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Pucks will drop at Pond Hockey Classic but probably not on Meredith Bay BY ADAM DRAPCHO THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
MEREDITH — The puck will drop for the third annul New England Pond Hockey Classic, expects founder Scott Crowder, though he doesn’t yet know where the event will be held. The first two years of the tournament were held on Meredith Bay, however, due to an unusually mild winter, ice has been slow to arrive to the bay this year. With more than 1,200 people expecting to play in a toursee HOCKEY page 10
VOL. 12 NO. 159
LACONIA, N.H.
527-9299
FREE
Police raid allegedly interrupts man cooking meth in downtown apartment at 7:45 a.m. BY GAIL OBER
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
LACONIA — Acting on a tip generated earlier this week, city police working with the N.H. Clandestine Drug Unit arrested a local man for manufacturing methamphetamine in a downtown apartment building. Capt. William Clary said yesterday police began working the tip Tuesday and by early yesterday morning had a search warrant for 614 Main St. Apt. 34. Police said when they went to the apart-
ment, the occupant, Jeffrey Waterman, 45, was actively making — or “cooking”— three small pots of methamphetamine, a highly volatile derivative of over-thecounter cold medicine heated and combined with various household chemicals.
Jeffrey Waterman (Laconia Police photo)
This is the second time in seven months city police have closed down the core of downtown to apprehend a purported methamphetamine operation. In July, police apprehended James Joyce, 40, in front of the now-shuttered Colonial Theater which is across the street from yesterday’s raid. Earlier this month, Joyce pleaded guilty to one count of possession of methamphetamine and one count of being a felon in possession of brass knuckles. he is serving a see METH page 10
An artist’s rendering of what the land located behind Laconia High School would look like if Option 2A is pursued. The area where the football field is now located would be converted to parking and nearly an acre of green space. The football field would be moved back to an elevated terrace and additional playing fields would be sited on a second terrace, beyond the football field. In total, approximately 100,000 cubic yards of earth would need to be removed to execute the plan. (Courtesy LSD)
Option A2 would transform Bobotas Field behind LHS BY MICHAEL KITCH THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
LACONIA — The Huot Regional Technical Education Center Planning Committee last night endorsed the latest — and most ambitious — proposal for relocating the football field and reconfiguring Bobotas Field at Laconia High School. All proposed improve-
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ments are part of the project to expand and renovate the Huot Center. Introducing the plan — dubbed “Option A2” — Principal Steve Beals explained that the school property encompasses 19 acres, seven of which are not put to their full use. The plan, he said, was intended to put the available
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space to its maximum and optimal use. The plan calls for radically altering the terrain east of the football field by removing the hill and creating two terraces stretching from the rear of the school building to the far side of Bobotas Field, which is in Gilford. The first 350 feet between the school
building and first terrace would be divided between a parking lot with spaces for 140 vehicles and a green space of 35,000-square-feet. A berm would divide the parking area and green space from the first terrace, which would hold the football field. The bleachers, press box and see LHS page 9