Connect with us

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania high school football scores for October 10, 2025

Published

on

Pennsylvania high school football scores for October 10, 2025


Friday night high school football is off and running across Pennsylvania. 

Week 7 of the 2025 high school football season is underway, with dozens of games across the state as the playoffs inch closer. 

This story will be updated with the latest scores from around the state as they come in on Friday. 

Week 7 Pennsylvania high school football scores 

Aliquippa 34, Blackhawk 17

Advertisement

Bald Eagle 28, Westmont Hilltop 0

Belle Vernon 48, Laurel Highlands 6

Bellwood-Antis 46, Chestnut Ridge 28

Bentworth 35, Jefferson-Morgan 13

Berwick 63, Williamsport 19

Advertisement

Bethlehem Center 48, Mapletown 0

Bethlehem Freedom 35, Northampton 14

Bishop Guilfoyle 28, Forest Hills 14

Bishop McCort 42, Philipsburg-Osceola 0

Butler 35, Taylor Allderdice High School 8

Advertisement

Cambria Heights 34, Conemaugh Township 26

Camp Hill Trinity 38, West Perry 14

Cedar Cliff 57, Carlisle 19

Cedar Crest 48, Lancaster McCaskey 6

Central Bucks West 28, Pennridge 14

Advertisement

Chambersburg 28, Altoona 10

Chartiers-Houston 34, Serra Catholic 0

Clairton 48, Leechburg 0

Clarion Area High School 86, Bradford 0

Claysburg-Kimmel 29, Moshannon Valley 13

Advertisement

Cle. Benedictine, Ohio 53, Cathedral Prep 23

Conestoga Valley 42, Elizabethtown 7

Corry 28, Fairview 3

Dallas 7, Crestwood 0

Delaware Valley 41, Valley View 0

Advertisement

Derry 43, Greensburg Salem 28

DuBois 45, Brookville 0

Dunmore 42, West Scranton 7

Eastern York 28, Susquehannock 23

Easton 23, Bethlehem Liberty 20

Advertisement

Eisenhower 42, Franklin 13

Elizabeth-Forward 55, Yough 7

Emmaus 42, Allentown Dieruff 7

Farrell 52, Sharpsville 7

Fitch, Ohio 21, Erie McDowell 12

Advertisement

Fort Cherry 56, Bishop Canevin 19

Garden Spot 34, Bristol 20

Garnet Valley 29, Upper Darby 7

General McLane 49, Meadville 20

Glendale 41, West Branch 6

Advertisement

Governor Mifflin 49, Lebanon 7

Greencastle Antrim 21, Juniata 20

Greensburg Central Catholic 52, Springdale 14

Greenville 43, Saegertown 6

Hatboro-Horsham 41, Tennent 18

Advertisement

Hempfield 30, Exeter 28

Hershey 42, Northern York 14

Highlands 42, Burrell 21

Hollidaysburg 42, Selinsgrove 14

Homer-Center 30, West Shamokin 0

Advertisement

Honesdale 56, Greater Nanticoke Area High School 21

Huntingdon 28, Bedford 9

Jeannette 23, Brentwood 18

Jersey Shore 44, Penn Wood 20

Karns City 63, Brockway 27

Advertisement

Kennett 24, Unionville 21

Kiski 27, Armstrong 25

Lakeland (PA) 40, Western Wayne 14

Lansdale Catholic 28, Archbishop Wood Catholic High School 21, OT

Laurel 42, Shenango 0

Advertisement

Lehighton 27, Tamaqua 16

Line Mountain 54, Buchanan 8

Littlestown 10, Delone Catholic High School 7

MD School for the Deaf, Md. 44, Coventry Christian School 16

Manheim Central 42, Fleetwood 3

Advertisement

Marion Center 28, Purchase Line 12

McKeesport 56, Mars 31

Meyersdale 54, Brownsville 0

Middletown 14, East Pennsboro 10

Minersville 34, Pottsville Nativity 0

Advertisement

Mohawk 33, Western Beaver 20

Montgomery 57, Holy Redeemer 6

Mount Carmel Area High School 35, Central Mountain 13

Mount Union High School 46, Southern Huntingdon High School 9

Nazareth Area 41, Bethlehem Catholic 33

Advertisement

New Oxford 14, West York 7

North Allegheny 21, Canon-McMillan 13

North Pocono 37, Scranton 14

Northern Bedford 27, North Star 26

Northern Garrett, Md. 38, Uniontown 0

Advertisement

Northern Lehigh 42, Catasauqua 12

Northwestern 50, Seneca 7

Northwestern Lehigh 50, Jim Thorpe 7

Notre Dame High School of Green Pond 34, Palisades 22

Oil City 61, Warren 7

Advertisement

Palmerton 26, Salisbury 25

Parkland 37, Allentown Central Catholic 7

Penn Cambria 27, Tyrone 10

Penn Hills 19, Mt Lebanon 14

Penn-Trafford 48, Franklin Regional 14

Advertisement

Pine-Richland 43, Greater Latrobe High School 7

Plum 35, Fox Chapel 0

Pottsgrove 35, Upper Merion 7

Quakertown 47, Truman 0

Red Land 23, Shippensburg 7

Advertisement

Richland 33, Bellefonte 29

Ridley 14, Haverford High School 0

River Valley 46, Conemaugh Valley 14

Riverside 55, Carbondale 7

Schuylkill Valley 31, Hamburg 13

Advertisement

Scranton Prep 35, Mid Valley 0

Seneca Valley 47, Hempfield Area 8

Shaler 17, North Hills 14

Shamokin 38, Lewisburg 0

Slippery Rock 37, Titusville 14

Advertisement

South Allegheny 35, Apollo-Ridge 0

South Park 42, Ligonier Valley 21

