Belmont girls take a pair from Winnisquam
Sports Editor - Salmon Press Newspapers
February 11, 2021TILTON The Winnisquam and Belmont girls hoop teams met up for a pair of games last week, with the Raiders coming out with a 41-30 win on Thursday, Feb. 4, in Belmont and then a 47-16 win the following night in Tilton.
The first game saw the two teams separated by just a point after one half, with Belmont up 18-17. However, the Raiders pulled away in the second half and secured the win. We really got ourselves in foul trouble in the first half, with both our bigs having three fouls each, said Winnisquam coach Mark Dawalga. Give Belmont credit, they played well.
J. Brent Hurd, age 87, passed away at his home in Lebanon on December 27, 2020.
Mr. Hurd was born in Nashville on July 19, 1933. He is preceded in death by his wife of 53 years, Barbara Jo Hurd; parents Brown Elliott Hurd and Susan Writesman Hurd; and a sister, Brownie Hurd Freeman.
Mr. Hurd graduated from Donelson High School in 1951. He served in the United States Army as a military policeman. Mr. Hurd graduated from The University of Tennessee Knoxville in 1958 with a degree in Agriculture Economics. Immediately upon graduation he married Barbara Jo Williams and started a 10-year stint managing a Grade A dairy farm. His next venture was spending 16 years with the largest real estate management company in the Southeast as CEO, overseeing 12,000 residential rental units and 300 employees. He founded Hurd Investment Properties, Inc. in 1981 and served the residential and commercial real estate management company as president for the next 9 years and as president of a large Nashvill
Last modified on Mon 2 Nov 2020 16.08 EST
Quotes attributed to Adolf Hitler and Confederate general Robert E Lee appear in training materials once used by the Kentucky state police (KSP) to create âruthlessâ warriors who would âfight to the deathâ.
The instructional slideshow, decorated with a bald eagle and American flag, advises officers to âmeet violence with greater violenceâ. It includes the line âüber allesâ â a phrase from a Nazi-associated verse of the German national anthem â ironically juxtaposed against a background of American troops in Iwo Jima during the second world war.
âIt is entirely inexcusable for the words of Hitler to be used in training Kentucky State Police,â the Anti-Defamation League tweeted on Friday.
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