SUNDAY'S NFL FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
Kansas City 13 Buffalo 10 (OT)
St Louis 20 Carolina 10
49ERS 24 Denver 16
Detriot 37 Washington 25
Green Bay 9 NY Jets 0
Miami 22 Cincinnati 14
Jacksonville 35 Dallas 17
San Diego 33 Tennesee 25
New England 28 Minnesota 18
Oakland 33 Seattle 3
Tampa Bay 38 Arizona 35
New Orleans 20 Steelers 10
Sunday, October 31, 2010
PCNTV SCHEDULE
---SCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGE---
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2010
2:00 P On the Road: 10th Congressional District (LIVE)
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA
3:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Kevin Shivers, State Director of National Federation of Independent Business
Larry Ceisler, Ceisler Media & Issues Advocacy
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
4:00 P Election 2010: 10th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
4:55 P Post Debate Interviews
Chris Carney, Democrat for Congress, 10th District
Thomas Marino, Republican for Congress, 10th District
5:05 P Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
6:00 P On the Road: 11th Congressional District (LIVE)
Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA
7:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Ray Zaborney, State Street Strategies
Tony May, Triad Strategies
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:45 P Election 2010: 11th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
8:40 P Post Debate Interviews
Paul Kanjorski, Democrat for Congress, 11th District
Lou Barletta, Republican for Congress, 11th District
9:00 P On the Road: 15th Congressional District (LIVE)
Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA
10:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Charlie Gerow, Quantum Communications
Vincent Carocci, Former Press Secretary to Gov. Robert Casey
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
11:00 P Election 2010: 15th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WFMZ-TV in Allentown, PA
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2010
12:00 A Post Debate Interviews
Charlie Dent, Republican for Congress, 15th District
John Callahan, Democrat for Congress, 15th District
Jake Towne, Independent for Congress, 15th District
12:15 A Election 2010: Penn State University Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
1:00 A On the Road: 10th Congressional District
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA
2:00 A On the Road: 11th Congressional District
Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA
3:00 A On the Road: 15th Congressional District
Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA
4:00 A Election 2010: Urban Issues Forum
Martin Luther King Leadership Development Institute
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
5:45 A Election Outlook: A Political Conversation
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
7:40 A Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
8:35 A Election 2010: Philadelphia Labor Get Out the Vote Rally
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
Gov. Ed Rendell
9:15 A Election 2010 Outlook
Terry Madonna, Director of Center for Politics & Public Affairs for Franklin & Marshall College
9:30 A Election 2010: Pine Grove, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
10:15 A Election 2010: Education Forum
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
11:15 A Election 2010: Scranton, PA Rally
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
11:30 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
11:40 A Election 2010: 3rd Congressional Debate
Allegheny College in Meadville, PA
12:50 P Post Debate Interviews
Kathy Dahlkemper, Democrat for Congress, 3rd District
Mike Kelly, Republican for Congress, 3rd District
1:00 P Election 2010 Outlook
Terry Madonna, Director of Center for Politics & Public Affairs for Franklin & Marshall College
1:15 P Election 2010 Outlook
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
1:30 P Election 2010: 10th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
2:30 P Election 2010: 11th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
3:30 P Election 2010: 7th Congressional Debate
Neumann University in Aston, PA
4:40 P Post Debate Interviews
Bryan Lentz, Democrat for Congress, 7th District
Pat Meehan, Republican for Congress, 7th District
Jim Schneller, Independent for Congress, 7th District
5:00 P On the Road: 7th Congressional District (LIVE)
Cheyney University in Cheyney, PA
6:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Mark Singel, The Winter Group
John Barley, Versant Strategies
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Jim Burn. Democratic State Committee Chair
Rep. Mike Turzai, R-House Minority Whip
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
8:00 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Patrick Murphy, Democrat for Congress, 8th District
8:30 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Mike Fitzpatrick, Republican for Congress, 8th District
9:00 P On the Road: 8th Congressional District (LIVE)
Ann's Choice in Warminster, PA
10:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
David LaTorre, LaTorre Communications
Fred Clark, Clark Resources
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
11:00 P Election 2010: 8th Congressional Debate
Bucks County Community College and Bucks County Courier Times
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2010
12:15 A Post Debate Interviews
Mike Fitzpatrick, Republican for Congress, 8th Debate
12:20 A Election 2010: Philadelphia Labor Get Out the Vote Rally
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
Gov. Ed Rendell
4:00 A On the Road: 7th Congressional District
Cheyney University in Cheyney, PA
5:00 A On the Road: 8th Congressional District
Ann's Choice in Warminster, PA
6:00 A PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (Recorded)
Jim Burn. Democratic State Committee Chair
Rep. Mike Turzai, R-House Minority Whip
7:00 A PCN Tours Schulmerich Bells
Sellersville, PA
8:00 A PA Books "The Face of Decline"
Author: Thomas Dublin
9:00 A Pennsylvania German Groundhog Lodges
PA Humanities Council
William Donner
National Energy Marketers Association Conference
10:00 A Utility Power Choice in PA
11:15 A Utility Power Regulation in Ohio
12:10 P Gov. Ed Rendell
12:30 P Consumer Education and Energy Choice
2:00 P Smart Grid Utility Usage
- - - - - - - - - -
5:45 P Weather World
6:00 P PCN Tours Schulmerich Bells
Sellersville, PA
7:00 P Pennsylvania German Groundhog Lodges
PA Humanities Council
William Donner
8:00 P Election 2010 (LIVE)
Alan Novak, President of Novak Strategic Advisors
Don Cunningham, Lehigh County Executive
Interviews from Campaign Headquarters
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
9:00 P Election 2010 (LIVE)
Mark Singel, Managing Partner of The Winter Group
John Barley, CEO of Versant Strategies
Interviews and Speeches from Campaign Headquarters
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
10:00 P Election 2010 (LIVE)
Interviews and Speeches from Campaign Headquarters
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
1:00 A Election 2010: Open Phones (LIVE)
Call 1-877-PA6-5001 with your comments and reactions
http://pcntv.com/
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2010
2:00 P On the Road: 10th Congressional District (LIVE)
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA
3:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Kevin Shivers, State Director of National Federation of Independent Business
Larry Ceisler, Ceisler Media & Issues Advocacy
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
4:00 P Election 2010: 10th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
4:55 P Post Debate Interviews
Chris Carney, Democrat for Congress, 10th District
Thomas Marino, Republican for Congress, 10th District
5:05 P Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
6:00 P On the Road: 11th Congressional District (LIVE)
Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA
7:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Ray Zaborney, State Street Strategies
Tony May, Triad Strategies
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:45 P Election 2010: 11th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
8:40 P Post Debate Interviews
Paul Kanjorski, Democrat for Congress, 11th District
Lou Barletta, Republican for Congress, 11th District
9:00 P On the Road: 15th Congressional District (LIVE)
Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA
10:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Charlie Gerow, Quantum Communications
Vincent Carocci, Former Press Secretary to Gov. Robert Casey
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
11:00 P Election 2010: 15th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WFMZ-TV in Allentown, PA
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2010
12:00 A Post Debate Interviews
Charlie Dent, Republican for Congress, 15th District
John Callahan, Democrat for Congress, 15th District
Jake Towne, Independent for Congress, 15th District
12:15 A Election 2010: Penn State University Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
1:00 A On the Road: 10th Congressional District
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA
2:00 A On the Road: 11th Congressional District
Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA
3:00 A On the Road: 15th Congressional District
Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA
4:00 A Election 2010: Urban Issues Forum
Martin Luther King Leadership Development Institute
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
5:45 A Election Outlook: A Political Conversation
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
7:40 A Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
8:35 A Election 2010: Philadelphia Labor Get Out the Vote Rally
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
Gov. Ed Rendell
9:15 A Election 2010 Outlook
Terry Madonna, Director of Center for Politics & Public Affairs for Franklin & Marshall College
9:30 A Election 2010: Pine Grove, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
10:15 A Election 2010: Education Forum
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
11:15 A Election 2010: Scranton, PA Rally
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
11:30 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
11:40 A Election 2010: 3rd Congressional Debate
Allegheny College in Meadville, PA
12:50 P Post Debate Interviews
Kathy Dahlkemper, Democrat for Congress, 3rd District
Mike Kelly, Republican for Congress, 3rd District
1:00 P Election 2010 Outlook
Terry Madonna, Director of Center for Politics & Public Affairs for Franklin & Marshall College
1:15 P Election 2010 Outlook
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
1:30 P Election 2010: 10th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
2:30 P Election 2010: 11th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
3:30 P Election 2010: 7th Congressional Debate
Neumann University in Aston, PA
4:40 P Post Debate Interviews
Bryan Lentz, Democrat for Congress, 7th District
Pat Meehan, Republican for Congress, 7th District
Jim Schneller, Independent for Congress, 7th District
5:00 P On the Road: 7th Congressional District (LIVE)
Cheyney University in Cheyney, PA
6:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Mark Singel, The Winter Group
John Barley, Versant Strategies
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Jim Burn. Democratic State Committee Chair
Rep. Mike Turzai, R-House Minority Whip
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
8:00 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Patrick Murphy, Democrat for Congress, 8th District
8:30 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Mike Fitzpatrick, Republican for Congress, 8th District
9:00 P On the Road: 8th Congressional District (LIVE)
Ann's Choice in Warminster, PA
10:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
David LaTorre, LaTorre Communications
Fred Clark, Clark Resources
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
11:00 P Election 2010: 8th Congressional Debate
Bucks County Community College and Bucks County Courier Times
TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 2010
12:15 A Post Debate Interviews
Mike Fitzpatrick, Republican for Congress, 8th Debate
12:20 A Election 2010: Philadelphia Labor Get Out the Vote Rally
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
Gov. Ed Rendell
4:00 A On the Road: 7th Congressional District
Cheyney University in Cheyney, PA
5:00 A On the Road: 8th Congressional District
Ann's Choice in Warminster, PA
6:00 A PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (Recorded)
Jim Burn. Democratic State Committee Chair
Rep. Mike Turzai, R-House Minority Whip
7:00 A PCN Tours Schulmerich Bells
Sellersville, PA
8:00 A PA Books "The Face of Decline"
Author: Thomas Dublin
9:00 A Pennsylvania German Groundhog Lodges
PA Humanities Council
William Donner
National Energy Marketers Association Conference
10:00 A Utility Power Choice in PA
11:15 A Utility Power Regulation in Ohio
12:10 P Gov. Ed Rendell
12:30 P Consumer Education and Energy Choice
2:00 P Smart Grid Utility Usage
- - - - - - - - - -
5:45 P Weather World
6:00 P PCN Tours Schulmerich Bells
Sellersville, PA
7:00 P Pennsylvania German Groundhog Lodges
PA Humanities Council
William Donner
8:00 P Election 2010 (LIVE)
Alan Novak, President of Novak Strategic Advisors
Don Cunningham, Lehigh County Executive
Interviews from Campaign Headquarters
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
9:00 P Election 2010 (LIVE)
Mark Singel, Managing Partner of The Winter Group
John Barley, CEO of Versant Strategies
Interviews and Speeches from Campaign Headquarters
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
10:00 P Election 2010 (LIVE)
Interviews and Speeches from Campaign Headquarters
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
1:00 A Election 2010: Open Phones (LIVE)
Call 1-877-PA6-5001 with your comments and reactions
http://pcntv.com/
Penn State-Northwestern kickoff set for 3:30 p.m.
FROM THE MORNING CALL
Penn State coach Joe Paterno goes for career win No. 400 next week against Northwestern. The game will kick off at 3:30 p.m. Saturday on ABC.
The Lions improved to 5-3 on Saturday night with a 41-31 victory over Michigan. The win moved Paterno's career record to 399-123-3. He can become just the third football coach in NCAA history, and first in the former Division I, to reach 400 career victories.
With a win, Paterno will join current St. John's (Minn.) coach John Gagliardi and former Grambling coach Eddie Robinson on the 400-victory list. Gagliardi, in his 62nd year of coaching, has 476 victories. Robinson finished his career with 408.
http://www.mcall.com/sports/mc-psu-northwestern-time-20101031,0,609503.story
Penn State coach Joe Paterno goes for career win No. 400 next week against Northwestern. The game will kick off at 3:30 p.m. Saturday on ABC.
The Lions improved to 5-3 on Saturday night with a 41-31 victory over Michigan. The win moved Paterno's career record to 399-123-3. He can become just the third football coach in NCAA history, and first in the former Division I, to reach 400 career victories.
With a win, Paterno will join current St. John's (Minn.) coach John Gagliardi and former Grambling coach Eddie Robinson on the 400-victory list. Gagliardi, in his 62nd year of coaching, has 476 victories. Robinson finished his career with 408.
http://www.mcall.com/sports/mc-psu-northwestern-time-20101031,0,609503.story
The 2nd Annual Blue Eagle Wrestling Casino Night
The Nazareth Blue Eagle Booster Club Presents:
The 2nd Annual Blue Eagle Wrestling Casino Night
When: Saturday, November 20th 2010
Where: Tatamy Fire Hall
Time: doors open at 6:00 p.m.
Price: $25.00 per person which includes: food, beer, and 2500 chips.
You can secure your tickets from any wrestler, coach, or wrestling parent.
(we had an absolute blast last year!)
Go Blue Eagle Wrestling Fundraising!
FROM MRS CROWELL
The 2nd Annual Blue Eagle Wrestling Casino Night
When: Saturday, November 20th 2010
Where: Tatamy Fire Hall
Time: doors open at 6:00 p.m.
Price: $25.00 per person which includes: food, beer, and 2500 chips.
You can secure your tickets from any wrestler, coach, or wrestling parent.
(we had an absolute blast last year!)
Go Blue Eagle Wrestling Fundraising!
FROM MRS CROWELL
Blue Eagle Families, Fans, and Supporters
Blue Eagle Families, Fans, and Supporters
Please contact Sean or Margie Horan if you can donate or contact a business for a donation of a gift card. They have contacted sponsors, but still could use more prizes. Anything would be great!
Examples:
gift certificate for a pizza
gift card(s) to a local restaurant, Wal-Mart, Kohls, Home Depot, a sporting goods store, a local mall, TJ Maxx, etc.
It doesn't have to be a huge amount.
Sean 610 248 9736
Margie 610 417 3180
Thanks to the Horans for organizing this special night!
--
Jackie Crowell
EAMS 5/6
PSSA Math
Honors Pre-Algebra
Please contact Sean or Margie Horan if you can donate or contact a business for a donation of a gift card. They have contacted sponsors, but still could use more prizes. Anything would be great!
Examples:
gift certificate for a pizza
gift card(s) to a local restaurant, Wal-Mart, Kohls, Home Depot, a sporting goods store, a local mall, TJ Maxx, etc.
It doesn't have to be a huge amount.
Sean 610 248 9736
Margie 610 417 3180
Thanks to the Horans for organizing this special night!
--
Jackie Crowell
EAMS 5/6
PSSA Math
Honors Pre-Algebra
IN NEED!
Nazareth Blue Eagle Families and Fans
Hi everyone! We are in need of food donations in the form of covered dishes for Casino Night. Please call Margie or Sean Horan as soon as possible so they have an idea on how to feed everyone that night. As of today, only one person has responded. The more donations, the less out-of-pocket expenses so the proceeds can go directly to the wrestling club for our boys.
Also, if you can let them know of any prizes you donate, that would be terrific. (see my last e mail for prize ideas).
As always, thanks so much for supporting this great cause which directly benefits our wrestlers.
Margie 610 248 9736
Sean 610 417 3180
(no e mails please) :)
Go Blue Eagles Wrestling fundraising!
This is from Mrs Crowell
Hi everyone! We are in need of food donations in the form of covered dishes for Casino Night. Please call Margie or Sean Horan as soon as possible so they have an idea on how to feed everyone that night. As of today, only one person has responded. The more donations, the less out-of-pocket expenses so the proceeds can go directly to the wrestling club for our boys.
Also, if you can let them know of any prizes you donate, that would be terrific. (see my last e mail for prize ideas).
As always, thanks so much for supporting this great cause which directly benefits our wrestlers.
Margie 610 248 9736
Sean 610 417 3180
(no e mails please) :)
Go Blue Eagles Wrestling fundraising!
This is from Mrs Crowell
KEITH GROLLER'S NFL Picks Week 8
FROM KEITH GROLLER
It's finally Halloween.
I am not sure when Halloween became a month-long celebration like Christmas, but the barrage of decorations, parades, Trick-or-Treat nights and parties comes to an end tonight.
And then we'll start seeing Christmas decorations all over the place come Monday morning.
For Halloween, I'd like to look like a smart guy with my NFL picks or maybe a smiling, big winner at the sports books in Vegas.
That would be a real nice disguise for someone who continues to be amazed at how bad his NFL picks are week after week.
I was just 7-7 outright last week, 10-4 on the over/under numbers, but a ridiculous 4-10 against the spread.
For the season, I am 53-50 outright, 46-52-5 against the spread, 55-47-1 on the over/under numbers. All lousy, like virtually everybody in the NFC.
At least my World Series pick of Giants in 7 looks like it still has a chance.
Here we go with the Week 8 selections:
At London (why do we need to play games overseas?) San Francisco (-2.5) 30, Denver 20 -- over-41
DALLAS (-6.5) 23, Jacksonville 14 --- under 43.5
DETROIT (-2.5) 24, Washington 19 -- under 44.5
NY JETS (-6) 26, Green Bay 21 -- over 42
Carolina (+2.5) 20, ST. LOUIS 16 --- under 37
Miami (+1) 30, CINCINNATI 20 -- over 44
KC CHIEFS (-7) 24, Buffalo 19 -- under 45
SAN DIEGO (-4.5) 31, Tennessee 17 -- over 44.5
ARIZONA (-4.5) 20, Tampa Bay 17 -- under 39.5
Seattle (+2.5) 21, OAKLAND 17 -- under-42
NEW ENGLAND (-5,5) 24, Minnesota 17 -- under 44
SUNDAY NIGHT
Pittsburgh (+1.5) 23, NEW ORLEANS 20 -- under 44.5
MONDAY NIGHT
INDIANAPOLIS (-5.5) 30, Houston 16 -- under 51
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/
It's finally Halloween.
I am not sure when Halloween became a month-long celebration like Christmas, but the barrage of decorations, parades, Trick-or-Treat nights and parties comes to an end tonight.
And then we'll start seeing Christmas decorations all over the place come Monday morning.
For Halloween, I'd like to look like a smart guy with my NFL picks or maybe a smiling, big winner at the sports books in Vegas.
That would be a real nice disguise for someone who continues to be amazed at how bad his NFL picks are week after week.
I was just 7-7 outright last week, 10-4 on the over/under numbers, but a ridiculous 4-10 against the spread.
For the season, I am 53-50 outright, 46-52-5 against the spread, 55-47-1 on the over/under numbers. All lousy, like virtually everybody in the NFC.
At least my World Series pick of Giants in 7 looks like it still has a chance.
Here we go with the Week 8 selections:
At London (why do we need to play games overseas?) San Francisco (-2.5) 30, Denver 20 -- over-41
DALLAS (-6.5) 23, Jacksonville 14 --- under 43.5
DETROIT (-2.5) 24, Washington 19 -- under 44.5
NY JETS (-6) 26, Green Bay 21 -- over 42
Carolina (+2.5) 20, ST. LOUIS 16 --- under 37
Miami (+1) 30, CINCINNATI 20 -- over 44
KC CHIEFS (-7) 24, Buffalo 19 -- under 45
SAN DIEGO (-4.5) 31, Tennessee 17 -- over 44.5
ARIZONA (-4.5) 20, Tampa Bay 17 -- under 39.5
Seattle (+2.5) 21, OAKLAND 17 -- under-42
NEW ENGLAND (-5,5) 24, Minnesota 17 -- under 44
SUNDAY NIGHT
Pittsburgh (+1.5) 23, NEW ORLEANS 20 -- under 44.5
MONDAY NIGHT
INDIANAPOLIS (-5.5) 30, Houston 16 -- under 51
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/
Congrats to the Nazareth Area Marching Band as they are 2010 northern state champions!
BREAKING NEWS:
Congrats to the Nazareth Area Marching Band as they are 2010 northern state champions!
Congrats to the Nazareth Area Marching Band as they are 2010 northern state champions!
TRICK AND TREAT TONIGHT!
2010 TRICK AND TREAT DATES:
Alburtis: 6-8 p.m..
Allen Township: 6-8 p.m.
Bangor: 2-5 p.m.
Easton: 6-8 p.m.
Lower Macungie Township: 6-9 p.m.
Lower Mount Bethel: 4-6 p.m.
Lower Nazareth: 6-8 p.m.
Macungie: 6-8 p.m.
Nazareth: 6-8 p.m.
Nesquehoning: 6-8 p.m.
Northampton: 6-8 p.m.
Palmer Township: 6-8 p.m.
Pen Argyl: 2-5 p.m.
Perkasie: 6-9 p.m.
Phillipsburg: 5-8 p.m.
Polk Township: 5-8 p.m.
Quakertown: 6-9 p.m.
Roseto: 2-5 p.m.
Springfield Township: 6-8 p.m.
Stockertown: 6-8 p.m.
Tamaqua: 6-8 p.m.
Topton: 6-8 p.m.
Towamensing Township: 6-8 p.m.
Upper Milford: 6-8 p.m.
Upper Nazareth Township: 6-8 p.m.
Wilson: 6-8 p.m.
Williams Township: 6-8 p.m.
Wind Gap: 2-4 p.m.
Wilson Borough: 6-8 p.m.
Alburtis: 6-8 p.m..
Allen Township: 6-8 p.m.
Bangor: 2-5 p.m.
Easton: 6-8 p.m.
Lower Macungie Township: 6-9 p.m.
Lower Mount Bethel: 4-6 p.m.
Lower Nazareth: 6-8 p.m.
Macungie: 6-8 p.m.
Nazareth: 6-8 p.m.
Nesquehoning: 6-8 p.m.
Northampton: 6-8 p.m.
Palmer Township: 6-8 p.m.
Pen Argyl: 2-5 p.m.
Perkasie: 6-9 p.m.
Phillipsburg: 5-8 p.m.
Polk Township: 5-8 p.m.
Quakertown: 6-9 p.m.
Roseto: 2-5 p.m.
Springfield Township: 6-8 p.m.
Stockertown: 6-8 p.m.
Tamaqua: 6-8 p.m.
Topton: 6-8 p.m.
Towamensing Township: 6-8 p.m.
Upper Milford: 6-8 p.m.
Upper Nazareth Township: 6-8 p.m.
Wilson: 6-8 p.m.
Williams Township: 6-8 p.m.
Wind Gap: 2-4 p.m.
Wilson Borough: 6-8 p.m.
HOLLOWEEN PARADES
HALLOWEEN PARADES
Alburtis Park: 4 p.m.
