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Concord Monitor du lieu suivant : Concord, New Hampshire • 1

Publication:
Concord Monitori
Lieu:
Concord, New Hampshire
Date de parution:
Page:
1
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

'y Friday -'October 29119931 jConcordNew Hampshire! the hell of Bosnia the Fourth of July a hundred times over" As he traveled Cavic gave away everyth' on ing including all of the money he had i haa He distributed five suitcases of Man from Salisbury aids the injured to "My cousin' died' eight months said I saw his house pockmarked with machine gun bullets His daughter her brother arid his wife are still there and they haven't had electricity for one and a half years You saw that He saw store shelves empty except for running one Hand through his thinning white hair For three weeks in September Cavic a businessman of Serbian descent traveled under police escort to Bos-1 nia-Herzegovina and Serb-held territory to find what was left of his family and to help whomever he could His parents em- a couple of bottles of aspirin and a few children i cans of food He saw children (lying of supplies aspirin bandages canned food candles spare clothing toothbrushes -r to anyone in need Some of the supplies had been donated by New Hampshire friends He returned with onythe clothes on his back Cavic continues to be haunted by the bloody Bight and incessant wailing of children thousands of them of various etiv nic backgrounds as they lay dying in hospitals many without arms or legs suffering for lack of basic supplies ana medicine such as painkillers insulin and anes- -thesia He is also troubled hy the plight of BSeeSERS Pagaft-B Sto the United States in the 1920s after Yugoslavia was formedin had been 19 years since he last visited' While there he discovered some of his family had been killed Menchanchana the village where his mother was bom lay in rubble only segments of walls 1 and chimneys remained standing like a twisted monument to the hatreds dismembering the lives of people caught up He ignored his coffee His voice grew soft and his eyes moistened as he described the atrocities he saw in his homeland the former Yugoslavia he said at a Donuts in Concord one morning this week "Imagine someone threw a bomb in here with all of these people and all of the windows were blown out everything strayed all blackened inside His voice trailed off pneumonia because ho antibiotics were -available' He saw cemeteries overrun by headstones and a virtual carpet of flow- ere 'These people are trying to help each other but they nont have anything with which to help" he said One night he saw the shelling from a Croatian offensive "It looked like thunder and lightning on the horizon It was like OAVLE SH0MER Monitor tuff Cavic returned after 19 years Bow 't-s its optioits New high school in picture Concowf Few hear candidates speak out By BRENDA CHARPENT1ER Monitor staff Mike Jacobsen put last public forum for school The lone survivor A large house sits untouched surrounded by the remains of luxury homes that burned to the ground in this area of Laguna Beach Calif Wildfires destroyed nearly 6dO homes and scorched more than 100000 acres PageA-2 By BRENDA CHARPENT1ER Monitor staff If the Concord school board decides not to include Bow students in an expanded high school Bow maybuiUabighigh school itself and take In tuition-paying students from nearby Communities While the Concord board which is split on the issue tries to make a decision the Bow school board is' making contingency plrins 1 "Some of the ideas are possibly' if we have to build a high school other towns (could) tuition in their students to us That may be Barn- stead that may be Hooksett that may be said Betsy Miller a Bow school board mem- her Courting students from other communities would give Bow a way to offer more courses and programs than it' could offer by itself Marie McMillen school board chairwoman has repeatedly said that the reason Bow sends kids to Concord fundamentally finan- dal the variety of courses and sports and socialization that a bigger school can offer Some of the talk about building a Bow high school is in a vein Miller said residents: have come alive oyer the issue arid many of them are fed up with what they call bashing As a result of "Bow she said people who formerly wanted to keep up a deal with Concord have called to Friday fy i- Cloudy board candidates into perspective When he looked around the room and said: a city of (over) 30600 to have this few people show up for public fonim is pretty sad" Fifteen residents and one moderator turned out to question five school