alloys, Bose Stereo w/CD, 19k Miles.

#10117PA

#10138PA

#10119PA

#10137PA

$25,900 or $413/Mo* $20,900 or $323/Mo* $22,900 or $359/Mo* $22,900 or $359/Mo* 2010 Chevy Aveo LT

2009 Chevy Aveo 2LT

2010 Chevy HHR LT

2010 Chevy Malibu LT2

A/C, Tilt, CD, ABS, 30k Miles.

A/C, Power Locks & Windows, Tilt, CD, Keyless Entry, Rear Spoiler, Only 11k Miles!

A/C, Cruise, Tilt, Sunscreen Glass, Power Locks, Windows & Driver’s Seat, ABS, CD, Keyless Entry, 31k Miles.

XM Satellite Radio, Power Locks, Windows & Driver’s Seat, Cruise, Tilt, Keyless Entry, ABS, Alloys, Leather, 29k Miles.

#10125PA

#12059A

#10147PA

#11120SA

$13,900 or $199/Mo* 2009 Chevy Malibu LT2

$11,900 or $170/Mo* 2008 Chevy Malibu LT2

A/C, Cruise, Tilt, On* Star, Power Locks, Windows & Driver’s Seat, CD, ABS, Keyless Entry, Heated Seats, Alloys, 46k Miles.

A/C, Power Locks, Windows, Driver’s Seat & Sunroof, Cruise, Tilt, Keyless Entry, ABS, Alloys, Dual Exhaust, CD, Only 32k Miles.

#11427A

#10100PA

2010 Chevy Cobalt LT

#10129PA

$13,450 or $189/Mo*

2007 Chevy Malibu LS

A/C, Cruise, Tilt, Power Windows, Locks & Driver’s Seat, CD, Keyless Entry, ABS 45k Miles.

#11345SA

2011 Chevy Traverse LT AWD

#11111A

$12,995 or $189/Mo* 2010 Chevy Cobalt LT

$14,995 or $229/Mo*

3 to Choose From

8-Passenger! Auto, A/C, ABS, Tilt, Cruise, Sunscreen Glass, Power Locks, Windows & Driver’s Seat, Keyless Entry, Alloys, 1-Owner, 24k Miles. #10161PA

#10145PA

$25,900 or $413/Mo*

$12,900 or $179/Mo*

A/C, Power Locks & Windows, Tilt, Cruise, Keyless Entry, CD, ABS, 32k Miles.

$18,900 or $302/Mo* 2008 Buick Lacrosse CX

A/C, Tilt, Cruise, Power Locks, Windows & Driver’s Seat, ABS, CD, Keyless Entry, 47k Miles.

$16,900 or $264/Mo* $18,900 or $302/Mo* A/C, Power Locks & Windows, Tilt, Cruise, Alloys, CD, ABS, 30k Miles.

$13,900 or $209/Mo*

“When other dealers can’t ... Cantin can!” SHOWROOM HOURS:

Mon., Tues., Wed. & Fri. 8:00-7:00pm Thur. 8:00-8:00pm Sat. 8:00-5:00pm

623 Union Avenue, Laconia, NH 603-524-0770 or 1-800-226-8467

VIEW OUR WEBSITE FOR COMPLETE INVENTORY: www.cantins.com

*Payment based on 60 months at 2.9% APR, with $3,000 cash or trade equity down payment, subject to credit approval. **Payment based on 60 months at 4.9% APR, with $3,000 cash or trade equity down payment, subject to credit approval. Not responsible for typographical errors. Photos for illustration purposes only.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.