Allentown: 2 p.m. Begins at Allentown Fairgrounds, ends at Seventh and Hamilton streets
Bethlehem: 2 p.m. Begins on Broad Street and 13th Avenue and ends under Hill to Hill Bridge.
Easton- Phillipsburg: 1:30 p.m. Begins at South Main Street, Phillispburg and ends at Centre Square, Easton.
Alburtis Park: 4 p.m.
Allentown: 2 p.m. Begins at Allentown Fairgrounds, ends at Seventh and Hamilton streets
Bethlehem: 2 p.m. Begins on Broad Street and 13th Avenue and ends under Hill to Hill Bridge.
Easton- Phillipsburg: 1:30 p.m. Begins at South Main Street, Phillispburg and ends at Centre Square, Easton.
Sunday!
Monday November 1, 2010
Welcome to November!
Another Month!
Thanksgiving Month!
Turkey!!!
What a great weekend!
Nazareth beat Whitehall Friday night!
BIG UPSET Win!
I Was dissapointed in the crowd.
Not many Whitehall people
We had more than Whitehall!
Now we have a Home Game November 12th!
I Get to collect tickets again!
Can't wait!!!
Get my FLU Shot this morning.
I Hope these nurses give me the right one!
I Don't trust this Doctor Office.
JV Football tonight!
It got cold again now.
That warm weather last week was too good to be true!
Was with Tyler Grady at the Art Center Saturday night!
He is a awesome guy!
Red Rooster Band this Saturday!!
How are you?
How was your weekend?
What did you do all weekend?
Anything fun?
Did you hand out Candy for Trick and Treat?
I Did Sunday night!
We had a large number of kids!!
It was cold sitting out there!
I Also watched the Allentown and Bethlehem Holloween Parades Sunday on RCN4!
Are you watching the World Series?
I Think Texas will make a comeback!!!!
GO Texas!
Congrats to Lafayette Football on their 2nd win of 2010 Saturday!!
They beat Bucknell!
Lehigh Football beat Colgate Saturday too!!
Way to go Lehigh!!!
Penn State won Saturday night too!!
I am happy to report Pam Amato is back home and doing better!
I Also happy to say Brenda Fockler the Dorm sup at HGA Is back at work!
I was her bodyguard, always walked her out to her silver jeep, even at 7am in
the morning I Went to B Dorm to help her out!!!
Have to get new batteries for My Microphone this week!
These are dying.
Remember to check out my BLOG For all the lastest updates!
Here is the link:
http://nazoeagle.blogspot.com/
Election Day Tuesday!
Are you ready?
Are you voting?
Who are you voting for?
I Want Tom Corbett to be the new governor!
He is a great guy!
Do you like him?
I Like watching Election Night TV Coverage on TV!
PA HOUSE Returns next Monday November 8th!
Friday at 1pm did my Radio Show and at 6pm went to the Nazareth at Whitehall
Football Game and at 11pm did the BIG TICKET on WFMZ!
Saturday at 9am listened to Keith Groller on 1470am and at 1pm Announced
Lafayette Football on RCN4,TV60 And at 7pm was at the Art Center to see Tyler
Grady and at 10pm anchored news on CW57.
Sunday at 11am did a Eagles Show on CBS3 And at 1pm Announced Field Hockey
on BIG TEN Network and at 6pm-8pm handed out Candy to Kids and at 10pm anchored
news on CW57.
UPCOMMING EVENTS AT THE NAZARETH ART CENTER:
November 5, 2010 | 8:00 - 9:30 p.m.
Inky Glass, Blues for the Lost Soul. Inky is a pinch of Leonard Cohen, a twist
of Bessie Smith, a splash of Lucinda Williams, Shaken with surprise. Sweet as
southern lemonade in one song, and bitter as a bat cave in the next. Inky's
sound is smoky, opaque, and to the bones blue. This New York City
singer/songwriter will perform songs from her debut CD "Miss Fit". Free
Admission.
The Little Red Rooster Blues Band
November 6, 2010 | 8:00 - 10:00 p.m.
The Little Red Rooster Blues Band returns to perform their high energy sound
through interpretations of traditional Chicago Blues and West Coast Jump Blues.
Their performance mission is simple: To entertain and leave them hungry for
more. http://www.littleredrooster.com/
Watch them perform Tellin' Lies from their CD "The Kids Love Us" during their
last show at the Center.
Schedule:
Monday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am FLU SHOT
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
1pm-2pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4:30pm-7pm DIANA
NO ANNOUNCING
OFF TONIGHT
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
Tuesday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
1pm-2pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4pm-6pm DIANA
7pm Announce 76ers Basketball on Comcast
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
Wednesday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
1pm-2pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4pm-6pm DIANA
7pm Announce Volleyball on BIG TEN Network
7pm Announce 76ers Basketball on Comcast
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
Thursday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
1pm-2pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4pm-6pm DIANA
5pm HS Soccer on RCN4
9:30pm HS Soccer on RCN4
NO ANNOUNCING
OFF TONIGHT
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
Friday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
12:30pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230(SPECIAL TIME AND ONLY A 30 MINUTE SHOW TODAY)
1pm Announce Field Hockey on BIG TEN NETWORK
3pm Announce Field Hockey on BIG TEN NETWORK
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4pm-6pm DIANA
6pm AT THE NAZARETH AT NORTHAMPTON FOOTBALL GAME
7pm Announce 76ers Basketball on Comcast
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
11pm Announce BIG TICKET ON WFMZ
Saturday:
7pm-10pm AT THE NAZARETH ARTS CENTER COLLECTING TICKETS (RED ROOSTER
BAND PERFORMING)
8:30-9:30am DIANA
9-11am KEITH GROLLER ON 1470AM
10am 69 Sports Saturday on WEEX 1230
NOON-5PM NED RICHARDS ON WGPA 1100
1pm Announce Lafayette at Bucknell Football on RCN4 AND TV60
5pm-7pm Dennis Christman on WGPA 1100
7pm-10pm AT THE NAZARETH ARTS CENTER COLLECTING TICKETS (RED ROOSTER
BAND PERFORMING)
10pm Anchor 10pm news on CW57
Sunday:
9:30am-NOON Jolly Joe Timmer on 1100am WGPA
9am-Noon John Richetta on 1470 THE FOX
11am Announce Eagles Pregame on CBS3
12-3pm Jeff Dean on 1100am WGPA
NOON Announce 76ers Basketball on Comcast
3pm Announce Field Hockey on BIG TEN NETWORK
7:30pm SF GIANTS AT TEXAS WORLD SERIES GAME 4 ON FOX
10pm Anchor 10pm news on CW57
RIP:
Dale Earenhardt SR.
Davey Allison
COURTNEY DIACONT
GRANDMA WEAVER
JAMIE LINTZ
JOHN VUKOVCICH
KRISTEN
BENNY PARSONS
DEREK KEHOE
JOSH HANCOCK
Joe Schneider
Frank Klepeisz
Mary Mutchler
Jene Flick
Frank Jenny
Jennifer Jacksits
Donald Williams
John Marzano
Andrew Millheim
Harold Rrenyold
Todd Rothrock
Wayne Grube
Catherine Baker Knoll
Josh Booth
Francesco Tolerico
Craig Borst
George Williams
Deborah Ed
Phil Newbaker
Harry Kalas
Dan Ozark
Chuck Daly
Brenton Krouse
Joshua Miller
Gary Pappa
Farrah Facett
Irv Homer
Michael Jackson
Steve Mcnair
Paul Marcinkowski
Walt Cronkite
Henry Tomkowski (Who raised a great and fun Daughter)
Tom Partridge
Angelica Fox
Melissa Kinsella
Joey Beers
Ben Yorgy
Brooke Stephens
Ryan Zawada
Frank Silfries
Pumpkin Groller
Al Alberts
Morgan Mcginis
Jason Gilligan
Harriet Lindenmoyer
Barbara Johnson
Chris Henry
Oral Roberts
Patti Heffner
Britney Murphy
Glen W. Bell Jr
Vince Heinlein
Heather Miller
John Murtha
Julio Rivera
Aaaron Groff
Jack Lapos
Tom Ochs
Mario Donnagelo
Sally Murphy
Owens Thomas
Ernie Harwell
Robin Roberts
Luke Hahn
Bob Shephard
Michael Yakemik
Donald Fritz
George Steinbrenner
Teko Johnson
Kiski
FROM ROYANN VASO REGARDING THE DREAM COME TRUE TELETHON:
It is our 25th Anniversary of the Telethon this year. This is our largest fund
raiser. We are looking to tape interviews of families about their dreams.
Whether your dream was this year or 20 years ago we would love to have you
interviewed. We can schedule tapings more or less at your convenience. Please
let me know if you are interested.
Rayann Vasko
Dream Come True
Executive Director
IMPORTANT WRESTLING INFORMATION FROM COACH CROWELL:
The Nazareth Blue Eagle Booster Club Presents:
The 2nd Annual Blue Eagle Wrestling Casino Night
When: Saturday, November 20th 2010
Where: Tatamy Fire Hall
Time: doors open at 6:00 p.m.
Price: $25.00 per person which includes: food, beer, and 2500 chips.
You can secure your tickets from any wrestler, coach, or wrestling parent.
(we had an absolute blast last year!)
Go Blue Eagle Wrestling Fundraising!
Blue Eagle Families, Fans, and Supporters
Please contact Sean or Margie Horan if you can donate or contact a business for
a donation of a gift card. They have contacted sponsors, but still could use
more prizes. Anything would be great!
Examples:
gift certificate for a pizza
gift card(s) to a local restaurant, Wal-Mart, Kohls, Home Depot, a sporting
goods store, a local mall, TJ Maxx, etc.
It doesn't have to be a huge amount.
Sean 610 248 9736
Margie 610 417 3180
Thanks to the Horans for organizing this special night!
SHOUT OUT TO MY J-TOWN ATTENDANT PAM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
HGA Made a big mistake letting PAM GO like that.
Pam would never hurt anybody!
She is the most awesome attendent ever!!!
President of the Alan Davis, Gary Laubach, Dream Kids and Keith Groller, Ray
Kaminski Fan Clubs!
Keep It real!
Thanks for your Time!
CHECK OUT THE NAZARETH'S ART CENTER WEBSITE AND ROSS NUNAMAKER RUNS THE CENTER!
His Website for the Arts Center:
http://www.thenunamakergroup.com/projects/market/nazareth-center-for-the-arts/
I Highly suggest you check out one of his upcoming events at the Arts Center!
SEE YOU WEDNESDAY!!!!!!!!!!!!
Welcome to November!
Another Month!
Thanksgiving Month!
Turkey!!!
What a great weekend!
Nazareth beat Whitehall Friday night!
BIG UPSET Win!
I Was dissapointed in the crowd.
Not many Whitehall people
We had more than Whitehall!
Now we have a Home Game November 12th!
I Get to collect tickets again!
Can't wait!!!
Get my FLU Shot this morning.
I Hope these nurses give me the right one!
I Don't trust this Doctor Office.
JV Football tonight!
It got cold again now.
That warm weather last week was too good to be true!
Was with Tyler Grady at the Art Center Saturday night!
He is a awesome guy!
Red Rooster Band this Saturday!!
How are you?
How was your weekend?
What did you do all weekend?
Anything fun?
Did you hand out Candy for Trick and Treat?
I Did Sunday night!
We had a large number of kids!!
It was cold sitting out there!
I Also watched the Allentown and Bethlehem Holloween Parades Sunday on RCN4!
Are you watching the World Series?
I Think Texas will make a comeback!!!!
GO Texas!
Congrats to Lafayette Football on their 2nd win of 2010 Saturday!!
They beat Bucknell!
Lehigh Football beat Colgate Saturday too!!
Way to go Lehigh!!!
Penn State won Saturday night too!!
I am happy to report Pam Amato is back home and doing better!
I Also happy to say Brenda Fockler the Dorm sup at HGA Is back at work!
I was her bodyguard, always walked her out to her silver jeep, even at 7am in
the morning I Went to B Dorm to help her out!!!
Have to get new batteries for My Microphone this week!
These are dying.
Remember to check out my BLOG For all the lastest updates!
Here is the link:
http://nazoeagle.blogspot.com/
Election Day Tuesday!
Are you ready?
Are you voting?
Who are you voting for?
I Want Tom Corbett to be the new governor!
He is a great guy!
Do you like him?
I Like watching Election Night TV Coverage on TV!
PA HOUSE Returns next Monday November 8th!
Friday at 1pm did my Radio Show and at 6pm went to the Nazareth at Whitehall
Football Game and at 11pm did the BIG TICKET on WFMZ!
Saturday at 9am listened to Keith Groller on 1470am and at 1pm Announced
Lafayette Football on RCN4,TV60 And at 7pm was at the Art Center to see Tyler
Grady and at 10pm anchored news on CW57.
Sunday at 11am did a Eagles Show on CBS3 And at 1pm Announced Field Hockey
on BIG TEN Network and at 6pm-8pm handed out Candy to Kids and at 10pm anchored
news on CW57.
UPCOMMING EVENTS AT THE NAZARETH ART CENTER:
November 5, 2010 | 8:00 - 9:30 p.m.
Inky Glass, Blues for the Lost Soul. Inky is a pinch of Leonard Cohen, a twist
of Bessie Smith, a splash of Lucinda Williams, Shaken with surprise. Sweet as
southern lemonade in one song, and bitter as a bat cave in the next. Inky's
sound is smoky, opaque, and to the bones blue. This New York City
singer/songwriter will perform songs from her debut CD "Miss Fit". Free
Admission.
The Little Red Rooster Blues Band
November 6, 2010 | 8:00 - 10:00 p.m.
The Little Red Rooster Blues Band returns to perform their high energy sound
through interpretations of traditional Chicago Blues and West Coast Jump Blues.
Their performance mission is simple: To entertain and leave them hungry for
more. http://www.littleredrooster.com/
Watch them perform Tellin' Lies from their CD "The Kids Love Us" during their
last show at the Center.
Schedule:
Monday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am FLU SHOT
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
1pm-2pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4:30pm-7pm DIANA
NO ANNOUNCING
OFF TONIGHT
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
Tuesday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
1pm-2pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4pm-6pm DIANA
7pm Announce 76ers Basketball on Comcast
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
Wednesday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
1pm-2pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4pm-6pm DIANA
7pm Announce Volleyball on BIG TEN Network
7pm Announce 76ers Basketball on Comcast
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
Thursday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
1pm-2pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4pm-6pm DIANA
5pm HS Soccer on RCN4
9:30pm HS Soccer on RCN4
NO ANNOUNCING
OFF TONIGHT
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
Friday:
8:30am-12:30pm DIANA
10am-3pm GLEN MAC AND ANTHONY GARGANO ON 610 WIP
12:30pm RADIO SHOW ON WEEX 1230(SPECIAL TIME AND ONLY A 30 MINUTE SHOW TODAY)
1pm Announce Field Hockey on BIG TEN NETWORK
3pm Announce Field Hockey on BIG TEN NETWORK
1pm-3pm Jody Mac and Brandon Tierney on 1050am NEW YORK
4pm-6:30pm HAPPY HOUR ON WEEX 1230
4pm-6pm DIANA
6pm AT THE NAZARETH AT NORTHAMPTON FOOTBALL GAME
7pm Announce 76ers Basketball on Comcast
10pm Anchor the news on CW57
11pm Announce BIG TICKET ON WFMZ
Saturday:
7pm-10pm AT THE NAZARETH ARTS CENTER COLLECTING TICKETS (RED ROOSTER
BAND PERFORMING)
8:30-9:30am DIANA
9-11am KEITH GROLLER ON 1470AM
10am 69 Sports Saturday on WEEX 1230
NOON-5PM NED RICHARDS ON WGPA 1100
1pm Announce Lafayette at Bucknell Football on RCN4 AND TV60
5pm-7pm Dennis Christman on WGPA 1100
7pm-10pm AT THE NAZARETH ARTS CENTER COLLECTING TICKETS (RED ROOSTER
BAND PERFORMING)
10pm Anchor 10pm news on CW57
Sunday:
9:30am-NOON Jolly Joe Timmer on 1100am WGPA
9am-Noon John Richetta on 1470 THE FOX
11am Announce Eagles Pregame on CBS3
12-3pm Jeff Dean on 1100am WGPA
NOON Announce 76ers Basketball on Comcast
3pm Announce Field Hockey on BIG TEN NETWORK
7:30pm SF GIANTS AT TEXAS WORLD SERIES GAME 4 ON FOX
10pm Anchor 10pm news on CW57
RIP:
Dale Earenhardt SR.
Davey Allison
COURTNEY DIACONT
GRANDMA WEAVER
JAMIE LINTZ
JOHN VUKOVCICH
KRISTEN
BENNY PARSONS
DEREK KEHOE
JOSH HANCOCK
Joe Schneider
Frank Klepeisz
Mary Mutchler
Jene Flick
Frank Jenny
Jennifer Jacksits
Donald Williams
John Marzano
Andrew Millheim
Harold Rrenyold
Todd Rothrock
Wayne Grube
Catherine Baker Knoll
Josh Booth
Francesco Tolerico
Craig Borst
George Williams
Deborah Ed
Phil Newbaker
Harry Kalas
Dan Ozark
Chuck Daly
Brenton Krouse
Joshua Miller
Gary Pappa
Farrah Facett
Irv Homer
Michael Jackson
Steve Mcnair
Paul Marcinkowski
Walt Cronkite
Henry Tomkowski (Who raised a great and fun Daughter)
Tom Partridge
Angelica Fox
Melissa Kinsella
Joey Beers
Ben Yorgy
Brooke Stephens
Ryan Zawada
Frank Silfries
Pumpkin Groller
Al Alberts
Morgan Mcginis
Jason Gilligan
Harriet Lindenmoyer
Barbara Johnson
Chris Henry
Oral Roberts
Patti Heffner
Britney Murphy
Glen W. Bell Jr
Vince Heinlein
Heather Miller
John Murtha
Julio Rivera
Aaaron Groff
Jack Lapos
Tom Ochs
Mario Donnagelo
Sally Murphy
Owens Thomas
Ernie Harwell
Robin Roberts
Luke Hahn
Bob Shephard
Michael Yakemik
Donald Fritz
George Steinbrenner
Teko Johnson
Kiski
FROM ROYANN VASO REGARDING THE DREAM COME TRUE TELETHON:
It is our 25th Anniversary of the Telethon this year. This is our largest fund
raiser. We are looking to tape interviews of families about their dreams.
Whether your dream was this year or 20 years ago we would love to have you
interviewed. We can schedule tapings more or less at your convenience. Please
let me know if you are interested.
Rayann Vasko
Dream Come True
Executive Director
IMPORTANT WRESTLING INFORMATION FROM COACH CROWELL:
The Nazareth Blue Eagle Booster Club Presents:
The 2nd Annual Blue Eagle Wrestling Casino Night
When: Saturday, November 20th 2010
Where: Tatamy Fire Hall
Time: doors open at 6:00 p.m.
Price: $25.00 per person which includes: food, beer, and 2500 chips.
You can secure your tickets from any wrestler, coach, or wrestling parent.
(we had an absolute blast last year!)
Go Blue Eagle Wrestling Fundraising!
Blue Eagle Families, Fans, and Supporters
Please contact Sean or Margie Horan if you can donate or contact a business for
a donation of a gift card. They have contacted sponsors, but still could use
more prizes. Anything would be great!
Examples:
gift certificate for a pizza
gift card(s) to a local restaurant, Wal-Mart, Kohls, Home Depot, a sporting
goods store, a local mall, TJ Maxx, etc.
It doesn't have to be a huge amount.
Sean 610 248 9736
Margie 610 417 3180
Thanks to the Horans for organizing this special night!
SHOUT OUT TO MY J-TOWN ATTENDANT PAM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
HGA Made a big mistake letting PAM GO like that.
Pam would never hurt anybody!
She is the most awesome attendent ever!!!
President of the Alan Davis, Gary Laubach, Dream Kids and Keith Groller, Ray
Kaminski Fan Clubs!
Keep It real!
Thanks for your Time!
CHECK OUT THE NAZARETH'S ART CENTER WEBSITE AND ROSS NUNAMAKER RUNS THE CENTER!
His Website for the Arts Center:
http://www.thenunamakergroup.com/projects/market/nazareth-center-for-the-arts/
I Highly suggest you check out one of his upcoming events at the Arts Center!
SEE YOU WEDNESDAY!!!!!!!!!!!!
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Moreland and Hamilton homer as Rangers beat Giants 4-2 in Game 3 and trail World Series 2-1
FROM THE MORNING CALL
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Back in Texas. Back in the World Series.
The Rangers, behind emerging October ace Colby Lewis, came home and threw themselves the biggest tailgate party of them all, beating San Francisco 4-2 on Saturday night and cutting the Giants' Series edge to 2-1.
Longhorns, Aggies, Horned Frogs — sorry. This was a night to celebrate baseball.
"We wanted to get back home. We felt comfortable here," Texas manager Ron Washington said. "We knew we could finally put a good game together, and we did."
Psyched by pep talks from former President George W. Bush and spurred by a heater from Nolan Ryan, the Rangers became the first team from Texas to win a Series game.
Rookie Mitch Moreland hit an early three-run homer, Josh Hamilton later launched a 426-foot shot and the Rangers posted a Series win that took the franchise 50 years to achieve.
Just in time, in fact, coming off two thumpings in San Francisco.
"We're still down one game, but it's shifted," Hamilton said.
Game 3 marked the first time the Series visited the Metroplex. On a college football weekend, the parking lots filled up early with flying pigskins, fine BBQ smoke and fans checking the scores of their alma maters.
But Lewis and the Rangers showed there was still a place in the Lone Star State for another sport, too. And they certainly brought more joy than the NFL's 1-5 Cowboys, whose gleaming stadium is just a few Hamilton-sized drives away.
"I was just really excited to come back home. I knew with these fans out here we had a definite advantage," Lewis said. "It was just a thing of comfortability."
Bush toured the Texas clubhouse before the game — previously a Rangers part-owner, he visited with individual players.
Then Big Tex himself jazzed the largest crowd in the history of Rangers Ballpark by cranking up for the ceremonial first toss. The Rangers' part-owner flung a 68 mph fastball — pretty swift for a 63-year-old guy wearing dress pants and a tie.
Lewis took over after that. He worked around solo home runs by Cody Ross — the fifth of the postseason for the NL championship series MVP — in the seventh inning and Andres Torres in the eighth. The Giants eventually brought the tying run to the plate, but reliever Darren O'Day retired Buster Posey to end the eighth.
Washington finally brought in Neftali Feliz, and the rocket-armed closer pitched a perfect ninth for his first save of the postseason. Washington was criticized in the first two games at San Francisco for leaving Feliz in the bullpen while the Giants broke away.
