Little earthquake in Ashland Shake measured at 2.6 magnitude hit at 11:46 Sunday night — P. 8
Tuesday, January 4, 2011
tuesday
Gilford murder victim last seen alive 2 days before body found By GAil oBer
THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
GILFORD — The final autopsy report on the murdered woman whose body was found in her Country Club Road home in late October showed she died of multiple gunshots. Atty. Benjamin Agati of the N.H. Attorney General’s Office said there was nothing in Roberta “Bobbie” Millers toxicology report to indicate any other cause of death. “There was no other foul play like poisoning involved,” said Agati Monday afternoon. He also there was nothing in the report to indicate Miller was using any illegal drugs, nor that she was intoxicated. Its been two months since the body of Miller and her golden retriever were found shot to death by a relative and though the investigation, according to Agati “is still on the front burner” very little information is being made public. Agati said investigators have still not nailed down the exact time of death saying Miller died between sometime Friday, Oct. see MuRdeR page 8
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Number of Laconia students accepting free or reduced-price lunch is approaching two out of three By AdAm drApcho THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
LACONIA — About two out of every three students in the city’s schools qualify for free or reduced price school lunch, a rate which has been higher in the past two school years than ever before. The federally-subsidized meals are available to students from households with low income levels, but school administrators say the rising statistic has as much to do with
improved accounting practices as it does with the recession or socioeconomic trends. Tim Goossens has been the Laconia School District’s food service director since 1998, and he said the local rates for free and reduced lunches spiked last year and have remained about the same level since. He reported that 58-percent of students at Pleasant Street School qualify for subsidized lunch, while the statistic for Elm Street School is 67-percent and
at Woodland Heights it’s 72-percent. Fiftynine percent of middle school students and 53-percent of high school students qualify. Goossens said the statewide average is around 25-percent. High school rates are typically lower than those for the younger grades because student income is taken into consideration and older students might be more reluctant to seek assistance, Goossens said. see LuNCH page 8
An uneven start to winter. Some ice, some not
Along the shore of Lake Winnipesaukee at Weirs Beach. (Laconia Daily Sun photo/Ed Engler)
Millham says Democrat lawyers welcome to apply for county post By michAel Kitch THE LACONIA DAILY SUN
LACONIA — All 18 members of the Belknap County Convention, which will choose the next county attorney, are now Republicans. Nevertheless, Representa-
tive Alida Millham of Gilford, who chairs the convention, stressed that candidates for the vaccant position will be judged on their credentials, regardless of their partisan allegiance. Shortly after Jim Carroll, a Democrat,
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won his third term in November, Governor John Lynch tapped him to become the presiding justice of the Laconia District Court, creating the vacancy. The county attorney must be a legal resisee COuNty attORNey page 8