board candidates about their views on school issues 'at Conant Elementary School The forum was sponsored by the citywide PTO Though the candidates talked about everything from longer school years to building a new middle school questions kept popping up about "the Bow The current tuition agrec- ment between Bow and Concord expires in 1997 and the board is scheduled to vote' See FORUM -Page A-8 Economic uptick US economic growth picked up considerably in the July-September quarter and the budget deficit for 1993 fell to the lowest level in three years Page A-7 New 1-93 brldgd The state has announced plans to build a $7 million bridge to replace the Route 3 and 11 bridge over Interstate 93 at Brit 20 in Tilton Page B-l Mostly cloudy today High jn the low 50sV Cloudy tonight low 35 to 40 Andrew Warner I of Harold Martin School Hop-kinton draws a sun-less day PageB-2 want to changed their minds 3 See BOW Page A-8 Epsom anew 1 Wt-s-fi A Murdered 1 I '-n wv SwuWM A 1 ft ''ATS -i Yesterday was the third day of Hoy's trial at Dismissal may DG rCQUCStGu "Itockingliam County Superior CdurtTThe 'state' traduced ccUiilar phone records and a gas credit credit By ANDREW GALARNEAU Monitor staff 1 A eard receipt to bolster statements of chief accuser his former coinmon-law wife Maria Zara: tt But the state's last question of the day may have been more important Before the trial began Judge Kenneth McHugh ruled that statements Kelly made- to the police i i 140 EXETER From defense attorneys and prosecutors in the Steven Itoy murder trial have been inching through a minefield er in presenting tesbmony about Charles' Kelly the housemate charged -With helping Roy buiy Jo- about Roy could not be used at Roy's trial Kelly anna body '-O had said that Roy confessed to murdering Kozak Yesterday the prosecutors stepped on a mine and asked him to help bury the body as Assistant Attorney General John Stephen asked But Kelly an cx-convict with a long record a question based on information the juiy has not would have been a shaky witness for the state He been allowed to hear would have been vulnerable to defense charges This morning lawyers could ask the that he was lying for his freedom judge to dismiss the case or request a hearing on 1 theissue See ROY Page A-8 A -t mans revealed Riley left debts had police record By ANNMARIE TIMMINS Monitor staff' The Manchester man found murdered in Epsom on Sunday had a criminal record in at least two states and left behind more than $1500 in unpaid debts Jerry Riley 24 whose last known address was 81 Laurel St Manchester was shot in the head and left under a pile of leaves in a remote part of Epsom sometime this summer Hikers found his body over the weekend and state police have been working since then to find a motive and suspect for the murder Tina Nadeau assistant attorney general said have a couple of leads they are pursuing she said yesterday She declined to say anything more and state police Sgt Arthur wiggin the investigating -officer could not be reached for comment Court and police records show that Ri- Flu vaccine supply running short Area clinics see increased demand i Mmi wi 'r-i-' 1 ihwi-W they want to do what they Concord Regional Visiting Nurse Association had 2000 doses of flu vaccine at the begin- ning of October and had to order another looo by mid month The association gave 197 flu shots at a clinic yesterday morning and had fewer than 100 doses left for its final clinic scheduled for the afternoon has been much said nurse Peggy TucIct er See FLU Page A-8 health officials' to recommend people get flu shots earlier this year Local health officials report that people have taken this suggestion to heart-' Concord Family Medicine has given 30 percent to 50 percent more flu shots this year than normal according to nurse Sue O'Donnell She said-the practice has run out of the vaccine and has had to -reschedule appointments until' alter Nov 1 when it will receive more' "People are scared and con-' O'Donnell 'said "And By RICHARD STRADUNG Monitor staff Flu vaccine is in short supply in some parts of the state as prcdic- -tions of a severe flu season fill clinics and doctors offices with people looking for vaccinations An earfy flu outbreak in the South and an unusually long flu season last year prompted federal QEOFF FORESTER Monitor Miff Backoff Dave Lucas (left) warns John Stark's Nate Shaw to keep away from goa (tender Sung Vivathana during the 1-0 tournament win yesterday Page C-l See RILEY Page A-8 1.

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À propos de la collection Concord Monitor

Pages disponibles:
854 959
Années disponibles:
1947-2024