Feliz struck out two, cheered on by Ryan, Bush and their wives in the front row next to the Texas dugout. As fireworks exploded overhead and Texas swing music blared, Bush leaned over and kissed Ryan's wife, Ruth.
The Rangers looked more like themselves with Vladimir Guerrero back in the DH spot. The other Texas big bats chimed in, with Hamilton hitting his fifth home run of the postseason.
Moreland homered from the ninth spot in the lineup, connecting in the second for a 3-0 lead.
"It's a different league, and that's the American League," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. "Their guy got a big hit."
No team in World Series history has overcome a 3-0 deficit and now Texas won't have to try, either. Rangers starter Tommy Hunter, especially good at home, faces rookie Madison Bumgarner in Game 4 on Sunday night.
Lewis picked up where he left off in the AL championship series, where he finished off the defending champion Yankees in Game 6. He's 3-0 this postseason, all of his wins coming after a Texas loss.
Lewis allowed five hits in 7 2-3 innings and struck out six. He stopped a Giants team that had become the first NL team to score at least nine runs in back-to-back Series game.
"We needed a well-pitched job," Washington said.
Moreland, promoted to the majors in late July, won a tough at-bat against Jonathan Sanchez and homered on the ninth pitch.
"I knew I had a runner in scoring position, so he was going to try to pitch me tough and I fouled off some off speed stuff and just tried to battle back, and I got the fastball," Moreland said.
At a burly 6-foot-4, Lewis is built something like a fullback. Backed by Moreland's homer, he plowed through the Giants until the late innings.
"It obviously takes some wind out of your sails, but the game's still early right there. We have to keep battling and keep fighting. Colby wouldn't let us do that. He was pitching great," Ross said.
Lewis is a below-.500 pitcher for his career, not including the two seasons he recently spent pitching for Hiroshima in the Japan league. Despite a shaky record, he's known for this trait: He gets tougher in tight situations.
Lewis escaped a two-on jam in the first by getting Pat Burrell to fish for a breaking ball, and worked around a leadoff walk to Ross in the second.
The next time he got on the mound, he already had a nice cushion.
Nelson Cruz opened the Texas second with a double off the center-field wall and eighth-place hitter Bengie Molina drew a walk. It was trouble time for Sanchez — he owned the best hits-to-innings ratio in the NL this year, yet also led the league in walks and can unravel quickly.
Moreland hung in, fouling off four straight 2-2 pitches and barely getting a piece on a couple of them. He then took a smooth swing sent a liner far into the right-field seats for his first career home run against a left-hander.
It was the big hit the Rangers needed to get back into the Series. The crowd roared and Ryan stood up, thrust his right arm in the air and hollered.
Hamilton gave his boss another thrill in the fifth. A bit jumpy at the plate early in the game, the probable AL MVP patiently waited for his pitch and launched a drive deep into the lower deck in right-center field.
"I felt like tonight I just stayed square and covered the ball," he said.
Sanchez, who got just six outs against Philadelphia in his previous start, gave up four runs, six hits and three walks in 4 2-3 innings, raising his ERA to 4.05 in four postseason starts. He was replaced by Guillermo Mota, who had started warming up in the third.
Notes: Feliz, at 22, is the second-youngest pitcher to post a save in the World Series. The youngest was Bob Welch of the Dodgers at 21 in 1978. The previous second-youngest was Nolan Ryan with the Mets in 1969. ... The Rangers had lost 13 of their previous 14 games against the Giants. ... Texas teams were 0-6 in the Series until this game. The Houston Astros were swept by the Chicago White Sox in 2005.
http://www.mcall.com/news/breaking/sns-ap-bbo-world-series,0,5860686.story?page=2
ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) — Back in Texas. Back in the World Series.
The Rangers, behind emerging October ace Colby Lewis, came home and threw themselves the biggest tailgate party of them all, beating San Francisco 4-2 on Saturday night and cutting the Giants' Series edge to 2-1.
Longhorns, Aggies, Horned Frogs — sorry. This was a night to celebrate baseball.
"We wanted to get back home. We felt comfortable here," Texas manager Ron Washington said. "We knew we could finally put a good game together, and we did."
Psyched by pep talks from former President George W. Bush and spurred by a heater from Nolan Ryan, the Rangers became the first team from Texas to win a Series game.
Rookie Mitch Moreland hit an early three-run homer, Josh Hamilton later launched a 426-foot shot and the Rangers posted a Series win that took the franchise 50 years to achieve.
Just in time, in fact, coming off two thumpings in San Francisco.
"We're still down one game, but it's shifted," Hamilton said.
Game 3 marked the first time the Series visited the Metroplex. On a college football weekend, the parking lots filled up early with flying pigskins, fine BBQ smoke and fans checking the scores of their alma maters.
But Lewis and the Rangers showed there was still a place in the Lone Star State for another sport, too. And they certainly brought more joy than the NFL's 1-5 Cowboys, whose gleaming stadium is just a few Hamilton-sized drives away.
"I was just really excited to come back home. I knew with these fans out here we had a definite advantage," Lewis said. "It was just a thing of comfortability."
Bush toured the Texas clubhouse before the game — previously a Rangers part-owner, he visited with individual players.
Then Big Tex himself jazzed the largest crowd in the history of Rangers Ballpark by cranking up for the ceremonial first toss. The Rangers' part-owner flung a 68 mph fastball — pretty swift for a 63-year-old guy wearing dress pants and a tie.
Lewis took over after that. He worked around solo home runs by Cody Ross — the fifth of the postseason for the NL championship series MVP — in the seventh inning and Andres Torres in the eighth. The Giants eventually brought the tying run to the plate, but reliever Darren O'Day retired Buster Posey to end the eighth.
Washington finally brought in Neftali Feliz, and the rocket-armed closer pitched a perfect ninth for his first save of the postseason. Washington was criticized in the first two games at San Francisco for leaving Feliz in the bullpen while the Giants broke away.
Feliz struck out two, cheered on by Ryan, Bush and their wives in the front row next to the Texas dugout. As fireworks exploded overhead and Texas swing music blared, Bush leaned over and kissed Ryan's wife, Ruth.
The Rangers looked more like themselves with Vladimir Guerrero back in the DH spot. The other Texas big bats chimed in, with Hamilton hitting his fifth home run of the postseason.
Moreland homered from the ninth spot in the lineup, connecting in the second for a 3-0 lead.
"It's a different league, and that's the American League," Giants manager Bruce Bochy said. "Their guy got a big hit."
No team in World Series history has overcome a 3-0 deficit and now Texas won't have to try, either. Rangers starter Tommy Hunter, especially good at home, faces rookie Madison Bumgarner in Game 4 on Sunday night.
Lewis picked up where he left off in the AL championship series, where he finished off the defending champion Yankees in Game 6. He's 3-0 this postseason, all of his wins coming after a Texas loss.
Lewis allowed five hits in 7 2-3 innings and struck out six. He stopped a Giants team that had become the first NL team to score at least nine runs in back-to-back Series game.
"We needed a well-pitched job," Washington said.
Moreland, promoted to the majors in late July, won a tough at-bat against Jonathan Sanchez and homered on the ninth pitch.
"I knew I had a runner in scoring position, so he was going to try to pitch me tough and I fouled off some off speed stuff and just tried to battle back, and I got the fastball," Moreland said.
At a burly 6-foot-4, Lewis is built something like a fullback. Backed by Moreland's homer, he plowed through the Giants until the late innings.
"It obviously takes some wind out of your sails, but the game's still early right there. We have to keep battling and keep fighting. Colby wouldn't let us do that. He was pitching great," Ross said.
Lewis is a below-.500 pitcher for his career, not including the two seasons he recently spent pitching for Hiroshima in the Japan league. Despite a shaky record, he's known for this trait: He gets tougher in tight situations.
Lewis escaped a two-on jam in the first by getting Pat Burrell to fish for a breaking ball, and worked around a leadoff walk to Ross in the second.
The next time he got on the mound, he already had a nice cushion.
Nelson Cruz opened the Texas second with a double off the center-field wall and eighth-place hitter Bengie Molina drew a walk. It was trouble time for Sanchez — he owned the best hits-to-innings ratio in the NL this year, yet also led the league in walks and can unravel quickly.
Moreland hung in, fouling off four straight 2-2 pitches and barely getting a piece on a couple of them. He then took a smooth swing sent a liner far into the right-field seats for his first career home run against a left-hander.
It was the big hit the Rangers needed to get back into the Series. The crowd roared and Ryan stood up, thrust his right arm in the air and hollered.
Hamilton gave his boss another thrill in the fifth. A bit jumpy at the plate early in the game, the probable AL MVP patiently waited for his pitch and launched a drive deep into the lower deck in right-center field.
"I felt like tonight I just stayed square and covered the ball," he said.
Sanchez, who got just six outs against Philadelphia in his previous start, gave up four runs, six hits and three walks in 4 2-3 innings, raising his ERA to 4.05 in four postseason starts. He was replaced by Guillermo Mota, who had started warming up in the third.
Notes: Feliz, at 22, is the second-youngest pitcher to post a save in the World Series. The youngest was Bob Welch of the Dodgers at 21 in 1978. The previous second-youngest was Nolan Ryan with the Mets in 1969. ... The Rangers had lost 13 of their previous 14 games against the Giants. ... Texas teams were 0-6 in the Series until this game. The Houston Astros were swept by the Chicago White Sox in 2005.
http://www.mcall.com/news/breaking/sns-ap-bbo-world-series,0,5860686.story?page=2
SATURDAY'S COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
SATURDAY'S COLLEGE FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
Lehigh 44 Colgate 14
Lafayette 33 Bucknell 22
Fordham 24 Georgetown 19
Yale 31 Columbia 28
Cornell 21 Princeton 19
UPENN 24 Brown 7
Villanova 28 Richmond 7
Army 29 Virgina Military 7
Liberty 34 Presbyterian 24
Robert Morris 34 Duquense 11
Central Conn. State 28 Wagner 20
Bryant 24 Albany 7
Sacred Heart 26 Monmouth 25
Dayton 37 Davidson 13
Marist 42 Campbell 14
Butler 48 Valparaiso 0
Pitt 20 Louisville 3
Syracuse 31 Cincinnati 7
Northwestern 20 Indiana 17
Illonis 44 Purdue 10
Mercyhurst 21 Slippery Rock 13
Geneva 34 Thiel 20
Washington Jefferson 21 Grove City 14
E-Burg 58 Cheyney 14
Moravian 24 Ursinus 17
Robert Morris 34 Duquesne 11
Cal Poly 41 Saint Francis 33
California 18 IUP 15 (OT)
Thomas More 37 Westminster 13
Northern Iowa 34 Youngstown State 30
Clarion 11 Gannon 10
Edinboro 30 Lock Haven 22
Fairmont State 44 Seton Hill 29
Waynesburg 34 Saint Vincent 28
Washington University 20 Carnegie Mellon 13 (OT)
Wabash 20 Allegheny 3
Harvard 30 Dartmouth 14
Penn State 41 Michigan 31
Ohio State 52 Minnesota 10
Iowa 37 Michigan State 6
Tulsa 28 Notre Dame 27
Duke 34 Navy 31
Maryland 62 Wake Forest 14
North Carolina 21 William Mary 17
Boston College 16 Clemson 10
Arizona 29 UCLA 21
Oregon State 35 California 7
Standford 41 Washington 0
Oregon 53 USC 32
Lehigh 44 Colgate 14
Lafayette 33 Bucknell 22
Fordham 24 Georgetown 19
Yale 31 Columbia 28
Cornell 21 Princeton 19
UPENN 24 Brown 7
Villanova 28 Richmond 7
Army 29 Virgina Military 7
Liberty 34 Presbyterian 24
Robert Morris 34 Duquense 11
Central Conn. State 28 Wagner 20
Bryant 24 Albany 7
Sacred Heart 26 Monmouth 25
Dayton 37 Davidson 13
Marist 42 Campbell 14
Butler 48 Valparaiso 0
Pitt 20 Louisville 3
Syracuse 31 Cincinnati 7
Northwestern 20 Indiana 17
Illonis 44 Purdue 10
Mercyhurst 21 Slippery Rock 13
Geneva 34 Thiel 20
Washington Jefferson 21 Grove City 14
E-Burg 58 Cheyney 14
Moravian 24 Ursinus 17
Robert Morris 34 Duquesne 11
Cal Poly 41 Saint Francis 33
California 18 IUP 15 (OT)
Thomas More 37 Westminster 13
Northern Iowa 34 Youngstown State 30
Clarion 11 Gannon 10
Edinboro 30 Lock Haven 22
Fairmont State 44 Seton Hill 29
Waynesburg 34 Saint Vincent 28
Washington University 20 Carnegie Mellon 13 (OT)
Wabash 20 Allegheny 3
Harvard 30 Dartmouth 14
Penn State 41 Michigan 31
Ohio State 52 Minnesota 10
Iowa 37 Michigan State 6
Tulsa 28 Notre Dame 27
Duke 34 Navy 31
Maryland 62 Wake Forest 14
North Carolina 21 William Mary 17
Boston College 16 Clemson 10
Arizona 29 UCLA 21
Oregon State 35 California 7
Standford 41 Washington 0
Oregon 53 USC 32
SATURDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
SATURDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
Pius X 66, Carson Long 24
Wilson 42, Saucon Valley 13
Freedom 28, Bethlehem Catholic 7
Mars Fighting Planets 23 - Knoch Knights 12
Western Beaver Golden Beavers 38 - Union Scotties 6
Shenango Wildcats 21 - Neshannock Lancers 9
Peabody Highlanders 34 - Brashear Bulls 24
Meyersdale 54, Rockwood 35*
Westmont 29, Cambria Heights 26
Blacklick Valley 48, Shade 13
United 27, Cambridge Springs 12
Pius X 66, Carson Long 24
Wilson 42, Saucon Valley 13
Freedom 28, Bethlehem Catholic 7
Mars Fighting Planets 23 - Knoch Knights 12
Western Beaver Golden Beavers 38 - Union Scotties 6
Shenango Wildcats 21 - Neshannock Lancers 9
Peabody Highlanders 34 - Brashear Bulls 24
Meyersdale 54, Rockwood 35*
Westmont 29, Cambria Heights 26
Blacklick Valley 48, Shade 13
United 27, Cambridge Springs 12
It's like old times for Lehigh in 44-14 rout of Colgate
FROM THE MORNING CALL
During the latter stages of Lehigh's stunning 44-14 rout of Colgate at Goodman Stadium on Saturday, Lehigh coach Andy Coen said to offensive coordinator Dave Cecchini "This really feels like old times."
Perhaps it had been since Coen and Cecchini worked together on Kevin Higgins' coaching staff in the late 1990s that Lehigh had dominated a quality opponent in the same manner it handled Colgate on this day in a game that might go a long way in determining the Patriot League title.
Junior quarterback Chris Lum completed 17 of 22 passes for a career-high 310 yards and two touchdowns and ran for another score as Lehigh scored the first 31 points and never looked back in its most impressive win in this — and quite possibly — many seasons.
In winning for the fourth straight time and clinching a winning season for the first time since 2006, Lehigh (6-2, 2-0) scored three touchdowns on its first five possessions and got points on four of five possessions overall in the first half in a startling display of offensive execution.
The defense, meanwhile, took advantage of the absence of Colgate quarterback Greg Sullivan and top receiver Doug Rosnick, who were both injured.
The Raiders (4-4, 1-2) still featured Nate Eachus, the Hazleton product who led all FCS level rushers with 167.3 yards per game coming in.
But Eachus was limited to 124 yards on 25 carries and Colgate could never get enough offensive consistency to sustain drives or match Lehigh's potent attack.
Punctuating the 31-0 blitz by the Mountain Hawks over the game's first 291/2 minutes was Jarard Cribbs' 48-yard interception return for a touchdown after Steve Rizzo, Sullivan's replacement, was hurt by linebacker Al Pierce as he threw the ball.
"It was a great feeling to be able to capitalize like that," Cribbs said. "When the situation arises, you've got to step up and make plays. That's what winning ballgames and winning championships is all about."
Suddenly, a league championship is not just some obscure dream. It's a goal that's attainable with three more wins.
"It was a great performance and I credit the kids," Coen said. "We talked a lot about this being the seniors last game at Goodman Stadium and we wanted them to go out the right way. We wanted them to play their best game and go out with their heads held high. They certainly did that.
"Aside from beating Lafayette in your last home game, beating Colgate is the next best thing."
And although no one wants to get ahead of themselves, not with a tough trip to Holy Cross looming next weekend, there's a possibility that it won't be the last game this season at Goodman.
Coming off a 4-7 season, Lehigh players, coaches and fans are reluctant to even mention the word playoffs.
But after what happened Saturday, anything is possible.
http://www.mcall.com/sports/mc-lehigh-colgate-football-20101030,0,717561.story
During the latter stages of Lehigh's stunning 44-14 rout of Colgate at Goodman Stadium on Saturday, Lehigh coach Andy Coen said to offensive coordinator Dave Cecchini "This really feels like old times."
Perhaps it had been since Coen and Cecchini worked together on Kevin Higgins' coaching staff in the late 1990s that Lehigh had dominated a quality opponent in the same manner it handled Colgate on this day in a game that might go a long way in determining the Patriot League title.
Junior quarterback Chris Lum completed 17 of 22 passes for a career-high 310 yards and two touchdowns and ran for another score as Lehigh scored the first 31 points and never looked back in its most impressive win in this — and quite possibly — many seasons.
In winning for the fourth straight time and clinching a winning season for the first time since 2006, Lehigh (6-2, 2-0) scored three touchdowns on its first five possessions and got points on four of five possessions overall in the first half in a startling display of offensive execution.
The defense, meanwhile, took advantage of the absence of Colgate quarterback Greg Sullivan and top receiver Doug Rosnick, who were both injured.
The Raiders (4-4, 1-2) still featured Nate Eachus, the Hazleton product who led all FCS level rushers with 167.3 yards per game coming in.
But Eachus was limited to 124 yards on 25 carries and Colgate could never get enough offensive consistency to sustain drives or match Lehigh's potent attack.
Punctuating the 31-0 blitz by the Mountain Hawks over the game's first 291/2 minutes was Jarard Cribbs' 48-yard interception return for a touchdown after Steve Rizzo, Sullivan's replacement, was hurt by linebacker Al Pierce as he threw the ball.
"It was a great feeling to be able to capitalize like that," Cribbs said. "When the situation arises, you've got to step up and make plays. That's what winning ballgames and winning championships is all about."
Suddenly, a league championship is not just some obscure dream. It's a goal that's attainable with three more wins.
"It was a great performance and I credit the kids," Coen said. "We talked a lot about this being the seniors last game at Goodman Stadium and we wanted them to go out the right way. We wanted them to play their best game and go out with their heads held high. They certainly did that.
"Aside from beating Lafayette in your last home game, beating Colgate is the next best thing."
And although no one wants to get ahead of themselves, not with a tough trip to Holy Cross looming next weekend, there's a possibility that it won't be the last game this season at Goodman.
Coming off a 4-7 season, Lehigh players, coaches and fans are reluctant to even mention the word playoffs.
But after what happened Saturday, anything is possible.
http://www.mcall.com/sports/mc-lehigh-colgate-football-20101030,0,717561.story
Lafayette College quarterback switch pays off as Leopards roll over Bucknell University
FROM THE EXPRESS TIMES
After junior starting quarterback Ryan O'Neil lost a fumble deep in Bucknell territory in the second quarter today, Lafayette College head football coach Frank Tavani switched to senior Marc Quilling -- and the Parkland graduate delivered.
Quilling tossed touchdowns of 31 and 35 yards to Kyle Hayes and 30 yards to Mitchell Bennett to spark a 33-22 Patriot League win over the Bison at Christy Mathewson-Memorial Stadium in Lewisburg, Pa. The Leopards quarterback had 217 pass yards in the game.
O'Neil had found freshman tailback Pat Mputu for a 75-yard touchdown on a screen pass on the Leopards' opening possession, and a Mike Schmidlein sack of Brandon Wesley made it 9-0 in the first quarter.
The Leopards (2-6, 1-1 PL) never trailed after that, despite losing three fumbles and giving up three big pass plays to the Bison (1-7, 1-2).
http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/lafayette/index.ssf/2010/10/lafayette_college_quarterback.html
After junior starting quarterback Ryan O'Neil lost a fumble deep in Bucknell territory in the second quarter today, Lafayette College head football coach Frank Tavani switched to senior Marc Quilling -- and the Parkland graduate delivered.
Quilling tossed touchdowns of 31 and 35 yards to Kyle Hayes and 30 yards to Mitchell Bennett to spark a 33-22 Patriot League win over the Bison at Christy Mathewson-Memorial Stadium in Lewisburg, Pa. The Leopards quarterback had 217 pass yards in the game.
O'Neil had found freshman tailback Pat Mputu for a 75-yard touchdown on a screen pass on the Leopards' opening possession, and a Mike Schmidlein sack of Brandon Wesley made it 9-0 in the first quarter.
The Leopards (2-6, 1-1 PL) never trailed after that, despite losing three fumbles and giving up three big pass plays to the Bison (1-7, 1-2).
http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/lafayette/index.ssf/2010/10/lafayette_college_quarterback.html
At the Nazareth Art Center from 7pm-10pm collecting Tickets for the Tyler Grady and Travis Hobbie Show! Tickets are $10.00. I Hope to see all of you a
BREAKING NEWS:
At the Nazareth Art Center from 7pm-10pm collecting Tickets for the Tyler Grady and Travis Hobbie Show!
Tickets are $10.00.
I Hope to see all of you at the Center,
Come on out and see Nazareth own's Tyler Grady who was on Amercian Idol!
The best thing to do on a Saturday night in Nazareth!
See you there!!!
At the Nazareth Art Center from 7pm-10pm collecting Tickets for the Tyler Grady and Travis Hobbie Show!
Tickets are $10.00.
I Hope to see all of you at the Center,
Come on out and see Nazareth own's Tyler Grady who was on Amercian Idol!
The best thing to do on a Saturday night in Nazareth!
See you there!!!
Lehigh-#Colgate Gameday Updates from Goodman Stadium: Lehigh 44, Colgate 14
FROM KEITH GROLLER
3:17 p.m.
Fitting ending. Lehigh gets a stop right on the goal line. Your final score, Lehigh 44, Colgate 14. Lehigh may not be saying goodbye to Goodman after all. Could there be a playoff game here on Nov. 27? Three hours ago, I didn't think that was likely. Now it's quite possible.
3:15 p.m.
A pass interference penalty keeps the final Colgate drive alive and it looks like Raiders might tack on a meaningless score here. But make no mistake, this was still a dominant, terrific performance by Lehigh today.
