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Ronald Veverka holds a picture of his son Sgt. David Veverka. Veverka said he's not surprised his son, who was killed in Iraq May 6, is being called a hero.
/ Tom Davidson/Herald


Jamestown native Sgt. David Veverka
/ Contributed


Published May 15, 2006 06:44 pm - His hometown knew him as a friend and role model. His nation will remember him as a hero.
Staff Sgt. David Michael Veverka, a 25-year-old Jamestown native, pulled a fellow soldier down into the cover of their truck as a roadside bomb exploded on May 6.


Fallen soldier saved comrade's life
Veverka also awarded posthumous degree

By Tom Davidson
Herald Staff Writer

JAMESTOWN

His hometown knew him as a friend and role model. His nation will remember him as a hero.

Staff Sgt. David Michael Veverka, a 25-year-old Jamestown native, pulled a fellow soldier down into the cover of their truck as a roadside bomb exploded on May 6.

Veverka, a University of Maine student and National Guardsman, was killed in the blast with Sgt. Dale James Kelly Jr., 48, of Richmond, Maine.

But Pvt. Chris Fraser, 19, of Windsor, Maine, is alive thanks to the actions of his fellow soldiers.

“He saved Chris’ life,” Fraser’s mother, Debra Gosselin, of Gardiner, Maine, said of Veverka.

“He’s a hero,” Ms. Gosselin said.

Veverka pulled her son to cover and Kelly taught him how to self-administer intravenous medications that helped him survive his injuries, she said.

Fraser told his mother that Kelly, Veverka and he were riding in the front truck of a convoy when they came upon a man with two young children. The man apparently threw a bomb at the truck, which exploded just as Veverka pulled her son down into the vehicle, Mrs. Gosselin said.

“That was David,” Ronald Veverka said of his son’s actions.

His voice stuck with pride when he talked about his son, the hero.

“That’s the way David was. I am so proud,” Ronald Veverka said.

Sgt. Veverka was also honored by the University of Maine, in Bangor, over the weekend at commencement, where he was posthumously awarded his bachelor’s degree in wildlife ecology.

He was eight credits shy of completing his studies when he was killed.

“We received the degree, and the letter they wrote is just wonderful,” Ronald Veverka said. “It’s just truly an honor and it wasn’t supposed to happen (this way), but I’m grateful for everything that’s going on now.”

“There’re no words to describe” the outpouring of support from the people in the Jamestown area, he said.



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