3:07 p.m.
Kind of playing out the string here at Goodman Stadium. Very impressive Lehigh performance, obviously.
Lehigh will go to 6-2 overall, 2-0 in the league with three tough road games left at Holy Cross, Georgetown and Lafayette.
2:53 p.m.
In a blog post last night, I asked if anyone cares about Lehigh football anymore. Well, there were only 6,784 here today for the biggest home game of this 2010 season. As great as the team has played today, that crowd is extremely disappointing.
2:47 p.m.
The Raiders aren't ready to hop on the bus for Hamilton just yet. They get their second TD on a Rizzo scoring pass to a wide open Noah Jackson. This score was set up by the dropped snap on the punt. It's now Lehigh 44-14 with 12:50 left in the third quarter.
2:41 p.m.
As good as offense and defense have been, Mountain Hawks special teams have been dreadful. Punter just dropped snap on a punt and Colgate has ball at the Lehigh 22. It may be nitpicking, and it won't matter today, but special teams better clean things up in time for trip to Holy Cross next week. It's 44-7 after three quarters.
2:37 p.m.
Colgate keeps the ball for more than six minutes, but doesn't get anything out of it. Raiders move to Lehigh 15 and can't get anything on fourth down as Lehigh defense swarms. It's still 44-7 with 2:09 left in the third quarter.
2:26 p.m.
Lum hit Spadola down the seam for 36 yards to the Colgate 1 and Lum keeps it for the final yard on the next play. Lehigh is now ahead 44-7 with 8:53 to go in the third quarter and an amazing day keeps getting more amazing.
2:23 p.m.
Lehigh has the ball back and Spadola just ran for about 20 yards on a reverse. Lehigh offense has been as good today as it has ever been during the Coen or Lembo eras.
2:16 p.m.
A screen pass from Lum to Campbell has Lehigh with a first-and-goal at the Colgate 8, and then Colvin kept for eight yards and another score. Stunning. Just stunning. Offense has been unbelievable. Missed PAT, but it's 37-7 with 11:57 left in the third quarter. That's a 4-play, 73-yard drive.
2:14 p.m.
Lehigh gets an important 3-and-out on defense to start the second half. On first play, Lum hit Drwal for 42 yards and Lehigh is already threatening again.
2:08 p.m.
Halftime nearly over here at Goodman. Everyone still buzzing about how good Lehigh looked in the first half. Lehigh outgained Raiders 257-128 in the first half. Chris Lum was 13-for-16 for 195 yards. Nate Eachus held to 60 yards on 13 carries for Colgate.
1:47 p.m.
A short kickoff by Lehigh led to a short Colgate scoring drive. The Raiders get on the board with a 5-yard TD pass from Rizzo to Chris Looney. It's now 31-7 with 0:35 left in the half and Colgate will get the ball to start the second half, so this one is a long way from being over.
1:38 p.m.
And the rout is officially on. A 9-yard TD pass from Chris Lum to Jake Drwal has made it 31-0 with 3:27 left in the first half. It's hard to remember a better Lehigh performance against a quality opponent.
1:35 p.m.
Lehigh continues to dominate. Gets a sack and a three-and-out. Lehigh gets ball at Colgate 35, 5:24 left in the half. Chance for a knockout blow. Just an amazing performance by the Mountain Hawks so far. I know Colgate doesn't have its starting QB, but still, impressive stuff.
1:30 p.m.
Al Pierce hit Colgate quarterback Steve Rizzo as he threw and Jarard Cribbs picked off the duck and went 46 yards with the interception and incredibly, and I do mean INCREDIBLY, Lehigh leads 24-0 with 7:51 left in the first half.
1:25 p.m.
Four straight pass completions had Lehigh in a first-and-goal situation, but drive stalled there. Tom Randazza kicks a 19-yard field goal and it's a 17-0 Lehigh lead with 9:04 left in the first half. It's an 8-play, 87-yard, 3:20 drive. As good as things are going now, that blown chance may come back to haunt Mountain Hawks.
1:11 p.m.
Now we can say it, what was Colgate thinking going for on fourth-and-short? It backfired because Lehigh took advantage of the short field for a second touchdown. They go 41 yards on three plays and score on wildcat quarterback Mike Colvin's 7-yard TD pass to Alex Wojdowski. It's Lehigh 14-0 with 14:55 left in the first half.
1:06 p.m.
Colgate converted once on fourth-and-short, but Eachus was stopped short on a second fourth-and-short. Lehigh gets the ball at the Colgate 41 and the speedy Spadola breaks off a big run on a reverse to the 11, a 30-yard gain.
1:01 p.m.
Three incompletions and a delay-of-game penalty stalled Lehigh's second possession. Colgate gets its second turn with the ball with 3:36 left in the first quarter.
12:56 p.m.
Without starting quarterback Greg Sullivan, who evidently won't be playing today because of a high ankle sprain, Colgate had a nice opening drive all the way to a first-and-goal at the 3. The drive bogged down there and the Raiders had a 24-yard field goal attempt blocked. So, Lehigh has the ball back and still has that 7-0 lead with 4:30 left in the first quarter.
12:42 p.m.
What a start for Lehigh. Colgate won the toss and deferred. That was a mistake. Lehigh went 72 yards on eight plays and scored on a 16-yard pass from Chris Lum to fullback Sean Farrell. Mountain Hawks did exactly what they needed to do and that's get ahead. Lehigh 7-0. 11:08 left in first quarter
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/2010/10/lehigh-colgate-gameday-updates-from-goodman-stadium-lehigh-takes-lead-with-great-opening-drive.html
3:17 p.m.
Fitting ending. Lehigh gets a stop right on the goal line. Your final score, Lehigh 44, Colgate 14. Lehigh may not be saying goodbye to Goodman after all. Could there be a playoff game here on Nov. 27? Three hours ago, I didn't think that was likely. Now it's quite possible.
3:15 p.m.
A pass interference penalty keeps the final Colgate drive alive and it looks like Raiders might tack on a meaningless score here. But make no mistake, this was still a dominant, terrific performance by Lehigh today.
3:07 p.m.
Kind of playing out the string here at Goodman Stadium. Very impressive Lehigh performance, obviously.
Lehigh will go to 6-2 overall, 2-0 in the league with three tough road games left at Holy Cross, Georgetown and Lafayette.
2:53 p.m.
In a blog post last night, I asked if anyone cares about Lehigh football anymore. Well, there were only 6,784 here today for the biggest home game of this 2010 season. As great as the team has played today, that crowd is extremely disappointing.
2:47 p.m.
The Raiders aren't ready to hop on the bus for Hamilton just yet. They get their second TD on a Rizzo scoring pass to a wide open Noah Jackson. This score was set up by the dropped snap on the punt. It's now Lehigh 44-14 with 12:50 left in the third quarter.
2:41 p.m.
As good as offense and defense have been, Mountain Hawks special teams have been dreadful. Punter just dropped snap on a punt and Colgate has ball at the Lehigh 22. It may be nitpicking, and it won't matter today, but special teams better clean things up in time for trip to Holy Cross next week. It's 44-7 after three quarters.
2:37 p.m.
Colgate keeps the ball for more than six minutes, but doesn't get anything out of it. Raiders move to Lehigh 15 and can't get anything on fourth down as Lehigh defense swarms. It's still 44-7 with 2:09 left in the third quarter.
2:26 p.m.
Lum hit Spadola down the seam for 36 yards to the Colgate 1 and Lum keeps it for the final yard on the next play. Lehigh is now ahead 44-7 with 8:53 to go in the third quarter and an amazing day keeps getting more amazing.
2:23 p.m.
Lehigh has the ball back and Spadola just ran for about 20 yards on a reverse. Lehigh offense has been as good today as it has ever been during the Coen or Lembo eras.
2:16 p.m.
A screen pass from Lum to Campbell has Lehigh with a first-and-goal at the Colgate 8, and then Colvin kept for eight yards and another score. Stunning. Just stunning. Offense has been unbelievable. Missed PAT, but it's 37-7 with 11:57 left in the third quarter. That's a 4-play, 73-yard drive.
2:14 p.m.
Lehigh gets an important 3-and-out on defense to start the second half. On first play, Lum hit Drwal for 42 yards and Lehigh is already threatening again.
2:08 p.m.
Halftime nearly over here at Goodman. Everyone still buzzing about how good Lehigh looked in the first half. Lehigh outgained Raiders 257-128 in the first half. Chris Lum was 13-for-16 for 195 yards. Nate Eachus held to 60 yards on 13 carries for Colgate.
1:47 p.m.
A short kickoff by Lehigh led to a short Colgate scoring drive. The Raiders get on the board with a 5-yard TD pass from Rizzo to Chris Looney. It's now 31-7 with 0:35 left in the half and Colgate will get the ball to start the second half, so this one is a long way from being over.
1:38 p.m.
And the rout is officially on. A 9-yard TD pass from Chris Lum to Jake Drwal has made it 31-0 with 3:27 left in the first half. It's hard to remember a better Lehigh performance against a quality opponent.
1:35 p.m.
Lehigh continues to dominate. Gets a sack and a three-and-out. Lehigh gets ball at Colgate 35, 5:24 left in the half. Chance for a knockout blow. Just an amazing performance by the Mountain Hawks so far. I know Colgate doesn't have its starting QB, but still, impressive stuff.
1:30 p.m.
Al Pierce hit Colgate quarterback Steve Rizzo as he threw and Jarard Cribbs picked off the duck and went 46 yards with the interception and incredibly, and I do mean INCREDIBLY, Lehigh leads 24-0 with 7:51 left in the first half.
1:25 p.m.
Four straight pass completions had Lehigh in a first-and-goal situation, but drive stalled there. Tom Randazza kicks a 19-yard field goal and it's a 17-0 Lehigh lead with 9:04 left in the first half. It's an 8-play, 87-yard, 3:20 drive. As good as things are going now, that blown chance may come back to haunt Mountain Hawks.
1:11 p.m.
Now we can say it, what was Colgate thinking going for on fourth-and-short? It backfired because Lehigh took advantage of the short field for a second touchdown. They go 41 yards on three plays and score on wildcat quarterback Mike Colvin's 7-yard TD pass to Alex Wojdowski. It's Lehigh 14-0 with 14:55 left in the first half.
1:06 p.m.
Colgate converted once on fourth-and-short, but Eachus was stopped short on a second fourth-and-short. Lehigh gets the ball at the Colgate 41 and the speedy Spadola breaks off a big run on a reverse to the 11, a 30-yard gain.
1:01 p.m.
Three incompletions and a delay-of-game penalty stalled Lehigh's second possession. Colgate gets its second turn with the ball with 3:36 left in the first quarter.
12:56 p.m.
Without starting quarterback Greg Sullivan, who evidently won't be playing today because of a high ankle sprain, Colgate had a nice opening drive all the way to a first-and-goal at the 3. The drive bogged down there and the Raiders had a 24-yard field goal attempt blocked. So, Lehigh has the ball back and still has that 7-0 lead with 4:30 left in the first quarter.
12:42 p.m.
What a start for Lehigh. Colgate won the toss and deferred. That was a mistake. Lehigh went 72 yards on eight plays and scored on a 16-yard pass from Chris Lum to fullback Sean Farrell. Mountain Hawks did exactly what they needed to do and that's get ahead. Lehigh 7-0. 11:08 left in first quarter
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/2010/10/lehigh-colgate-gameday-updates-from-goodman-stadium-lehigh-takes-lead-with-great-opening-drive.html
Volunteer Opportunities in the Lehigh Valley
FROM THE MORNING CALL
AMERICA ON WHEELS, Allentown is a "Toys for Tots" collection site from Nov. 26th through Dec.18 in conjunction with our Train Time Charity Exhibit that features model trains running through all of our galleries through Dec. 30. Contact: Connie McDowell, 610-432-4200, education@americaonwheels.org.
ARTSQUEST, Bethlehem has volunteer opportunities for their "Countdown in Downtown" New Year's Eve celebration at Spring and Main streets. Volunteers will help with admissions, serve as greeters, work information booth and sell merchandise. Contact: Karen DeLuca, 610-332-1340, kdeluca@artsquest.org.
FLINT HILL FARM EDUCATIONAL CENTER, Coopersburg needs tour guides for farm tours from 8:30-11:30 a.m. or 12:30-3 p.m. a few days a month to assist with school groups touring the farm. Orientation and training provided. Training days are flexible. Contact: Kathleen Fields, 610-838-2928, kathy@flinthill-farm.org.
HOLIDAY HOPE CHESTS, Bethlehem, help Lehigh Valley's less fortunate children by filling a shoebox with age appropriate items and dropping it off at our office at the Volunteer Center of the Lehigh Valley, 2121 City Line Road, Bethlehem, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Nov. 30 through Dec. 3 or 3-7 p.m. Nov. 30 and Dec. 1. To participate, go to http://www.volunteerlv.org and fill out the Holiday Hope Chest donation registration form. Contact: Sandie at 610-807-0336 or e-mail skelly@volunteerlv.org.
LEHIGH VALLEY HEALTH NETWORK, Allentown has a year-round need for the following new items: board books, coloring books, crayons, small toys for ages three and older, and used beanie babies in excellent condition. Donations may be dropped off at volunteer offices at Lehigh Valley Hospitals. Contact: Betty Anton, 610-402-8897, Elizabeth.Anton@lvh.com.
MOSSER VILLAGE, Allentown is looking for volunteers to reach out to our families in need of assistance with Christmas gifts for their children. A list that contains a gift the child needs will be provided. If you would like to adopt one child or several children, call Mitzi Xander, 610-820-4067.
SIXTH STREET SHELTER, Allentown needs caring people to sponsor families for the holidays. Your gifts and food donations for baskets make the holidays brighter for our shelter families. Contact: Jennifer Reyes, 610-495-1490, jreyes@caclv.org.
THE SALVATION ARMY CHILDREN'S SERVICES FOSTER CARE AND ADOPTION SERVICES, Allentown has a year-round need for winter coats, hats, gloves, mittens, scarves, school back packs, duffel bags for foster children. Items may be dropped off at 425 Allentown Drive, Allentown. For information on how you can bring hope and strength to children of troubled families, contact, Florence Rhue, 610-821-7706, florence_rhue@use.salvationarmy.org.
Contact the Volunteer Center to receive a brochure listing agencies that need volunteers at 610-807-0336 or e-mail: vc@volunteerlv.org.
http://www.mcall.com/news/local/allentown/mc-volunteers-1031-20101030,0,7847036.story
AMERICA ON WHEELS, Allentown is a "Toys for Tots" collection site from Nov. 26th through Dec.18 in conjunction with our Train Time Charity Exhibit that features model trains running through all of our galleries through Dec. 30. Contact: Connie McDowell, 610-432-4200, education@americaonwheels.org.
ARTSQUEST, Bethlehem has volunteer opportunities for their "Countdown in Downtown" New Year's Eve celebration at Spring and Main streets. Volunteers will help with admissions, serve as greeters, work information booth and sell merchandise. Contact: Karen DeLuca, 610-332-1340, kdeluca@artsquest.org.
FLINT HILL FARM EDUCATIONAL CENTER, Coopersburg needs tour guides for farm tours from 8:30-11:30 a.m. or 12:30-3 p.m. a few days a month to assist with school groups touring the farm. Orientation and training provided. Training days are flexible. Contact: Kathleen Fields, 610-838-2928, kathy@flinthill-farm.org.
HOLIDAY HOPE CHESTS, Bethlehem, help Lehigh Valley's less fortunate children by filling a shoebox with age appropriate items and dropping it off at our office at the Volunteer Center of the Lehigh Valley, 2121 City Line Road, Bethlehem, from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Nov. 30 through Dec. 3 or 3-7 p.m. Nov. 30 and Dec. 1. To participate, go to http://www.volunteerlv.org and fill out the Holiday Hope Chest donation registration form. Contact: Sandie at 610-807-0336 or e-mail skelly@volunteerlv.org.
LEHIGH VALLEY HEALTH NETWORK, Allentown has a year-round need for the following new items: board books, coloring books, crayons, small toys for ages three and older, and used beanie babies in excellent condition. Donations may be dropped off at volunteer offices at Lehigh Valley Hospitals. Contact: Betty Anton, 610-402-8897, Elizabeth.Anton@lvh.com.
MOSSER VILLAGE, Allentown is looking for volunteers to reach out to our families in need of assistance with Christmas gifts for their children. A list that contains a gift the child needs will be provided. If you would like to adopt one child or several children, call Mitzi Xander, 610-820-4067.
SIXTH STREET SHELTER, Allentown needs caring people to sponsor families for the holidays. Your gifts and food donations for baskets make the holidays brighter for our shelter families. Contact: Jennifer Reyes, 610-495-1490, jreyes@caclv.org.
THE SALVATION ARMY CHILDREN'S SERVICES FOSTER CARE AND ADOPTION SERVICES, Allentown has a year-round need for winter coats, hats, gloves, mittens, scarves, school back packs, duffel bags for foster children. Items may be dropped off at 425 Allentown Drive, Allentown. For information on how you can bring hope and strength to children of troubled families, contact, Florence Rhue, 610-821-7706, florence_rhue@use.salvationarmy.org.
Contact the Volunteer Center to receive a brochure listing agencies that need volunteers at 610-807-0336 or e-mail: vc@volunteerlv.org.
http://www.mcall.com/news/local/allentown/mc-volunteers-1031-20101030,0,7847036.story
Jim Eisenreich on "Calling All Sports" radio show
FROM KEITH GROLLER
Today's Morning Call "Calling All Sports" radio show on AM 1470, the Fox and Fox1470.com, will feature Chuck Burton, the founder off the "Lehigh Football Nation" blog; author Billy Staples of "Billyball 2009: The Road to the Phillies-Yankees World Series," former Phillies player Jim Eisenreich and Penn State beat writer Mark Wogenrich.
There will also be trivia contests and other features.
To participate, call 610-432-5767.
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/
Today's Morning Call "Calling All Sports" radio show on AM 1470, the Fox and Fox1470.com, will feature Chuck Burton, the founder off the "Lehigh Football Nation" blog; author Billy Staples of "Billyball 2009: The Road to the Phillies-Yankees World Series," former Phillies player Jim Eisenreich and Penn State beat writer Mark Wogenrich.
There will also be trivia contests and other features.
To participate, call 610-432-5767.
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/
HOLLOWEEN PARADES
NOTE: This list will be updated throughout the month of October. Please come back for additional updates.
Alburtis Park: 4 p.m. Oct. 31. Upper ball field.
Allentown: 2 p.m. Oct. 31. Begins at Allentown Fairgrounds, 17th and Chew streets and ends at Seventh and Hamilton streets. Rain date, 2 p.m. Nov. 7.
Bethlehem: 2 p.m. Oct. 31. Begins on Broad Street and 13th Avenue and ends under Hill to Hill Bridge. Rain date, 7 p.m. Nov. 1
Easton-Phillipsburg: 1:30 p.m. Oct. 31. Begins at South Main Street, Phillispburg and ends at Centre Square, Easton.
Hamburg: King Frost Parade, 7 p.m. Oct. 30. Begins at Third Street and Port Clinton Avenue; ends at Fourth Street and Franklin Avenue. Rain date, Nov. 6.
Slatington-Walnutport: Northern Lehigh parade at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 30. Begins at Main and Soutrh streets, Slatington. Rain date, Nov. 6.
Alburtis Park: 4 p.m. Oct. 31. Upper ball field.
Allentown: 2 p.m. Oct. 31. Begins at Allentown Fairgrounds, 17th and Chew streets and ends at Seventh and Hamilton streets. Rain date, 2 p.m. Nov. 7.
Bethlehem: 2 p.m. Oct. 31. Begins on Broad Street and 13th Avenue and ends under Hill to Hill Bridge. Rain date, 7 p.m. Nov. 1
Easton-Phillipsburg: 1:30 p.m. Oct. 31. Begins at South Main Street, Phillispburg and ends at Centre Square, Easton.
Hamburg: King Frost Parade, 7 p.m. Oct. 30. Begins at Third Street and Port Clinton Avenue; ends at Fourth Street and Franklin Avenue. Rain date, Nov. 6.
Slatington-Walnutport: Northern Lehigh parade at 6:30 p.m. Oct. 30. Begins at Main and Soutrh streets, Slatington. Rain date, Nov. 6.
TRICK AND TREAT DATES
2010 TRICK AND TREAT DATES:
Alburtis: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31. No rain date
Allen Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Bangor: 2-5 p.m. Oct. 31.
Catasauqua: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30. Rain date, Oct. 31.
Coopersburg: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29. No rain date.
Easton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Forks Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Fountain Hill: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29. No rain date.
Franklin Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct, 27.
Heidelberg Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30.
Jim Thorpe: Kids dress in costume and trick-or-treat at select businesses in downtown Jim Thorpe, noon-5 p.m., Oct. 30-31.
Lehigh Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29.
Lehighton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 27.
Lower Macungie Township: 6-9 p.m. Oct. 31.
Lower Mount Bethel: 4-6 p.m. Oct. 31.
Lower Nazareth: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Lowhill Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30. No rain date.
Macungie: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Moore Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30.
Nazareth: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Nesquehoning: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Northampton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
New Tripoli: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30.
North Catasauqua: 6-8 p.m.. Oct. 30. Rain date, 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Northampton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
North Whitehall Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29. No rain date.
Palmer Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Pen Argyl: 2-5 p.m. Oct. 31.
Perkasie: 6-9 p.m. Oct. 31.
Phillipsburg: 5-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Polk Township: 5-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Quakertown: 6-9 p.m. Oct. 31.
Roseto: 2-5 p.m. Oct. 31.
Springfield Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Stockertown: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Tamaqua: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Topton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Towamensing Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Upper Macungie Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29. No rain date.
Upper Milford: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Upper Nazareth Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Wilson: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Williams Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Wind Gap: 2-4 p.m. Oct. 31
Wilson Borough: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Weisenberg Township, Lehigh County: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30. No rain date.
Alburtis: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31. No rain date
Allen Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Bangor: 2-5 p.m. Oct. 31.
Catasauqua: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30. Rain date, Oct. 31.
Coopersburg: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29. No rain date.
Easton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Forks Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Fountain Hill: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29. No rain date.
Franklin Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct, 27.
Heidelberg Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30.
Jim Thorpe: Kids dress in costume and trick-or-treat at select businesses in downtown Jim Thorpe, noon-5 p.m., Oct. 30-31.
Lehigh Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29.
Lehighton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 27.
Lower Macungie Township: 6-9 p.m. Oct. 31.
Lower Mount Bethel: 4-6 p.m. Oct. 31.
Lower Nazareth: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Lowhill Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30. No rain date.
Macungie: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Moore Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30.
Nazareth: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Nesquehoning: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Northampton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
New Tripoli: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30.
North Catasauqua: 6-8 p.m.. Oct. 30. Rain date, 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Northampton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
North Whitehall Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29. No rain date.
Palmer Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Pen Argyl: 2-5 p.m. Oct. 31.
Perkasie: 6-9 p.m. Oct. 31.
Phillipsburg: 5-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Polk Township: 5-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Quakertown: 6-9 p.m. Oct. 31.
Roseto: 2-5 p.m. Oct. 31.
Springfield Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Stockertown: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Tamaqua: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Topton: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Towamensing Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Upper Macungie Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 29. No rain date.
Upper Milford: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Upper Nazareth Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Wilson: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31
Williams Township: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Wind Gap: 2-4 p.m. Oct. 31
Wilson Borough: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 31.
Weisenberg Township, Lehigh County: 6-8 p.m. Oct. 30. No rain date.
Rough, tough Rovers ready for repeat
FROM KEITH GROLLER
The crowd oohed and aahed at Bethlehem Area School District Stadium Friday night every time the Nazareth-Whitehall score was announced.
And there were a lot of updates for always entertaining P.A. announcer Jake Llewellyn to give during the Easton-Liberty game.
Clearly, Nazareth plays the most interesting football of anyone in the area because they score a lot of points and give up nearly as much.
56-22, 39-36, 42-35 ... the Blue Eagles are the Oregon Ducks of Lehigh Valley Conference football and it's a fun team to watch.
Easton, meanwhile, isn't nearly as sexy to watch. They don't neccessarily score a lot, but they don't give up that many either. They play old-school football, the type built on rock-solid, hard-hitting defense. It's blue-collar, Bethlehem Steel, Mack Trucks stuff.
They rely on defense and a heady, gritty quarterback named Justin Pacchioli who will go down as one of the school's all-time best.
I've seen Easton twice in the last three weeks and this 14-7 win over Liberty tonight was a lot like the Rovers win over Emmaus two weeks ago.
It wasn't spectacular offense. But very good defense and opportunistic offense was good enough.
I like Justin Pacchioli. I like his poise, his leadership, his toughness. Kid's a winner.
Justin played Friday's game in pain. He lost a loved one in his family on Friday.
It was obviously someone Pacchioli cared a great deal about.
He had tears streaming down his face when the game was over.
Coach Steve Shiffert asked him if he wanted to talk to the press. Pacchioli said he'd be ok and he was.
As he had during the game, Pacchioli (below) did what he had to do in the interview and answered our questions while fighting back tears.
I don't know if Easton will repeat as district champs, but I wouldn't bet against the Rovers.
With Pacchioli and that hard-hitting defense they may have just enough talent to repeat, although, again, they'll have to play the district final -- if they get that far -- two days after the Thanksgiving Day game against a very strong, one-loss Phillipsburg team.
I still don't know how they did it last year, beating Parkland just two days after playing a game on Thanksgiving morning. By the end, they were hanging on for dear life because the fatigue was taking over.
But Easton is chock full of great kids who just bask in that great tradition. They love challenges and playing three games in eight days every November is one of them.
There's a lot of pride under those helmets and there's a lot of mystique about Cottingham Stadium and that's where several games in the District 11 4A tournament will unfold. It again figures to be a special place this November.
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/
The crowd oohed and aahed at Bethlehem Area School District Stadium Friday night every time the Nazareth-Whitehall score was announced.
And there were a lot of updates for always entertaining P.A. announcer Jake Llewellyn to give during the Easton-Liberty game.
Clearly, Nazareth plays the most interesting football of anyone in the area because they score a lot of points and give up nearly as much.
56-22, 39-36, 42-35 ... the Blue Eagles are the Oregon Ducks of Lehigh Valley Conference football and it's a fun team to watch.
Easton, meanwhile, isn't nearly as sexy to watch. They don't neccessarily score a lot, but they don't give up that many either. They play old-school football, the type built on rock-solid, hard-hitting defense. It's blue-collar, Bethlehem Steel, Mack Trucks stuff.
They rely on defense and a heady, gritty quarterback named Justin Pacchioli who will go down as one of the school's all-time best.
I've seen Easton twice in the last three weeks and this 14-7 win over Liberty tonight was a lot like the Rovers win over Emmaus two weeks ago.
It wasn't spectacular offense. But very good defense and opportunistic offense was good enough.
I like Justin Pacchioli. I like his poise, his leadership, his toughness. Kid's a winner.
Justin played Friday's game in pain. He lost a loved one in his family on Friday.
It was obviously someone Pacchioli cared a great deal about.
He had tears streaming down his face when the game was over.
Coach Steve Shiffert asked him if he wanted to talk to the press. Pacchioli said he'd be ok and he was.
As he had during the game, Pacchioli (below) did what he had to do in the interview and answered our questions while fighting back tears.
I don't know if Easton will repeat as district champs, but I wouldn't bet against the Rovers.
With Pacchioli and that hard-hitting defense they may have just enough talent to repeat, although, again, they'll have to play the district final -- if they get that far -- two days after the Thanksgiving Day game against a very strong, one-loss Phillipsburg team.
I still don't know how they did it last year, beating Parkland just two days after playing a game on Thanksgiving morning. By the end, they were hanging on for dear life because the fatigue was taking over.
But Easton is chock full of great kids who just bask in that great tradition. They love challenges and playing three games in eight days every November is one of them.
There's a lot of pride under those helmets and there's a lot of mystique about Cottingham Stadium and that's where several games in the District 11 4A tournament will unfold. It again figures to be a special place this November.
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/
Does anyone care about Lehigh football anymore?
FROM KEITH GROLLER
We'll find out on Saturday as the Mountain Hawks play their biggest game of the 2010 season so far, and their biggest non-Lafayette game in several years.
Crowds have been down at Goodman Stadium.
Even in great weather this season, 5,000-6,000 has been the norm.
Even national champion Villanova didn't pack the place.
There are a bunch of theories as to why the crowds have been down.
There are fewer local kids on the Lehigh roster than there were in years past. You've got Northampton's Billy Boyko, Wilson's Matt Lippincott and some kids from Jim Thorpe.
There is also the impact of live local television. I always say live TV gives people an excuse to stay home, and while Lehigh tickets aren't super expensive, every little bit chips away at the family budget in these tough economic times. If you don't have family playing, maybe you have something less expensive to do.
But the biggest reason for the reduced crowds, in my opinion, has been the team's record in recent years -- 5-6, 5-6 and 4-7. It has been a tough go for coach Andy Coen (below).
This team, however, is 5-2, and playing the kind of offensive football that fans desire. It has a chance to win a league championship and earn the program's first playoff berth since 2004.
If all that is going to happen, a win over Colgate is essential.
After Colgate, Lehigh plays at Holy Cross, Georgetown and Lafayette to close out the regular season and all of those games will be difficult as well.
A win over the hated Raiders, the preseason favorite to win the league, however, would be a huge momentum boost going into November and that three-game road swing.
It should be a terrific game. Hazleton's Nate Eachus is the nation's leading rusher. He was one of the best high school players I've ever seen and three years later, he's better than ever. He gains four yards just falling to the ground.
I was told that Eachus is fired up for the game. He really wants to tear apart the Mountain Hawks. He's capable of doing it.
We'll see.
I do know that this could be a special Lehigh football season. Saturday could be a special day at Goodman Stadium.
It would be nice to see a huge crowd of at least 10,000 on hand.
It's not as if the Phillies are a diversion. And frankly, neither is Penn State since they are playing at 8 Saturday night and this is a mediocre Nittany Lions team anyway.
Does anyone care about Lehigh football anymore?
We'll find out about 12:30 Saturday afternoon.
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/
We'll find out on Saturday as the Mountain Hawks play their biggest game of the 2010 season so far, and their biggest non-Lafayette game in several years.
Crowds have been down at Goodman Stadium.
Even in great weather this season, 5,000-6,000 has been the norm.
Even national champion Villanova didn't pack the place.
There are a bunch of theories as to why the crowds have been down.
There are fewer local kids on the Lehigh roster than there were in years past. You've got Northampton's Billy Boyko, Wilson's Matt Lippincott and some kids from Jim Thorpe.
There is also the impact of live local television. I always say live TV gives people an excuse to stay home, and while Lehigh tickets aren't super expensive, every little bit chips away at the family budget in these tough economic times. If you don't have family playing, maybe you have something less expensive to do.
But the biggest reason for the reduced crowds, in my opinion, has been the team's record in recent years -- 5-6, 5-6 and 4-7. It has been a tough go for coach Andy Coen (below).
This team, however, is 5-2, and playing the kind of offensive football that fans desire. It has a chance to win a league championship and earn the program's first playoff berth since 2004.
If all that is going to happen, a win over Colgate is essential.
After Colgate, Lehigh plays at Holy Cross, Georgetown and Lafayette to close out the regular season and all of those games will be difficult as well.
A win over the hated Raiders, the preseason favorite to win the league, however, would be a huge momentum boost going into November and that three-game road swing.
It should be a terrific game. Hazleton's Nate Eachus is the nation's leading rusher. He was one of the best high school players I've ever seen and three years later, he's better than ever. He gains four yards just falling to the ground.
I was told that Eachus is fired up for the game. He really wants to tear apart the Mountain Hawks. He's capable of doing it.
We'll see.
I do know that this could be a special Lehigh football season. Saturday could be a special day at Goodman Stadium.
It would be nice to see a huge crowd of at least 10,000 on hand.
It's not as if the Phillies are a diversion. And frankly, neither is Penn State since they are playing at 8 Saturday night and this is a mediocre Nittany Lions team anyway.
Does anyone care about Lehigh football anymore?
We'll find out about 12:30 Saturday afternoon.
http://blogs.mcall.com/groller/
Friday, October 29, 2010
Kent, Dibilio instrumental in memorable comeback
By BETH HUDSON
The Express-Times
WHITEHALL | Kris Kent hadn't played football since his freshman year, but the right set of circumstances convinced him to give it one more chance as a senior at Nazareth Area High School.
"Coach (Rob) Melosky did a little in-school recruiting," Kent said with a grin. "I came over to give it a shot, and I love it."
The rest of the Blue Eagles are pretty happy with his decision as well. Kent had two interceptions for the second consecutive week, and Nazareth held off Whitehall for a 42-35 victory Friday night at Whitehall High School. The Blue Eagles overcame a 14-0 first-quarter deficit and improved to 7-2 overall and 6-2 in the Lehigh Valley Conference heading into the final week of the regular season. The Zephyrs have the same records.
It was easy to see what the victory meant to the Nazareth players, who ran off the field with jubilant screams and then gathered with some fans in a corner near the locker room to sing the "Ole, ole" song that's become synonymous with international soccer matches.
"We started slow," Kent said. "To come back and win, it's huge for us."
Senior tailback Chuck Dibilio ran 25 times for 224 yards and four touchdowns, and junior quarterback Dan Harding completed 9 of 12 passes for 133 yards and one score. Then there was Kent, playing with a broken right hand and a cast for the second consecutive week. He intercepted Whitehall quarterback Chris Polony and returned it to the midfield with less than a minute remaining in the first half.
Four plays later, Adam Bridgeforth caught a 19-yard touchdown pass to complete one of the game's biggest momentum swings. After Kent stole away Whitehall's chance to take a lead going into halftime, Nazareth took its own, 28-21.
Asked about Kent's interception, Dibilio said, "I don't know how he does it. It's his first year playing football since his freshman year. He has one arm. He's just a natural athlete."
Whitehall opened quickly, scoring two touchdowns in the first seven minutes. Facing a third-and-9 from his own 36-yard line, Polony scrambled until he found Tyler Artim for a 64-yard touchdown reception with 9:21 left in the first quarter. And, after forcing Nazareth to go three-and-out on its first possession, the Zephyrs put together a five-play, 47-yard drive that ended with Eric Fiore's 11-yard run.
Still, Nazareth needed just two plays including a 42-yard TD by Dibilio to cut a 14-0 deficit in half. The Blue Eagles scored 28 points in the last 17 minutes of the half.
http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/sports/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/1288411505300980.xml&coll=3
The Express-Times
WHITEHALL | Kris Kent hadn't played football since his freshman year, but the right set of circumstances convinced him to give it one more chance as a senior at Nazareth Area High School.
"Coach (Rob) Melosky did a little in-school recruiting," Kent said with a grin. "I came over to give it a shot, and I love it."
The rest of the Blue Eagles are pretty happy with his decision as well. Kent had two interceptions for the second consecutive week, and Nazareth held off Whitehall for a 42-35 victory Friday night at Whitehall High School. The Blue Eagles overcame a 14-0 first-quarter deficit and improved to 7-2 overall and 6-2 in the Lehigh Valley Conference heading into the final week of the regular season. The Zephyrs have the same records.
It was easy to see what the victory meant to the Nazareth players, who ran off the field with jubilant screams and then gathered with some fans in a corner near the locker room to sing the "Ole, ole" song that's become synonymous with international soccer matches.
"We started slow," Kent said. "To come back and win, it's huge for us."
Senior tailback Chuck Dibilio ran 25 times for 224 yards and four touchdowns, and junior quarterback Dan Harding completed 9 of 12 passes for 133 yards and one score. Then there was Kent, playing with a broken right hand and a cast for the second consecutive week. He intercepted Whitehall quarterback Chris Polony and returned it to the midfield with less than a minute remaining in the first half.
Four plays later, Adam Bridgeforth caught a 19-yard touchdown pass to complete one of the game's biggest momentum swings. After Kent stole away Whitehall's chance to take a lead going into halftime, Nazareth took its own, 28-21.
Asked about Kent's interception, Dibilio said, "I don't know how he does it. It's his first year playing football since his freshman year. He has one arm. He's just a natural athlete."
Whitehall opened quickly, scoring two touchdowns in the first seven minutes. Facing a third-and-9 from his own 36-yard line, Polony scrambled until he found Tyler Artim for a 64-yard touchdown reception with 9:21 left in the first quarter. And, after forcing Nazareth to go three-and-out on its first possession, the Zephyrs put together a five-play, 47-yard drive that ended with Eric Fiore's 11-yard run.
Still, Nazareth needed just two plays including a 42-yard TD by Dibilio to cut a 14-0 deficit in half. The Blue Eagles scored 28 points in the last 17 minutes of the half.
http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/sports/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/1288411505300980.xml&coll=3
Rovers weather early storm, tame Hurricanes 14-7
FROM THE MORNING CALL
The last time Easton played Liberty at Bethlehem Area School District Stadium the Rovers lost 42-0.
Friday night's game at BASD began like a continuation of that Oct. 24, 2008 shellacking.
The Hurricanes went 76 yards in two plays and 32 seconds. Quarterback James McCarthy exploded for 63 yards on the first play and 13 yards into the end zone on the second.
But Liberty wouldn't score again over the game's last 59 minutes and 38 seconds and Easton would capitalize on two Liberty fumbles for a gritty 14-7 Lehigh Valley Conference win that placed the Rovers (8-1, 7-1 LVC) in position to grab the No. 1 seed for the upcoming District 2-4-11 Class 4A tournament.
"The last thing we said to the team before they went out on the field was 'keep your composure if something bad happens early' and they sure followed that to a T," Easton coach Steve Shiffert said.
"We knew we'd have a little trouble early with their triple-option, but the defense adjusted. We had some opportunities on offense that we blew, but we had some seniors step up and make some plays."
None was bigger than Justin Pacchioli's 21-yard pass completion to Jonathan Bisci as Easton ran out the clock in the final minutes.
Pacchioli eluded the pass rush of speedy Liberty defensive end Dante Holmes and found Bisci with a perfectly thrown ball down the sideline. Bisci planted his feet inbounds and leaned over the line for the catch.
Not only did it give Easton a first down at the 'Canes 35, and, basically, the victory, but it also gave Pacchioli Easton's all-time passing yardage record.
Pacchioli, who also set the school's completion mark, now has 3,194 passing yards — one more than previous record holder Matt Loebsack.
"I wasn't thinking about the records," Pacchioli said. "People were telling me and telling my parents that I was close to breaking records, but I really don't follow numbers. I'm more of a team player and not about individual stats. This win is 10 times more important than any school record."
Pacchioli figured this would be a tough game. He was right.
Easton never could sustain a long scoring drive.
The Rovers had incompletions on two fourth-and-short plays in the first half (although TV replays indicated that one of those passes was actually caught by Tyler Holjes and should have been a touchdown).
Bisci also was wide left on a 26-yard field goal attempt in the third quarter.
Easton, however, was able to cash in on two Liberty fumbles with scoring drives of 33 yards and 18 yards in the middle quarters.
Pacchioli hit Justin Souders for a 29-yard touchdown pass after the first fumble and James Middleton scored on a 3-yard TD for what proved to be the game-winning score with 3:59 left in the third quarter.
"We've talked about turnovers and we know that other teams capitalize on us and we have to start doing the same thing to them," Pacchioli said. "That's definitely what we did tonight."
Liberty's defense played well enough to keep the hosts within striking distance, but after the two big plays to start the game the 'Canes triple-option was contained.
Liberty (5-4, 4-4) had just one first down and 53 yards of offense in the second half.
"We've never played against a triple-option team before and they run it perfect," Pacchioli said. "They caught us with it in the beginning, but coach [Doug] Powell made some adjustments and we stuck with them the rest of the game."
Hurricanes coach Dave Brown said his team needs to learn from its mistakes.
"Their speed up front defensively hurt us and we got frustrated," he said. "Heck, we haven't punted in four games and I think we punted five or six times tonight. We could have played better on offense, but a lot of credit goes to them. Other than those two first two plays, they had us under control. It was the first time we ended up looking at each other because we were trying to figure out what they were doing."
Now, Liberty has to figure out whether or not it can qualify for the district playoffs. The Hurricanes close the regular season against Freedom a week from Saturday. A win might be enough to get them in once the numbers are crunched.
"I'm not smart enough to figure out that out," Brown said. "I listen to what everybody else says. I just know that we're a good football team and we've had a great season and I hope we can keep going."
Easton, meanwhile, knows it will be playing playoff games after next week's regular season finale against Bethlehem Catholic.
But the defending district champion Rovers are hoping the road to another 4A title runs through Cottingham Stadium.
"The kids want to play at Cottingham," Shiffert said. "We've never won a district title on the road. We want stay home just like last year."
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-easton-liberty-football-1029-20101029,0,7656100.story
The last time Easton played Liberty at Bethlehem Area School District Stadium the Rovers lost 42-0.
Friday night's game at BASD began like a continuation of that Oct. 24, 2008 shellacking.
The Hurricanes went 76 yards in two plays and 32 seconds. Quarterback James McCarthy exploded for 63 yards on the first play and 13 yards into the end zone on the second.
But Liberty wouldn't score again over the game's last 59 minutes and 38 seconds and Easton would capitalize on two Liberty fumbles for a gritty 14-7 Lehigh Valley Conference win that placed the Rovers (8-1, 7-1 LVC) in position to grab the No. 1 seed for the upcoming District 2-4-11 Class 4A tournament.
"The last thing we said to the team before they went out on the field was 'keep your composure if something bad happens early' and they sure followed that to a T," Easton coach Steve Shiffert said.
"We knew we'd have a little trouble early with their triple-option, but the defense adjusted. We had some opportunities on offense that we blew, but we had some seniors step up and make some plays."
None was bigger than Justin Pacchioli's 21-yard pass completion to Jonathan Bisci as Easton ran out the clock in the final minutes.
Pacchioli eluded the pass rush of speedy Liberty defensive end Dante Holmes and found Bisci with a perfectly thrown ball down the sideline. Bisci planted his feet inbounds and leaned over the line for the catch.
Not only did it give Easton a first down at the 'Canes 35, and, basically, the victory, but it also gave Pacchioli Easton's all-time passing yardage record.
Pacchioli, who also set the school's completion mark, now has 3,194 passing yards — one more than previous record holder Matt Loebsack.
"I wasn't thinking about the records," Pacchioli said. "People were telling me and telling my parents that I was close to breaking records, but I really don't follow numbers. I'm more of a team player and not about individual stats. This win is 10 times more important than any school record."
Pacchioli figured this would be a tough game. He was right.
Easton never could sustain a long scoring drive.
The Rovers had incompletions on two fourth-and-short plays in the first half (although TV replays indicated that one of those passes was actually caught by Tyler Holjes and should have been a touchdown).
Bisci also was wide left on a 26-yard field goal attempt in the third quarter.
Easton, however, was able to cash in on two Liberty fumbles with scoring drives of 33 yards and 18 yards in the middle quarters.
Pacchioli hit Justin Souders for a 29-yard touchdown pass after the first fumble and James Middleton scored on a 3-yard TD for what proved to be the game-winning score with 3:59 left in the third quarter.
"We've talked about turnovers and we know that other teams capitalize on us and we have to start doing the same thing to them," Pacchioli said. "That's definitely what we did tonight."
Liberty's defense played well enough to keep the hosts within striking distance, but after the two big plays to start the game the 'Canes triple-option was contained.
Liberty (5-4, 4-4) had just one first down and 53 yards of offense in the second half.
"We've never played against a triple-option team before and they run it perfect," Pacchioli said. "They caught us with it in the beginning, but coach [Doug] Powell made some adjustments and we stuck with them the rest of the game."
Hurricanes coach Dave Brown said his team needs to learn from its mistakes.
"Their speed up front defensively hurt us and we got frustrated," he said. "Heck, we haven't punted in four games and I think we punted five or six times tonight. We could have played better on offense, but a lot of credit goes to them. Other than those two first two plays, they had us under control. It was the first time we ended up looking at each other because we were trying to figure out what they were doing."
Now, Liberty has to figure out whether or not it can qualify for the district playoffs. The Hurricanes close the regular season against Freedom a week from Saturday. A win might be enough to get them in once the numbers are crunched.
"I'm not smart enough to figure out that out," Brown said. "I listen to what everybody else says. I just know that we're a good football team and we've had a great season and I hope we can keep going."
Easton, meanwhile, knows it will be playing playoff games after next week's regular season finale against Bethlehem Catholic.
But the defending district champion Rovers are hoping the road to another 4A title runs through Cottingham Stadium.
"The kids want to play at Cottingham," Shiffert said. "We've never won a district title on the road. We want stay home just like last year."
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-easton-liberty-football-1029-20101029,0,7656100.story
Nazareth outguns Whitehall in LVC football shootout
FROM THE MORNING CALL
When Adam Bridgeforth darted 4 yards for yet another go-ahead Nazareth touchdown, coach Rob Melosky looked at the clock with one thought — too much time remained.
A rare defensive hold allowed the Blue Eagles to keep their final lead Friday night.
After allowing Whitehall to reach its 44-yard line in the final 2 minutes, Nazareth stymied the Zephyrs on four straight plays to take the ball back on downs. Two powerful runs from Chuck Dibilio gave the Blue Eagles a game-clinching first down and a 42-35 Lehigh Valley Conference football win.
Dibilio finished with 227 yards and four touchdowns on 25 carries as Nazareth (7-2 overall, 6-2 LVC) nailed down a spot in the Districts 2-4-11 Class 4A subregional playoffs. Bridgeforth added seven catches for 113 yards and one touchdown, and two rushes for 13 yards and a score.
Their efforts allowed the Blue Eagles to celebrate despite falling behind 14-0 in the first quarter and surrendering 443 yards of offense to Whitehall (7-2, 6-2).
"I told the team here, in the 18 years I've been coaching, I think this is the best group of kids in terms of resiliency along with the coaching staff and the community," Melosky said. "Our fan support tonight was second to none. It was obviously a great win for the program."
Dibilio, the LVC's top rusher, led a Nazareth offense that rolled up 402 yards and answered ever Whitehall score. His 42-yard touchdown burst 40 seconds after the Zephyrs opened a 14-0 lead set the shootout in motion, and his next two first-half scores brought the Blue Eagles even.
Dibilio also amassed 33 yards on Nazareth's final scoring drive, a 64-yard march that ended with Bridgeforth's 4-yard touchdown run with 5:36 to play.
"For some reason, the last three games we've started off slow," Dibilio said. "We said we couldn't do it anymore. Luckily we came back from it. I don't know how we did it. We just persevered and had confidence in our offense to get us back in the game."
For all the offensive firepower on display Friday, one defensive play shifted the game's momentum toward Nazareth.
With the first half winding down, Whitehall drove the ball to Nazareth's 10-yard line to set up a first-and-goal. Zephyrs quarterback Chris Polony (15-for-23, 198 yards, one touchdown, two interceptions) rolled right on the next play as he kept looking for an open receiver.
He never found one, instead throwing the ball to Nazareth defensive back Kris Kent. Kent, playing with a cast on his broken right hand, picked it off and ran it back 45 yards to midfield. The Blue Eagles scored four plays later on a 19-yard pass from Daniel Harding to Bridgeforth with 7.2 seconds to play in the half, taking a 28-21 lead into the locker room.
"They just ran a flood route, and I was just sitting there reading his eyes," said Kent, who added another interception to close the first half and has picked off four passes in the last two weeks while playing with the cast. "I just kept floating and he threw it right to me."
Whitehall managed to tie Nazareth two times in the second half but never regained the lead. The loss likely cost the Zephyrs a chance to earn the top seed for and home-field advantage throughout districts thanks to Easton's win over Liberty.
Eric Fiore had 25 carries for 111 yards and three touchdowns for Whitehall, and Tyler Artim caught nine passes for 147 yards and a score. The Zephyrs' inability to stop Dibilio rendered their offensive fireworks moot.
"They're a playoff football team," Whitehall coach Tony Trisciani said of Nazareth. "This is the type of atmosphere we're going to be in. The criticalness of every play on this field, it felt like a playoff football game. It's important that we had this experience."
Nazareth will never forget Friday's experience either.
"[The win's] got to be up there," Dibilio said. "In the history of our program, we haven't had that many close wins. We either lose or we win big. It's the best feeling in the world to win these close games."
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-football-whitehall-1029-20101029,0,5352077.story
When Adam Bridgeforth darted 4 yards for yet another go-ahead Nazareth touchdown, coach Rob Melosky looked at the clock with one thought — too much time remained.
A rare defensive hold allowed the Blue Eagles to keep their final lead Friday night.
After allowing Whitehall to reach its 44-yard line in the final 2 minutes, Nazareth stymied the Zephyrs on four straight plays to take the ball back on downs. Two powerful runs from Chuck Dibilio gave the Blue Eagles a game-clinching first down and a 42-35 Lehigh Valley Conference football win.
Dibilio finished with 227 yards and four touchdowns on 25 carries as Nazareth (7-2 overall, 6-2 LVC) nailed down a spot in the Districts 2-4-11 Class 4A subregional playoffs. Bridgeforth added seven catches for 113 yards and one touchdown, and two rushes for 13 yards and a score.
Their efforts allowed the Blue Eagles to celebrate despite falling behind 14-0 in the first quarter and surrendering 443 yards of offense to Whitehall (7-2, 6-2).
"I told the team here, in the 18 years I've been coaching, I think this is the best group of kids in terms of resiliency along with the coaching staff and the community," Melosky said. "Our fan support tonight was second to none. It was obviously a great win for the program."
Dibilio, the LVC's top rusher, led a Nazareth offense that rolled up 402 yards and answered ever Whitehall score. His 42-yard touchdown burst 40 seconds after the Zephyrs opened a 14-0 lead set the shootout in motion, and his next two first-half scores brought the Blue Eagles even.
Dibilio also amassed 33 yards on Nazareth's final scoring drive, a 64-yard march that ended with Bridgeforth's 4-yard touchdown run with 5:36 to play.
"For some reason, the last three games we've started off slow," Dibilio said. "We said we couldn't do it anymore. Luckily we came back from it. I don't know how we did it. We just persevered and had confidence in our offense to get us back in the game."
For all the offensive firepower on display Friday, one defensive play shifted the game's momentum toward Nazareth.
With the first half winding down, Whitehall drove the ball to Nazareth's 10-yard line to set up a first-and-goal. Zephyrs quarterback Chris Polony (15-for-23, 198 yards, one touchdown, two interceptions) rolled right on the next play as he kept looking for an open receiver.
He never found one, instead throwing the ball to Nazareth defensive back Kris Kent. Kent, playing with a cast on his broken right hand, picked it off and ran it back 45 yards to midfield. The Blue Eagles scored four plays later on a 19-yard pass from Daniel Harding to Bridgeforth with 7.2 seconds to play in the half, taking a 28-21 lead into the locker room.
"They just ran a flood route, and I was just sitting there reading his eyes," said Kent, who added another interception to close the first half and has picked off four passes in the last two weeks while playing with the cast. "I just kept floating and he threw it right to me."
Whitehall managed to tie Nazareth two times in the second half but never regained the lead. The loss likely cost the Zephyrs a chance to earn the top seed for and home-field advantage throughout districts thanks to Easton's win over Liberty.
Eric Fiore had 25 carries for 111 yards and three touchdowns for Whitehall, and Tyler Artim caught nine passes for 147 yards and a score. The Zephyrs' inability to stop Dibilio rendered their offensive fireworks moot.
"They're a playoff football team," Whitehall coach Tony Trisciani said of Nazareth. "This is the type of atmosphere we're going to be in. The criticalness of every play on this field, it felt like a playoff football game. It's important that we had this experience."
Nazareth will never forget Friday's experience either.
"[The win's] got to be up there," Dibilio said. "In the history of our program, we haven't had that many close wins. We either lose or we win big. It's the best feeling in the world to win these close games."
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-football-whitehall-1029-20101029,0,5352077.story
Easton bounces back, bounces Parkland
FROM THE MORNING CALL
Like night and day.
Easton played the first half of its District 11 3A quarterfinal playoff game at Parkland like the Red Rovers were intent upon completing their season. After intermission, however, the visitors played like a team that didn't want to go home anytime soon.
And in the end, Easton's second-half effort far outweighed its first, carrying the Rovers to a 3-1 victory and a spot in next Tuesday's district semifinals.
Fourth-seeded Parkland wasted little time in grabbing a 1-0 lead as Michael Ottinger turned on a ball deep in Easton's defensive sector, blasting a low shot past Rovers keeper Luke Farrell just 5:13 into the opening half.
From there, the Trojans (13-6-1) dominated play through intermission, outshooting its guests by a 7-2 margin and using solid passing accuracy to keep Easton in its half of the field 90 percent of the time.
Come halftime, Easton coach Tim Hall — to put it mildly — read his team the riot act.
"He basically told us we were screwing up our senior year, and we shouldn't have let it get to that point," said senior Ryan Davie, who scored two goals and assisted on the third. "He really fired us up, I think, really got us intense, and we picked up our game in the second half."
Hall admitted to making one key strategic adjustment, but for the most part, his plea was to the No. 5 Rovers' collective consciences.
"Obviously, Parkland was clearly the better team in the first half," Hall said. "We had a not-so-pleasant talk at halftime about character and heart.
"Basically, I called them out, and they could have quit or they could have responded," he added. "Obviously, they responded. We made one tactical adjustment; the rest was kicking them in the rear."
Davie pulled the Rovers even with 35:52 remaining on a nice angle run that put him behind the Trojan defense, buying enough time to send a shot rocketing into the right corner.
"On their first goal, [Gabe Robinson], who's an outstanding player, hustled his tail off to save a ball that was right on the sideline, chipped it forward, and in they go," explained Parkland coach Chris Bleam. "It's all about work, and they played very inspired in the second half."
Easton posted the game-winning goal on the visitors' lone corner kick as Davie sent a ball across the heart of the goal mouth to teammate Billy Bryson for a head-ball connection past Parkland keeper Brandon Krum with 13:48 on the clock.
The Trojans spent much of the rest of regulation frantically trying to put scoring plays together, with Ottinger and senior teammates Ali Famili and Aner Barav leading the way, but a quick change of direction saw Davie collect a pass from Alejandro Pascual for a clinching score with 1:50 remaining.
"This one's huge for us," Davie said. "I've been playing varsity for four years and I've yet to beat Parkland until today. They're a fantastic soccer program."
But on this day, Easton (14-5-1), which had dropped a 2-1 regular season decision to the visiting Trojans, kept its season alive while ending Parkland's.
"They tackled harder. They ran through us. They ran over us," Bleam noted. "We had one ball go off the side of the post. We had one ball go off the post and to the goalkeeper. We were a bit unfortunate there.
"I thought we played well, but they played a little better than we did," he added. "The bottom line, the thing they did better was they went through the ball."
Easton0 3-3
Parkland1 0-1
E goals: Ryan Davie 2, Billy Bryson. Assists: Davie, Gabe Robinson, Alejandro Pascual. Shots: 7. Corners: 1. Saves: Luke Farrell 6.
P goal: Michael Ottinger. Shots: 12. Corners: 5. Saves: Brandon Krum 3.
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-soccer-1029-20101029,0,3390501.story
Like night and day.
Easton played the first half of its District 11 3A quarterfinal playoff game at Parkland like the Red Rovers were intent upon completing their season. After intermission, however, the visitors played like a team that didn't want to go home anytime soon.
And in the end, Easton's second-half effort far outweighed its first, carrying the Rovers to a 3-1 victory and a spot in next Tuesday's district semifinals.
Fourth-seeded Parkland wasted little time in grabbing a 1-0 lead as Michael Ottinger turned on a ball deep in Easton's defensive sector, blasting a low shot past Rovers keeper Luke Farrell just 5:13 into the opening half.
From there, the Trojans (13-6-1) dominated play through intermission, outshooting its guests by a 7-2 margin and using solid passing accuracy to keep Easton in its half of the field 90 percent of the time.
Come halftime, Easton coach Tim Hall — to put it mildly — read his team the riot act.
"He basically told us we were screwing up our senior year, and we shouldn't have let it get to that point," said senior Ryan Davie, who scored two goals and assisted on the third. "He really fired us up, I think, really got us intense, and we picked up our game in the second half."
Hall admitted to making one key strategic adjustment, but for the most part, his plea was to the No. 5 Rovers' collective consciences.
"Obviously, Parkland was clearly the better team in the first half," Hall said. "We had a not-so-pleasant talk at halftime about character and heart.
"Basically, I called them out, and they could have quit or they could have responded," he added. "Obviously, they responded. We made one tactical adjustment; the rest was kicking them in the rear."
Davie pulled the Rovers even with 35:52 remaining on a nice angle run that put him behind the Trojan defense, buying enough time to send a shot rocketing into the right corner.
"On their first goal, [Gabe Robinson], who's an outstanding player, hustled his tail off to save a ball that was right on the sideline, chipped it forward, and in they go," explained Parkland coach Chris Bleam. "It's all about work, and they played very inspired in the second half."
Easton posted the game-winning goal on the visitors' lone corner kick as Davie sent a ball across the heart of the goal mouth to teammate Billy Bryson for a head-ball connection past Parkland keeper Brandon Krum with 13:48 on the clock.
The Trojans spent much of the rest of regulation frantically trying to put scoring plays together, with Ottinger and senior teammates Ali Famili and Aner Barav leading the way, but a quick change of direction saw Davie collect a pass from Alejandro Pascual for a clinching score with 1:50 remaining.
"This one's huge for us," Davie said. "I've been playing varsity for four years and I've yet to beat Parkland until today. They're a fantastic soccer program."
But on this day, Easton (14-5-1), which had dropped a 2-1 regular season decision to the visiting Trojans, kept its season alive while ending Parkland's.
"They tackled harder. They ran through us. They ran over us," Bleam noted. "We had one ball go off the side of the post. We had one ball go off the post and to the goalkeeper. We were a bit unfortunate there.
"I thought we played well, but they played a little better than we did," he added. "The bottom line, the thing they did better was they went through the ball."
Easton0 3-3
Parkland1 0-1
E goals: Ryan Davie 2, Billy Bryson. Assists: Davie, Gabe Robinson, Alejandro Pascual. Shots: 7. Corners: 1. Saves: Luke Farrell 6.
P goal: Michael Ottinger. Shots: 12. Corners: 5. Saves: Brandon Krum 3.
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-soccer-1029-20101029,0,3390501.story
Bangor pays the price for win over Northwestern
FROM THE MORNING CALL
Bangor coach Frank Scagliotta walked off Farnan Field on Friday night with a heavy heart.
On Senior Night, Scagliotta's most notable player in his final high school season --- and one of the best players in the history of the Colonial League --- suffered a third knee injury in the last three months.
Scott LaValva, who had surgery on his left knee in August and recently sat out three games with an injury to his right knee, went down again less than 6 minutes into Friday's game against Northwestern.
He sat with ice on his left knee for the rest of the first half and spent the final two quarters in street clothes as Bangor turned in a stellar defensive effort and got two rushing touchdowns from Josh Wing in a 22-7 win.
"I have mixed feelings," Scagliotta said. "I'm happy for the team. This is a big win. But I'm depressed. I'm broken-hearted. No one has done as much in his four years as [LaValva] has. And, for this to happen on Senior Night is just terrible."
Scagliotta didn't know the severity of LaValva's injury, but the senior running back could miss the regular-season finale against Slate Belt rival Pen Argyl on Nov. 6.
On the other sideline Friday night, Northwestern (5-4) coach Tom Linette was angry with club's poor performance from the game's first play from a scrimmage --- a 75-yard touchdown pass from LaValva to Ben Ammerman on a flea-flicker.
"It was a fiasco," Linette admitted. "I'm not sure exactly why. We were thrown off our rhythm.
"You've got to give [Bangor] credit for it. Tonight, they were the better team."
The Tigers didn't score until Ty Cunningham's 62-yard run around left end against the Slaters' second-teamers with 2:17 left in the game.
Until then, Northwestern had a net of 7 yards of offense for the game.
That made Scagliotta happy.
"Our defensive line and linebackers, which are mostly underclassmen tonight, I thought they were outstanding," the Bangor coach said.
The Slaters (7-2) allowed just 33 yards and three first downs in the first half, which saw them take an 8-0 lead to the lockerroom.
Bangor's offense was slow adjusting to the loss of LaValva. It came up short on three fourth downs in the first two quarters in Northwestern territory and the fourth drive ended with LaValva's fumble (also in Tigers territory) on the play he suffered the injury.
"Scott said there was some soreness in his [left] knee [this week]," Scagliotta said. "Then he got it twisted the wrong way in the identical scenario as the first time he was hurt in the Southern Lehigh game."
Bangor took a 15-0 lead in the third quarter when Wing broke free around the right side for a 34-yard touchdown run at 1:19. The Slaters were able to overcome two holding penalties to finally finish off a drive.
Wing got loose outside again on Bangor's second series of the fourth quarter for a 44-yard game-clinching score.
Northwestern's only first down of the second half came on Cunningham's scoring run.
"We're in a bad streak right now, losing the last three games," Linette said. "So you tend to look down at things. We still have a shot to play on [beyond next week].
"I'm not ready to put the pads away."
Bangor remains in a battle with Southern Lehigh (7-2) and others for a District 11 Class 3A playoff berth. It likely needs a win next Saturday at Pen Argyl to secure a spot.
Northwestern must beat Catasauqua to have a chance at a Class 2A spot in the Eastern Conference tournament.
thousenick@mcall.com
Twitter @TomHousenick
Northwestern 0007 --- 7
Bangor8077 --- 22
First quarter
B-Ben Ammermann 75 pass from Scott LaValva (Russ Horn pass from LaValva), 9:40
Third quarter
B-Josh Wing 34 run (Ryan Fraunfelter kick), 1:19
Fourth quarter
B-Wing 44 run (Fraunfelter kick), 6:41
NW-Ty Cunningham 62 run (Andrew Deutsch kick), 2;17
TEAM STATISTICS
NW B
First downs 413
Rushes-yards23-10348-194
Passing-yards 1157
Comp-Att-Int 4-15-16-9-0
Penalties 5-404-36
Punts 7-37.02-28.5
Fumbles-lost1-01-1
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing: NWL: Ty Cunningham 14-99, TD; Payton Bachman 2-12; Ben Snyder 5-(-4); Josh Werley 1-(-4); Matt Naugle 1-0. Bangor: Scott LaValva 2-11; Josh Wing 18-131, 2 TDs; Ryan Fraunfelter 13-52; Drew Nicholas 5-(-8); Ricky Flowers 2-(-4); Josh Pensyl 2-14; team 2-(-4); Steve Altorfer 1-(-7); Tony Bencivengo 1-(-1); Brett Albinson 1-5; Oshine White 1-5.
Passing: NWL: Snyder 3-11-1, 1 yard; Werley 1-4-0, 0 yards. Bangor: Nicholas 5-8-0, 82 yards; LaValva 1-1-0, 75 yards, TD.
Receiving: NWL: Cunningham 1-3; Bachman 1-(-1); Werley 1-(-1); Mason Schuler 1-0. Bangor: Ryan Hester 5-82; Ben Ammermann 1-75, TD.
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-bangor-football-1029-20101029,0,6753592.story?page=2
Bangor coach Frank Scagliotta walked off Farnan Field on Friday night with a heavy heart.
On Senior Night, Scagliotta's most notable player in his final high school season --- and one of the best players in the history of the Colonial League --- suffered a third knee injury in the last three months.
Scott LaValva, who had surgery on his left knee in August and recently sat out three games with an injury to his right knee, went down again less than 6 minutes into Friday's game against Northwestern.
He sat with ice on his left knee for the rest of the first half and spent the final two quarters in street clothes as Bangor turned in a stellar defensive effort and got two rushing touchdowns from Josh Wing in a 22-7 win.
"I have mixed feelings," Scagliotta said. "I'm happy for the team. This is a big win. But I'm depressed. I'm broken-hearted. No one has done as much in his four years as [LaValva] has. And, for this to happen on Senior Night is just terrible."
Scagliotta didn't know the severity of LaValva's injury, but the senior running back could miss the regular-season finale against Slate Belt rival Pen Argyl on Nov. 6.
On the other sideline Friday night, Northwestern (5-4) coach Tom Linette was angry with club's poor performance from the game's first play from a scrimmage --- a 75-yard touchdown pass from LaValva to Ben Ammerman on a flea-flicker.
"It was a fiasco," Linette admitted. "I'm not sure exactly why. We were thrown off our rhythm.
"You've got to give [Bangor] credit for it. Tonight, they were the better team."
The Tigers didn't score until Ty Cunningham's 62-yard run around left end against the Slaters' second-teamers with 2:17 left in the game.
Until then, Northwestern had a net of 7 yards of offense for the game.
That made Scagliotta happy.
"Our defensive line and linebackers, which are mostly underclassmen tonight, I thought they were outstanding," the Bangor coach said.
The Slaters (7-2) allowed just 33 yards and three first downs in the first half, which saw them take an 8-0 lead to the lockerroom.
Bangor's offense was slow adjusting to the loss of LaValva. It came up short on three fourth downs in the first two quarters in Northwestern territory and the fourth drive ended with LaValva's fumble (also in Tigers territory) on the play he suffered the injury.
"Scott said there was some soreness in his [left] knee [this week]," Scagliotta said. "Then he got it twisted the wrong way in the identical scenario as the first time he was hurt in the Southern Lehigh game."
Bangor took a 15-0 lead in the third quarter when Wing broke free around the right side for a 34-yard touchdown run at 1:19. The Slaters were able to overcome two holding penalties to finally finish off a drive.
Wing got loose outside again on Bangor's second series of the fourth quarter for a 44-yard game-clinching score.
Northwestern's only first down of the second half came on Cunningham's scoring run.
"We're in a bad streak right now, losing the last three games," Linette said. "So you tend to look down at things. We still have a shot to play on [beyond next week].
"I'm not ready to put the pads away."
Bangor remains in a battle with Southern Lehigh (7-2) and others for a District 11 Class 3A playoff berth. It likely needs a win next Saturday at Pen Argyl to secure a spot.
Northwestern must beat Catasauqua to have a chance at a Class 2A spot in the Eastern Conference tournament.
thousenick@mcall.com
Twitter @TomHousenick
Northwestern 0007 --- 7
Bangor8077 --- 22
First quarter
B-Ben Ammermann 75 pass from Scott LaValva (Russ Horn pass from LaValva), 9:40
Third quarter
B-Josh Wing 34 run (Ryan Fraunfelter kick), 1:19
Fourth quarter
B-Wing 44 run (Fraunfelter kick), 6:41
NW-Ty Cunningham 62 run (Andrew Deutsch kick), 2;17
TEAM STATISTICS
NW B
First downs 413
Rushes-yards23-10348-194
Passing-yards 1157
Comp-Att-Int 4-15-16-9-0
Penalties 5-404-36
Punts 7-37.02-28.5
Fumbles-lost1-01-1
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
Rushing: NWL: Ty Cunningham 14-99, TD; Payton Bachman 2-12; Ben Snyder 5-(-4); Josh Werley 1-(-4); Matt Naugle 1-0. Bangor: Scott LaValva 2-11; Josh Wing 18-131, 2 TDs; Ryan Fraunfelter 13-52; Drew Nicholas 5-(-8); Ricky Flowers 2-(-4); Josh Pensyl 2-14; team 2-(-4); Steve Altorfer 1-(-7); Tony Bencivengo 1-(-1); Brett Albinson 1-5; Oshine White 1-5.
Passing: NWL: Snyder 3-11-1, 1 yard; Werley 1-4-0, 0 yards. Bangor: Nicholas 5-8-0, 82 yards; LaValva 1-1-0, 75 yards, TD.
Receiving: NWL: Cunningham 1-3; Bachman 1-(-1); Werley 1-(-1); Mason Schuler 1-0. Bangor: Ryan Hester 5-82; Ben Ammermann 1-75, TD.
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-bangor-football-1029-20101029,0,6753592.story?page=2
Elder sparks Parkland comeback
FROM THE MORNING CALL
Seven of his Parkland teammates had rushing attempts before Jarel Elder had the chance to touch the ball late in the second quarter Friday night in a Lehigh Valley Conference football game against Northampton.
Elder quickly made up for lost time. He scored on a 50-yard run on his first carry to give the Trojans their first score of the game and added two more rushing TDs to help lift Parkland to a 28-20 win over the Konkrete Kids on Senior Night.
Elder led the Trojans (4-5, 4-4) with 69 yards rushing and was one of the sparks that helped erase a 20-0 deficit. The outcome helps keep Parkland in the hunt for a postseason berth, while damaging the chances of Northampton (4-5, 3-5).
Parkland ends the regular season next week against Whitehall, while Northampton plays Nazareth.
"We started slow in the beginning, but we picked it up big-time," Elder said. "Being down 20 motivated us."
The story of the game might have been the performance of the Parkland offensive line. After Northampton's John Lambert returned an interception 45 yards for a touchdown with 3:02 left in the second quarter, the K-Kids led 20-0.
If there was a line of demarcation, that was it. Two plays after that, Lambert's second touchdown, Parkland ran well behind its offensive line of left tackle Eric Burleson, left guard Jarrod Bulger, center Koty Krempasky, right guard Puneet Kumar and right tackle Doug Turrell.
Elder's TD was one of four straight possessions on which the Trojans scored.
"We made some adjustments at halftime," Turrell said. "We came out and won the game. We fought hard up front and pulled together in the second half."
Parkland had the ball at the beginning of the fourth quarter and covered 75 yards over eight plays, the last being a 34-yard touchdown from Tim Baranek to Sean Roth.
After forcing the K-Kids to punt after four plays, the Trojans covered 65 yards, the last 6 coming on an Elder rush around left end. That gave Parkland a 21-20 lead near the end of the third quarter.
The Trojans scored their final TD on their first possesion of the fourth when Elder ran it in from 5 yards out.
Elder understands his place in Parkland's Wing-T. A lot of runners get the chance, and whoever has the hot hand usually gets more carries.
"With fresh legs, we can keep it going the whole game," he said. "There are other backs ahead of me."
Northampton dominated the first quarter and a half. On the first play from scrimmage, Lambert took a handoff on a trap and went 70 yards for a touchdown. On their next possession, the K-Kids went 71 yards on six plays, capped by Chad Fenon's 4-yard run around right end.
Northampton coach Bob Steckel said he did not know exactly where things went wrong for his team.
"If I knew," he said, "we wouldn't have done it. There's nothing I can tell you that you didn't see. They took over the second half. There's nothing more I can say."
Parkland has had issues with turnovers. The Trojans had 18 over a three-game stretch and six last week at Nazareth, but committed only two Friday.
"The coaches hounded us all week at practice to not put the ball on the ground and not turn the ball over," Turrell said.
"Our mentality going into this game was no turnovers," Elder said. "We had to keep turnovers to a minimum."
Northampton had two late chances to tie the game. The K-Kids drove to the Parkland 7 with 3:50 left, but Trojans safety Cody Callahan had a key end zone breakup of a pass to stall the drive.
Northampton got the ball back again at the Parkland 45 with 2:43 to go, but the Trojans forced four straight incompletions to end the game.
Parkland coach Jim Morgans did not have time to figure out playoff possibilities, especially with Whitehall coming up next.
"There's a possibility," he said. "I'm not thinking about that. All I'm thinking about is Whitehall."
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-parkland-kids-1029-20101029,0,7495150.story
Seven of his Parkland teammates had rushing attempts before Jarel Elder had the chance to touch the ball late in the second quarter Friday night in a Lehigh Valley Conference football game against Northampton.
Elder quickly made up for lost time. He scored on a 50-yard run on his first carry to give the Trojans their first score of the game and added two more rushing TDs to help lift Parkland to a 28-20 win over the Konkrete Kids on Senior Night.
Elder led the Trojans (4-5, 4-4) with 69 yards rushing and was one of the sparks that helped erase a 20-0 deficit. The outcome helps keep Parkland in the hunt for a postseason berth, while damaging the chances of Northampton (4-5, 3-5).
Parkland ends the regular season next week against Whitehall, while Northampton plays Nazareth.
"We started slow in the beginning, but we picked it up big-time," Elder said. "Being down 20 motivated us."
The story of the game might have been the performance of the Parkland offensive line. After Northampton's John Lambert returned an interception 45 yards for a touchdown with 3:02 left in the second quarter, the K-Kids led 20-0.
If there was a line of demarcation, that was it. Two plays after that, Lambert's second touchdown, Parkland ran well behind its offensive line of left tackle Eric Burleson, left guard Jarrod Bulger, center Koty Krempasky, right guard Puneet Kumar and right tackle Doug Turrell.
Elder's TD was one of four straight possessions on which the Trojans scored.
"We made some adjustments at halftime," Turrell said. "We came out and won the game. We fought hard up front and pulled together in the second half."
Parkland had the ball at the beginning of the fourth quarter and covered 75 yards over eight plays, the last being a 34-yard touchdown from Tim Baranek to Sean Roth.
After forcing the K-Kids to punt after four plays, the Trojans covered 65 yards, the last 6 coming on an Elder rush around left end. That gave Parkland a 21-20 lead near the end of the third quarter.
The Trojans scored their final TD on their first possesion of the fourth when Elder ran it in from 5 yards out.
Elder understands his place in Parkland's Wing-T. A lot of runners get the chance, and whoever has the hot hand usually gets more carries.
"With fresh legs, we can keep it going the whole game," he said. "There are other backs ahead of me."
Northampton dominated the first quarter and a half. On the first play from scrimmage, Lambert took a handoff on a trap and went 70 yards for a touchdown. On their next possession, the K-Kids went 71 yards on six plays, capped by Chad Fenon's 4-yard run around right end.
Northampton coach Bob Steckel said he did not know exactly where things went wrong for his team.
"If I knew," he said, "we wouldn't have done it. There's nothing I can tell you that you didn't see. They took over the second half. There's nothing more I can say."
Parkland has had issues with turnovers. The Trojans had 18 over a three-game stretch and six last week at Nazareth, but committed only two Friday.
"The coaches hounded us all week at practice to not put the ball on the ground and not turn the ball over," Turrell said.
"Our mentality going into this game was no turnovers," Elder said. "We had to keep turnovers to a minimum."
Northampton had two late chances to tie the game. The K-Kids drove to the Parkland 7 with 3:50 left, but Trojans safety Cody Callahan had a key end zone breakup of a pass to stall the drive.
Northampton got the ball back again at the Parkland 45 with 2:43 to go, but the Trojans forced four straight incompletions to end the game.
Parkland coach Jim Morgans did not have time to figure out playoff possibilities, especially with Whitehall coming up next.
"There's a possibility," he said. "I'm not thinking about that. All I'm thinking about is Whitehall."
http://www.mcall.com/sports/varsity/mc-parkland-kids-1029-20101029,0,7495150.story
Notre Dame High School football team ends losing streak by defeating Salisbury High School 28-13
FROM THE EXPRESS TIMES
BETHLEHEM TWP., Pa. | For the second straight week, Notre Dame High School's football team was handed a lead.
Last week against Palisades, the Crusaders didn't handle it particularly well.
But presented with a lead Friday night, Notre Dame knew exactly what to do with it.
The Crusaders rebounded from a two-touchdown deficit in the first half and rode a 183-yard, three-touchdown performance by Dysean Alexander as well as a stout second-half defense to turn back Salisbury 28-13 in a Colonial League football game.
The win ended the Crusaders' 36-game losing streak, dating to the second game of the 2007 season, which tied Notre Dame with Phillipsburg Catholic (1978-82) for the longest winless streak in Express-Times region history.
With the streak finally stamped out, Notre Dame (1-8) and coach Chuck Muller now can routinely prepare for their rivalry game next Saturday at Wilson (4-4).
"These kids last week maybe didn't know how to win, but this week they found the will to win," said an excited Muller, who was hugging anyone he could find after the win. "One of my players, Kyree (Bowles), told me after we got the lead, 'Coach, we're gonna get this. And Vic Embardino, what can you say about him? He's only 148 pounds but he's the fiercest striker in the league."
Notre Dame fell behind 13-0 and it had little answer for Salisbury running back Andy Eherts who rushed for 108 yards and two touchdowns in the first half.
But the Crusaders got moving in the final minute of the first half, the result of a 43-yard interception return by Noah Miller to the Salisbury 37. Alexander eventually scored on a 4-yard run around the left side with four seconds left to get Notre Dame on the board.
A key second-half adjustment also impacted the game. The Crusaders moved Embardino, normally an inside linebacker, to the outside and inserted Joey Baurkot in the middle.
The scheme worked perfectly. Embardino, a junior, was all over the field. Unofficially, he was credited with 12 tackles, a sack and another for loss.
Notre Dame took the lead for good on its first play of the third quarter when Alexander broke loose on a sweep and raced 72 yards down the right sideline. Connor Hughes kicked the extra point and the Crusaders had their first lead.
Instead of wilting from their front-runner perch, the Crusaders used it as a position of strength against the Falcons (0-9).
Alexander didn't stop there, either. The junior running back scored on a 6-yard run off left tackle on the next Notre Dame series as the Crusaders offensive line was visibly wearing down Salisbury, which dressed just 24 players.
"We could feel the momentum shift right at the end of the first half," said Alexander, a Moravian Academy student. "Last week, we let a 17-point lead slip though our hands. We weren't going to do that again."
Bowles, who alternates at quarterback with Gary Poulson out of Notre Dame's wildcat look, augmented Alexander with 81 yards rushing, including a 2-yard sneak with 6:18 to go.
Salisbury 6 7 0 0--13
Notre Dame 0 7 14 7--28
First quarter
S -- Andy Eherts 4 run (kick blocked), 8:08.
Second quarter
S -- Eherts 11 run (Chad Heidecker kick), 5:31.
ND -- Dysean Alexander 4 run (Connor Hughes kick), 0:04.
Third quarter
ND -- Alexander 72 run (Hughes kick), 8:32.
ND -- Alexander 6 run (Hughes kick), 3:37.
Fourth quarter
ND -- Kyree Bowles 2 run (Hughes kick), 6:18.
Records: Salisbury 0-9, 0-9; Notre Dame 1-8, 1-8.
TEAM STATISTICS
Salisbury ND
First downs 11 15
Rushes-yards 39-128 40-290
Passing yards 44 69
Passes C-A-I 5-12-1 5-15-0
Fumbles-lost 1-0 3-1
Punts-average 4-41 2-31
Penalties-yards 2-11 5-45
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING -- Salisbury, Eherts 25-116, Dominic Rossetti 6-10, Aaron Young 1-3, Michael Abraham 7-(minus-1); Notre Dame, Alexander 15-183, Bowles 15-81, Juvany Georges 1-20, Victor Embardino 2-9, P.J. Santos 1-2, Gary Poulson 1-(minus-1), Vince Villani 3-(minus-2), Dan Weekes 2-(minus-2).
PASSING -- Salisbury, Ryan Kelly 1-1-0 for 32, Abraham 4-11-1 for 12; Notre Dame, Poulson 5-13-0 for 69, Bowles 0-1-0 for 0, Jeff Barr 0-1-0 for 0.
RECEIVING -- Salisbury, Eherts 2-1, Rossetti 1-32, Kelly 1-6, Trent Clay 1-5; Notre Dame, Noah Miller 2-18, R.J. Snyder 1-25, Alexander 1-21, Santos 1-5.
http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/sports/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/128841420834720.xml&coll=3&thispage=4
BETHLEHEM TWP., Pa. | For the second straight week, Notre Dame High School's football team was handed a lead.
Last week against Palisades, the Crusaders didn't handle it particularly well.
But presented with a lead Friday night, Notre Dame knew exactly what to do with it.
The Crusaders rebounded from a two-touchdown deficit in the first half and rode a 183-yard, three-touchdown performance by Dysean Alexander as well as a stout second-half defense to turn back Salisbury 28-13 in a Colonial League football game.
The win ended the Crusaders' 36-game losing streak, dating to the second game of the 2007 season, which tied Notre Dame with Phillipsburg Catholic (1978-82) for the longest winless streak in Express-Times region history.
With the streak finally stamped out, Notre Dame (1-8) and coach Chuck Muller now can routinely prepare for their rivalry game next Saturday at Wilson (4-4).
"These kids last week maybe didn't know how to win, but this week they found the will to win," said an excited Muller, who was hugging anyone he could find after the win. "One of my players, Kyree (Bowles), told me after we got the lead, 'Coach, we're gonna get this. And Vic Embardino, what can you say about him? He's only 148 pounds but he's the fiercest striker in the league."
Notre Dame fell behind 13-0 and it had little answer for Salisbury running back Andy Eherts who rushed for 108 yards and two touchdowns in the first half.
But the Crusaders got moving in the final minute of the first half, the result of a 43-yard interception return by Noah Miller to the Salisbury 37. Alexander eventually scored on a 4-yard run around the left side with four seconds left to get Notre Dame on the board.
A key second-half adjustment also impacted the game. The Crusaders moved Embardino, normally an inside linebacker, to the outside and inserted Joey Baurkot in the middle.
The scheme worked perfectly. Embardino, a junior, was all over the field. Unofficially, he was credited with 12 tackles, a sack and another for loss.
Notre Dame took the lead for good on its first play of the third quarter when Alexander broke loose on a sweep and raced 72 yards down the right sideline. Connor Hughes kicked the extra point and the Crusaders had their first lead.
Instead of wilting from their front-runner perch, the Crusaders used it as a position of strength against the Falcons (0-9).
Alexander didn't stop there, either. The junior running back scored on a 6-yard run off left tackle on the next Notre Dame series as the Crusaders offensive line was visibly wearing down Salisbury, which dressed just 24 players.
"We could feel the momentum shift right at the end of the first half," said Alexander, a Moravian Academy student. "Last week, we let a 17-point lead slip though our hands. We weren't going to do that again."
Bowles, who alternates at quarterback with Gary Poulson out of Notre Dame's wildcat look, augmented Alexander with 81 yards rushing, including a 2-yard sneak with 6:18 to go.
Salisbury 6 7 0 0--13
Notre Dame 0 7 14 7--28
First quarter
S -- Andy Eherts 4 run (kick blocked), 8:08.
Second quarter
S -- Eherts 11 run (Chad Heidecker kick), 5:31.
ND -- Dysean Alexander 4 run (Connor Hughes kick), 0:04.
Third quarter
ND -- Alexander 72 run (Hughes kick), 8:32.
ND -- Alexander 6 run (Hughes kick), 3:37.
Fourth quarter
ND -- Kyree Bowles 2 run (Hughes kick), 6:18.
Records: Salisbury 0-9, 0-9; Notre Dame 1-8, 1-8.
TEAM STATISTICS
Salisbury ND
First downs 11 15
Rushes-yards 39-128 40-290
Passing yards 44 69
Passes C-A-I 5-12-1 5-15-0
Fumbles-lost 1-0 3-1
Punts-average 4-41 2-31
Penalties-yards 2-11 5-45
INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS
RUSHING -- Salisbury, Eherts 25-116, Dominic Rossetti 6-10, Aaron Young 1-3, Michael Abraham 7-(minus-1); Notre Dame, Alexander 15-183, Bowles 15-81, Juvany Georges 1-20, Victor Embardino 2-9, P.J. Santos 1-2, Gary Poulson 1-(minus-1), Vince Villani 3-(minus-2), Dan Weekes 2-(minus-2).
PASSING -- Salisbury, Ryan Kelly 1-1-0 for 32, Abraham 4-11-1 for 12; Notre Dame, Poulson 5-13-0 for 69, Bowles 0-1-0 for 0, Jeff Barr 0-1-0 for 0.
RECEIVING -- Salisbury, Eherts 2-1, Rossetti 1-32, Kelly 1-6, Trent Clay 1-5; Notre Dame, Noah Miller 2-18, R.J. Snyder 1-25, Alexander 1-21, Santos 1-5.
http://www.lehighvalleylive.com/sports/index.ssf?/base/sports-0/128841420834720.xml&coll=3&thispage=4
FRIDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
FRIDAY'S HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL SCOREBOARD
Reading Holy Name 20, Blue Mountain 14
Central Catholic 55, Allen 0
Shenandoah Valley 32, Columbia Montour Vo-Tech 7
Emmaus 49, Dieruff 0
Lehighton 36, East Stroudsburg North 19
Easton 14, Liberty 7
East Stroudsburg South 45, Hazleton 6
Schuylkill Haven 21, Mahanoy Area 0
Jim Thorpe 41, Marian Catholic 0
Tamaqua 29, Minersville 7
Pottsville 52, Muhlenberg 26
Nazareth 42, Whitehall 35
North Schuylkill 54, Panther Valley 0
Parkland 28, Northampton 20
Northern Lehigh 49, Catasauqua 7
Bangor 22, Northwestern 7
Southern Lehigh 36, Palisades 0
Pen Argyl 33, Palmerton 12
Williams Valley 41, Pine Grove 14
Pleasant Valley 35, Pocono Mountain East 13
Notre Dame 28, Salisbury 13
Tri-Valley 35, Nativity BVM 6
North Hills Indians 21 - North Allegheny Tigers 16 (F) (MSA)
Pine-Richland Rams 19 - Shaler Titans 15 (F) (MSA)
Seneca Valley Raiders 41 - Butler Golden Tornado 17 (F) (MSA)
Mount Lebanon Blue Devils 14 - Upper St. Clair Panthers 10 (F) (MSA)
Bethel Park Black Hawks 28 - Baldwin Highlanders 7 (F) (MSA)
Peters Township Indians 35 - Canon-McMillan Big Macs 13 (F) (MSA)
Woodland Hills Wolverines 29 - Penn Hills Indians 0 (F) (MSA)
Plum Mustangs 23 - Kiski Area Cavaliers 14 (F) (MSA)
Pittsburgh Central Catholic Vikings 49 - Fox Chapel Foxes 0 (F)
McKeesport Tigers 28 - Gateway Gators 14 (F) (MSA)
Latrobe Wildcats 14 - Hempfield Spartans 12 (F) (MSA)
Norwin Knights 42 - Penn-Trafford Warriors 34 (F)
Erie McDowell Trojans 63 - Altoona Mountain Lions 27 (F) (MSA)
Connellsville Falcons 42 - Valley Vikings 0 (F) (MSA)
Ringgold Rams 40 - Uniontown Red Raiders 7 (F) (MSA)
Franklin Regional Panthers 42 - Greensburg-Salem Lions 14 (F) (MSA)
Hollidaysburg Golden Tigers 40 - Derry Trojans 13 (F) (MSA)
Albert Gallatin Colonials 41 - Laurel Highlands Mustangs 34 (F) (MSA)
Indiana Little Indians 27 - Kittanning Wildcats 13 (F) (MSA)
Highlands Golden Rams 31 - Hampton Talbots 20 (F) (MSA)
Central Valley Warriors 42 - Ambridge Bridgers 13 (F) (MSA)
New Castle Red Hurricane 30 - Blackhawk Cougars 27 (F) (MSA)
Montour Spartans 42 - Moon Tigers 6 (F)
Trinity Hillers 35 - McGuffey Highlanders 7 {F} (MSA)
South Park Eagles 16 - Chartiers Valley Colts 0 (F)
Thomas Jefferson Jaguars 31 - West Mifflin Titans 12 (F)
Belle Vernon Leopards 35 - Elizabeth Forward Warriors 20 (F)
Greensburg Central Catholic Centurions 21 - Jeannette Jayhawks 9 (F) (MSA)
Mount Pleasant Vikings 38 - Southmoreland Scotties 0 (F) (MSA)
Waynesburg Raiders 26 - Brownsville Falcons 22 (F) (MSA)
Charleroi Cougars 49 - Yough Cougars 14 (F)
Beaver Falls Tigers 23 - Beaver Bobcats 17 (F-2OT) (MSA)
Ellwood City Wolverines 24 - Riverside Panthers 21 (F) (MSA)
Laurel Spartans 55 - Mohawk Warriors 28 (F) (MSA)
New Brighton Lions 28 - Freedom Bulldogs 22 (F)
Deer Lakes Lancers 13 - Shady Side Academy Indians 6 (F) (MSA)
Ford City Sabers 33 - Burrell Buccaneers 0 (F)
Freeport Yellowjackets 27 - Summit Academy Knights 14 (F)
Apollo-Ridge Vikings 35 - West Shamokin Wolves 7 (F)
Seton-LaSalle Rebels 32 - Keystone Oaks Golden Eagles 22 (F)
Steel Valley Ironmen 42 - South Allegheny Gladiators 13 (F)
South Fayette Lions 48 - Quaker Valley Quakers 13 (F)
Washington Little Prexies 53 - Burgettstown Blue Devils 19 (F)
Aliquippa Quips 28 - East Allegheny Wildcats 13 (F)
Beth-Center Bulldogs 41 - Jefferson-Morgan 14 (F) (MSA)
Carmichaels Mighty Mikes 46- Mapletown Maples 0 (F) (MSA)
Monessen Greyhounds 39 - Frazier Commodores 16 (F)
California Trojans 42 - Geibel Gators 14 (F)
Fort Cherry Rangers 48 - Chartiers-Houston Buccaneers 40 (F) (MSA)
Clairton Bears 60 - Serra Catholic Eagles 0 (F)
Brentwood Spartans 27 - Carlynton Cougars 6 (F)
Avella Eagles 29 - Bentworth Bearcats 16 (F)
Bishop Canevin Crusaders 40 - North Catholic Trojans 15 (F) (MSA)
Avonworth Antelopes 35 - Northgate Flames 0 (F)
Springdale Dynamos 47 - Riverview Raiders 0 (F)
Leechburg Blue Devils 27 - Wilkinsburg Tigers 14 (F)
Sto-Rox Vikings 33 - Cornell Raiders 0 (F)
Rochester Rams 49 - South Side Beaver Rams 13 (F)
Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Chargers 10 - West Greene Pioneers 6 (F) (MSA)
Oliver Bears 28 - Carrick Raiders 20 (F)
Allderdice Dragons 26 - Langley Mustangs 0 (F)
Central Cambria 14, Johnstown 13*
Forest Hills 44, Bishop McCort 10*
Richland 42, Bishop Guilfoyle 6*
Penn Cambria 30, Bedford 6*
Bishop Carroll 40, Somerset 22
Berlin 21, Windber 7*
North Star 43, Conemaugh Twp.33*
Portage 47, Conemaugh Valley 0
Penns Manor 47, Northern Cambria 0
Ligonier Valley 54, Purchase Line 0
Marion Center 34, Blairsville 26
Homer-Center 35, Saltsburg 6
Glendale 42, Tussey Mountain 20*
Northern Bedford 42, West Branch 0
Juniata Valley 55, Wiliamsburg 19
Bellwood-Antis 55, Mount Union 15
Everett 13, Claysburg 0
Moshannon Valley 22, S. Huntingdon 20
Clearfield 34, Bellefonte 0*
Tyrone 42, Penns Valley 0
Central 49, Bald Eagle 15
Central Mountain 27, Indian Valley 2
Huntingdon 34, Philipsburg 21*
Juniata 40, Lewistown 20
Brockway 21, Kane 7
Curwensville 42, Johnsonburg 22
Chestnut Ridge 43, Allegany, Md. 28*
Punxsutawney 37, Brookville 6
Central Dauphin 35, State College 14*
Grove City 45, DuBois 6
Hollidaysburg 40, Derry 13
McDowell 63, Altoona 27
Saint Marys 28, Karns City 20
Reading Holy Name 20, Blue Mountain 14
Central Catholic 55, Allen 0
Shenandoah Valley 32, Columbia Montour Vo-Tech 7
Emmaus 49, Dieruff 0
Lehighton 36, East Stroudsburg North 19
Easton 14, Liberty 7
East Stroudsburg South 45, Hazleton 6
Schuylkill Haven 21, Mahanoy Area 0
Jim Thorpe 41, Marian Catholic 0
Tamaqua 29, Minersville 7
Pottsville 52, Muhlenberg 26
Nazareth 42, Whitehall 35
North Schuylkill 54, Panther Valley 0
Parkland 28, Northampton 20
Northern Lehigh 49, Catasauqua 7
Bangor 22, Northwestern 7
Southern Lehigh 36, Palisades 0
Pen Argyl 33, Palmerton 12
Williams Valley 41, Pine Grove 14
Pleasant Valley 35, Pocono Mountain East 13
Notre Dame 28, Salisbury 13
Tri-Valley 35, Nativity BVM 6
North Hills Indians 21 - North Allegheny Tigers 16 (F) (MSA)
Pine-Richland Rams 19 - Shaler Titans 15 (F) (MSA)
Seneca Valley Raiders 41 - Butler Golden Tornado 17 (F) (MSA)
Mount Lebanon Blue Devils 14 - Upper St. Clair Panthers 10 (F) (MSA)
Bethel Park Black Hawks 28 - Baldwin Highlanders 7 (F) (MSA)
Peters Township Indians 35 - Canon-McMillan Big Macs 13 (F) (MSA)
Woodland Hills Wolverines 29 - Penn Hills Indians 0 (F) (MSA)
Plum Mustangs 23 - Kiski Area Cavaliers 14 (F) (MSA)
Pittsburgh Central Catholic Vikings 49 - Fox Chapel Foxes 0 (F)
McKeesport Tigers 28 - Gateway Gators 14 (F) (MSA)
Latrobe Wildcats 14 - Hempfield Spartans 12 (F) (MSA)
Norwin Knights 42 - Penn-Trafford Warriors 34 (F)
Erie McDowell Trojans 63 - Altoona Mountain Lions 27 (F) (MSA)
Connellsville Falcons 42 - Valley Vikings 0 (F) (MSA)
Ringgold Rams 40 - Uniontown Red Raiders 7 (F) (MSA)
Franklin Regional Panthers 42 - Greensburg-Salem Lions 14 (F) (MSA)
Hollidaysburg Golden Tigers 40 - Derry Trojans 13 (F) (MSA)
Albert Gallatin Colonials 41 - Laurel Highlands Mustangs 34 (F) (MSA)
Indiana Little Indians 27 - Kittanning Wildcats 13 (F) (MSA)
Highlands Golden Rams 31 - Hampton Talbots 20 (F) (MSA)
Central Valley Warriors 42 - Ambridge Bridgers 13 (F) (MSA)
New Castle Red Hurricane 30 - Blackhawk Cougars 27 (F) (MSA)
Montour Spartans 42 - Moon Tigers 6 (F)
Trinity Hillers 35 - McGuffey Highlanders 7 {F} (MSA)
South Park Eagles 16 - Chartiers Valley Colts 0 (F)
Thomas Jefferson Jaguars 31 - West Mifflin Titans 12 (F)
Belle Vernon Leopards 35 - Elizabeth Forward Warriors 20 (F)
Greensburg Central Catholic Centurions 21 - Jeannette Jayhawks 9 (F) (MSA)
Mount Pleasant Vikings 38 - Southmoreland Scotties 0 (F) (MSA)
Waynesburg Raiders 26 - Brownsville Falcons 22 (F) (MSA)
Charleroi Cougars 49 - Yough Cougars 14 (F)
Beaver Falls Tigers 23 - Beaver Bobcats 17 (F-2OT) (MSA)
Ellwood City Wolverines 24 - Riverside Panthers 21 (F) (MSA)
Laurel Spartans 55 - Mohawk Warriors 28 (F) (MSA)
New Brighton Lions 28 - Freedom Bulldogs 22 (F)
Deer Lakes Lancers 13 - Shady Side Academy Indians 6 (F) (MSA)
Ford City Sabers 33 - Burrell Buccaneers 0 (F)
Freeport Yellowjackets 27 - Summit Academy Knights 14 (F)
Apollo-Ridge Vikings 35 - West Shamokin Wolves 7 (F)
Seton-LaSalle Rebels 32 - Keystone Oaks Golden Eagles 22 (F)
Steel Valley Ironmen 42 - South Allegheny Gladiators 13 (F)
South Fayette Lions 48 - Quaker Valley Quakers 13 (F)
Washington Little Prexies 53 - Burgettstown Blue Devils 19 (F)
Aliquippa Quips 28 - East Allegheny Wildcats 13 (F)
Beth-Center Bulldogs 41 - Jefferson-Morgan 14 (F) (MSA)
Carmichaels Mighty Mikes 46- Mapletown Maples 0 (F) (MSA)
Monessen Greyhounds 39 - Frazier Commodores 16 (F)
California Trojans 42 - Geibel Gators 14 (F)
Fort Cherry Rangers 48 - Chartiers-Houston Buccaneers 40 (F) (MSA)
Clairton Bears 60 - Serra Catholic Eagles 0 (F)
Brentwood Spartans 27 - Carlynton Cougars 6 (F)
Avella Eagles 29 - Bentworth Bearcats 16 (F)
Bishop Canevin Crusaders 40 - North Catholic Trojans 15 (F) (MSA)
Avonworth Antelopes 35 - Northgate Flames 0 (F)
Springdale Dynamos 47 - Riverview Raiders 0 (F)
Leechburg Blue Devils 27 - Wilkinsburg Tigers 14 (F)
Sto-Rox Vikings 33 - Cornell Raiders 0 (F)
Rochester Rams 49 - South Side Beaver Rams 13 (F)
Our Lady of the Sacred Heart Chargers 10 - West Greene Pioneers 6 (F) (MSA)
Oliver Bears 28 - Carrick Raiders 20 (F)
Allderdice Dragons 26 - Langley Mustangs 0 (F)
Central Cambria 14, Johnstown 13*
Forest Hills 44, Bishop McCort 10*
Richland 42, Bishop Guilfoyle 6*
Penn Cambria 30, Bedford 6*
Bishop Carroll 40, Somerset 22
Berlin 21, Windber 7*
North Star 43, Conemaugh Twp.33*
Portage 47, Conemaugh Valley 0
Penns Manor 47, Northern Cambria 0
Ligonier Valley 54, Purchase Line 0
Marion Center 34, Blairsville 26
Homer-Center 35, Saltsburg 6
Glendale 42, Tussey Mountain 20*
Northern Bedford 42, West Branch 0
Juniata Valley 55, Wiliamsburg 19
Bellwood-Antis 55, Mount Union 15
Everett 13, Claysburg 0
Moshannon Valley 22, S. Huntingdon 20
Clearfield 34, Bellefonte 0*
Tyrone 42, Penns Valley 0
Central 49, Bald Eagle 15
Central Mountain 27, Indian Valley 2
Huntingdon 34, Philipsburg 21*
Juniata 40, Lewistown 20
Brockway 21, Kane 7
Curwensville 42, Johnsonburg 22
Chestnut Ridge 43, Allegany, Md. 28*
Punxsutawney 37, Brookville 6
Central Dauphin 35, State College 14*
Grove City 45, DuBois 6
Hollidaysburg 40, Derry 13
McDowell 63, Altoona 27
Saint Marys 28, Karns City 20
Nazareth beat Whitehall 42-35 to go to 7-2!! BIG WIN!!! WE WILL NOW HAVE A HOME GAME NOVEMBER 12TH, WILL BE COLLECTING TICKETS 1 MORE TIME NOVEMBER 12
BREAKING NEWS:
Nazareth beat Whitehall 42-35 to go to 7-2!!
BIG WIN!!!
WE WILL NOW HAVE A HOME GAME NOVEMBER 12TH,
WILL BE COLLECTING TICKETS 1 MORE TIME NOVEMBER 12!!!
CONGRATS BOYS!!!
WE MIGHT EVEN BE NUMBER 1 IN THE RANKINGS, WILL FIND THAYT OUT SUNDAY!
WE ARE AT NORTHAMPTON NEXT FRIDAY!!!
GO NAZARETH!!!
Nazareth beat Whitehall 42-35 to go to 7-2!!
BIG WIN!!!
WE WILL NOW HAVE A HOME GAME NOVEMBER 12TH,
WILL BE COLLECTING TICKETS 1 MORE TIME NOVEMBER 12!!!
CONGRATS BOYS!!!
WE MIGHT EVEN BE NUMBER 1 IN THE RANKINGS, WILL FIND THAYT OUT SUNDAY!
WE ARE AT NORTHAMPTON NEXT FRIDAY!!!
GO NAZARETH!!!
PCNTV SCHEDULE
PCNTV SCHEDULE
---SCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGE---
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2010
7:00 P Election Outlook: A Political Conversation
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
8:55 P Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
9:50 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
10:20 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
10:30 P Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
11:20 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
11:50 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2010
12:00 A Election Outlook: A Political Conversation
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
1:55 A Election 2010 Outlook
Terry Madonna, Director of Center for Politics & Public Affairs for Franklin & Marshall College
2:10 A Election 2010: Erie, PA Get Out the Vote Rally
Former President Bill Clinton
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
Kathy Dahlkemper, Democrat for Congress, 3rd District
3:10 A Election 2010: Scranton, PA Rally
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
3:25 A Election 2010: Bryn Mawr, PA Get Out the Vote Rally
Former President Bill Clinton
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
4:25 A Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
5:20 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
5:50 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
6:00 A (Paid Programming)
2:00 P On the Road: 3rd Congressional District (LIVE)
Grove City College in Grove City, PA
3:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
John Milliron, Milliron & Associates
Gene Barr, VP of Government & Public Affairs of the PA Chamber of Business and Industry
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
3:40 P Election 2010: 3rd Congressional Debate
Allegheny College in Meadville, PA
4:50 P Post Debate Interviews
Kathy Dahlkemper, Democrat for Congress, 3rd District
Mike Kelly, Republican for Congress, 3rd District
5:00 P On the Road: 4th Congressional District (LIVE)
Westminster College in New Wilmington, PA
6:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Eric Epstein, Coordinator of Rock the Capital
Chris Nicholas, Eagle Consulting Group
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:00 P Election 2010: 4th Congressional Debate
Longwood at Oakmont Resident Public Policy Committee
8:00 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Jason Altmire, Democrat for Congress, 4th District
8:30 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Keith Rothfus, Republican for Congress, 4th District
9:00 P On the Road: 12th Congressional District (LIVE)
Indiana University of PA in Indiana, PA
10:00 P Election 2010: 12th Congressional Debate
Somerset Daily American
11:00 P Post Debate Interviews
Mark Critz, Democrat for Congress, 12th District
Tim Burns, Republican for Congress, 12th District
11:10 P Election 2010: Federal Budget Issues
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
11:45 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2010
12:00 A On the Road: 3rd Congressional District
Grove City College in Grove City, PA
1:00 A On the Road: 4th Congressional District
Westminster College in New Wilmington, PA
2:00 A On the Road: 12th Congressional District
Indiana University of PA in Indiana, PA
3:00 A Election 2010: Nanticoke, PA Rally
Former President Bill Clinton
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
Paul Kanjorski, Democrat for Congress, 11th District
4:00 A Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
5:00 A Election 2010: Wayne, PA Get Out the Vote Rally
Vice President Joe Biden
Bryan Lentz, Democrat for Congress, 7th District
6:00 A (Paid Programming)
2:00 P On the Road: 10th Congressional District (LIVE)
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA
3:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Kevin Shivers, State Director of National Federation of Independent Business
Larry Ceisler, Ceisler Media & Issues Advocacy
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
4:00 P Election 2010: 10th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
4:55 P Post Debate Interviews
Chris Carney, Democrat for Congress, 10th District
Thomas Marino, Republican for Congress, 10th District
5:05 P Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
6:00 P On the Road: 11th Congressional District (LIVE)
Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA
7:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Ray Zaborney, State Street Strategies
Tony May, Triad Strategies
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:45 P Election 2010: 11th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
8:40 P Post Debate Interviews
Paul Kanjorski, Democrat for Congress, 11th District
Lou Barletta, Republican for Congress, 11th District
9:00 P On the Road: 15th Congressional District (LIVE)
Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA
10:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Charlie Gerow, Quantum Communications
Vincent Carocci, Former Press secretary to Gov. Robert Casey
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
11:00 P Election 2010: 15th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WFMZ-TV in Allentown, PA
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2010
12:00 A Post Debate Interviews
Charlie Dent, Republican for Congress, 15th District
John Callahan, Democrat for Congress, 15th District
Jake Towne, Independent for Congress, 15th District
12:15 A Election 2010: Penn State University Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
1:00 A On the Road: 10th Congressional District
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA
2:00 A On the Road: 11th Congressional District
Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA
3:00 A On the Road: 15th Congressional District
Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA
4:00 A Election 2010: Urban Issues Forum
Martin Luther King Leadership Development Institute
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
5:45 A Election Outlook: A Political Conversation
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
7:40 A Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
8:35 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
9:05 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
9:15 A Election 2010 Outlook
Terry Madonna, Director of Center for Politics & Public Affairs for Franklin & Marshall College
9:30 A Election 2010: Pine Grove, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
10:15 A Election 2010: Education Forum
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
11:15 A Election 2010: Federal Budget Issues
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
11:50 A Election 2010: Scranton, PA Rally
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
12:05 P Election 2010: Bryn Mawr, PA Get Out the Vote Rally
Former President Bill Clinton
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
1:05 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
1:15 P Election 2010 Outlook
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
1:30 P Election 2010: 10th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
2:30 P Election 2010: 11th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
3:30 P Election 2010: 7th Congressional Debate
Neumann University in Aston, PA
4:40 P Post Debate Interviews
Bryan Lentz, Democrat for Congress, 7th District
Pat Meehan, Republican for Congress, 7th District
Jim Schneller, Independent for Congress, 7th District
5:00 P On the Road: 7th Congressional District (LIVE)
Cheyney University in Cheyney, PA
6:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Mark Singel, The Winter Group
John Barley, Versant Strategies
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Jim Burn. Democratic State Committee Chair
Rep. Mike Turzai, R-House Minority Whip
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
8:00 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Patrick Murphy, Democrat for Congress, 8th District
8:30 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Mike Fitzpatrick, Republican for Congress, 8th District
9:00 P On the Road: 8th Congressional District (LIVE)
Ann's Choice in Warminster, PA
10:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
David LaTorre, LaTorre Communications
Fred Clark, Clark Resources
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
11:00 P Election 2010: 8th Congressional Debate
Bucks County Community College and Bucks County Courier Times
12:15 A Post Debate Interviews
Mike Fitzpatrick, Republican for Congress, 8th Debate
http://pcntv.com/
---SCHEDULE SUBJECT TO CHANGE---
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 29, 2010
7:00 P Election Outlook: A Political Conversation
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
8:55 P Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
9:50 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
10:20 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
10:30 P Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
11:20 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
11:50 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 2010
12:00 A Election Outlook: A Political Conversation
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
1:55 A Election 2010 Outlook
Terry Madonna, Director of Center for Politics & Public Affairs for Franklin & Marshall College
2:10 A Election 2010: Erie, PA Get Out the Vote Rally
Former President Bill Clinton
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
Kathy Dahlkemper, Democrat for Congress, 3rd District
3:10 A Election 2010: Scranton, PA Rally
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
3:25 A Election 2010: Bryn Mawr, PA Get Out the Vote Rally
Former President Bill Clinton
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
4:25 A Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
5:20 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
5:50 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
6:00 A (Paid Programming)
2:00 P On the Road: 3rd Congressional District (LIVE)
Grove City College in Grove City, PA
3:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
John Milliron, Milliron & Associates
Gene Barr, VP of Government & Public Affairs of the PA Chamber of Business and Industry
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
3:40 P Election 2010: 3rd Congressional Debate
Allegheny College in Meadville, PA
4:50 P Post Debate Interviews
Kathy Dahlkemper, Democrat for Congress, 3rd District
Mike Kelly, Republican for Congress, 3rd District
5:00 P On the Road: 4th Congressional District (LIVE)
Westminster College in New Wilmington, PA
6:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Eric Epstein, Coordinator of Rock the Capital
Chris Nicholas, Eagle Consulting Group
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:00 P Election 2010: 4th Congressional Debate
Longwood at Oakmont Resident Public Policy Committee
8:00 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Jason Altmire, Democrat for Congress, 4th District
8:30 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Keith Rothfus, Republican for Congress, 4th District
9:00 P On the Road: 12th Congressional District (LIVE)
Indiana University of PA in Indiana, PA
10:00 P Election 2010: 12th Congressional Debate
Somerset Daily American
11:00 P Post Debate Interviews
Mark Critz, Democrat for Congress, 12th District
Tim Burns, Republican for Congress, 12th District
11:10 P Election 2010: Federal Budget Issues
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
11:45 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
SUNDAY, OCTOBER 31, 2010
12:00 A On the Road: 3rd Congressional District
Grove City College in Grove City, PA
1:00 A On the Road: 4th Congressional District
Westminster College in New Wilmington, PA
2:00 A On the Road: 12th Congressional District
Indiana University of PA in Indiana, PA
3:00 A Election 2010: Nanticoke, PA Rally
Former President Bill Clinton
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
Paul Kanjorski, Democrat for Congress, 11th District
4:00 A Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
5:00 A Election 2010: Wayne, PA Get Out the Vote Rally
Vice President Joe Biden
Bryan Lentz, Democrat for Congress, 7th District
6:00 A (Paid Programming)
2:00 P On the Road: 10th Congressional District (LIVE)
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA
3:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Kevin Shivers, State Director of National Federation of Independent Business
Larry Ceisler, Ceisler Media & Issues Advocacy
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
4:00 P Election 2010: 10th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
4:55 P Post Debate Interviews
Chris Carney, Democrat for Congress, 10th District
Thomas Marino, Republican for Congress, 10th District
5:05 P Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
6:00 P On the Road: 11th Congressional District (LIVE)
Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA
7:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Ray Zaborney, State Street Strategies
Tony May, Triad Strategies
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:45 P Election 2010: 11th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
8:40 P Post Debate Interviews
Paul Kanjorski, Democrat for Congress, 11th District
Lou Barletta, Republican for Congress, 11th District
9:00 P On the Road: 15th Congressional District (LIVE)
Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA
10:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Charlie Gerow, Quantum Communications
Vincent Carocci, Former Press secretary to Gov. Robert Casey
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
11:00 P Election 2010: 15th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WFMZ-TV in Allentown, PA
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 2010
12:00 A Post Debate Interviews
Charlie Dent, Republican for Congress, 15th District
John Callahan, Democrat for Congress, 15th District
Jake Towne, Independent for Congress, 15th District
12:15 A Election 2010: Penn State University Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
1:00 A On the Road: 10th Congressional District
Susquehanna University in Selinsgrove, PA
2:00 A On the Road: 11th Congressional District
Wilkes University in Wilkes-Barre, PA
3:00 A On the Road: 15th Congressional District
Muhlenberg College in Allentown, PA
4:00 A Election 2010: Urban Issues Forum
Martin Luther King Leadership Development Institute
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
5:45 A Election Outlook: A Political Conversation
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
7:40 A Election 2010: Lititz, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
8:35 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
9:05 A Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
9:15 A Election 2010 Outlook
Terry Madonna, Director of Center for Politics & Public Affairs for Franklin & Marshall College
9:30 A Election 2010: Pine Grove, PA Rally
Tom Corbett, Republican for Governor
10:15 A Election 2010: Education Forum
Dan Onorato, Democrat for Governor
11:15 A Election 2010: Federal Budget Issues
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
11:50 A Election 2010: Scranton, PA Rally
Pat Toomey, Republican for U.S. Senate
12:05 P Election 2010: Bryn Mawr, PA Get Out the Vote Rally
Former President Bill Clinton
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
1:05 P Election 2010: Black Clergy of Philadelphia & Vicinity Endorsement
Joe Sestak, Democrat for U.S. Senate
1:15 P Election 2010 Outlook
Howard Dean, Former Democratic National Committee Chair
1:30 P Election 2010: 10th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
2:30 P Election 2010: 11th Congressional Debate
Courtesy of WVIA-TV in Pittston, PA
3:30 P Election 2010: 7th Congressional Debate
Neumann University in Aston, PA
4:40 P Post Debate Interviews
Bryan Lentz, Democrat for Congress, 7th District
Pat Meehan, Republican for Congress, 7th District
Jim Schneller, Independent for Congress, 7th District
5:00 P On the Road: 7th Congressional District (LIVE)
Cheyney University in Cheyney, PA
6:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Mark Singel, The Winter Group
John Barley, Versant Strategies
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
7:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
Jim Burn. Democratic State Committee Chair
Rep. Mike Turzai, R-House Minority Whip
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
8:00 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Patrick Murphy, Democrat for Congress, 8th District
8:30 P On The Issues: Election 2010
Mike Fitzpatrick, Republican for Congress, 8th District
9:00 P On the Road: 8th Congressional District (LIVE)
Ann's Choice in Warminster, PA
10:00 P PCN Call-In: Election 2010 (LIVE)
David LaTorre, LaTorre Communications
Fred Clark, Clark Resources
Call 1-877-PA6-5001
11:00 P Election 2010: 8th Congressional Debate
Bucks County Community College and Bucks County Courier Times
12:15 A Post Debate Interviews
Mike Fitzpatrick, Republican for Congress, 8th Debate
http://pcntv.com/
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