South Side 35, Neshannock 7

South Williamsport 28, Muncy 20

Southern Columbia 26, Montoursville 16

Advertisement

Southmoreland 14, Mount Pleasant 0

St. Joseph’s Prep 40, The Roman Catholic High School of Philadelphia 39

State College 39, Central Dauphin East 14

Strath Haven 51, Harriton 0

Stroudsburg 28, East Stroudsburg North 6

Advertisement

Thomas Jefferson 42, Ringgold 6

Towanda 42, Sayre Area 14

Tri-Valley 42, Mahanoy 7

Trinity Washington 42, Chartiers Valley 18

Troy 58, North Penn-Mansfield 10

Advertisement

United Valley 31, Portage Area 0

Upper Perkiomen 22, Phoenixville 19

Upper St Clair 57, Bethel Park 32

Warrior Run 42, Hughesville 7

Washington 61, Charleroi 9

Advertisement

West Allegheny 24, New Castle 14

West Chester East 27, West Chester Henderson 26

Whitehall 48, William Allen High School 8

William Penn High School 42, Spring Grove 39

Williams Valley 56, Marian Catholic High School 10

Advertisement

Wilmington 48, Mercer 0

Wilson High School – West Lawn, PA 42, Penn Manor 7

Windber 14, Berlin-Brothersvalley 10

Woodland Hills 42, Gateway 28

Wyoming 28, Lake-Lehman 0

Advertisement

Berks Catholic 37, Columbia 0 (Thursday)

Council Rock South 14, Souderton 7 (Thursday)

Hickory 21, Grove City 14 (Thursday)

Milton Hershey 49, Boiling Springs 21 (Thursday)

North Schuylkill 42, Blue Mountain 21 (Thursday)

Advertisement

Olney 34, Academy at Palumbo 8 (Thursday)

Pittsburgh Central Catholic 35, Norwin 6 (Thursday)

WPIAL high school football games on KDKA+

This season, KDKA+ is airing regular-season WPIAL high school football games as part of the Steelers High School Showcase Game of the Week series. 

The games are scheduled to air every Friday through Oct. 24, with kickoff scheduled for 7 p.m. each week. The games will be simulcast on KDKA.com and the CBS News Pittsburgh streaming service. 

Advertisement



Source link

Pennsylvania

PA targets AI developers for allegedly misleading users

Published

on

PA targets AI developers for allegedly misleading users


HARRISBURG — A new task force under Pennsylvania’s Department of State has been working since February to hunt down AI chatbots that may be misleading users into believing the bots are licensed professionals.

Last week, the Shapiro administration filed what it said was the first lawsuit to stem from its AI investigations and the first enforcement action of its kind announced by a governor in the United States. Pennsylvania officials indicated there could be more to come.

The high-profile litigation comes as lawmakers across the country are pursuing, and in some cases enacting, legislation to address concerns brought on by the growing artificial intelligence industry — from banning the creation of sexual images of minors to requiring age verification for all users. A number of proposals from Gov. Josh Shapiro’s most recent budget address await action in the legislature.

The administration’s lawsuit alleges that software known as Character.AI, which creates fictional personalities for users to interact with, posed as a licensed doctor and offered medical advice to a state investigator, violating state law governing the practice of medicine. The suit was filed by Pennsylvania’s State Board of Medicine.

Advertisement

“We will continue to take action to protect the public from misleading or unlawful practices, whether they come from individuals or emerging technologies,” Secretary of the Commonwealth Al Schmidt said in a statement following the Character.AI lawsuit.

Shapiro made a similar promise in a statement, saying Pennsylvania will continue “holding bad actors accountable and setting clear guardrails so people can use new technology responsibly.”

The lawsuit says it stems from an investigation in which an employee with the Department of State created an account with the service and began a dialogue with “Emilie” — an AI-generated character the software described as a “Doctor of psychiatry.”

The character allegedly claimed it went to Imperial College London, had been practicing for seven years, and is licensed in Pennsylvania.

“In fact, I did a stint in Philadelphia for a while,” it told the investigator, according to the lawsuit.

Advertisement

The software also provided what the lawsuit said was a fake license number.

Those claims, the Shapiro administration argues, trick users into believing they are receiving medical advice from a licensed practitioner.

“Pennsylvanians deserve to know who — or what — they are interacting with online, especially when it comes to their health,” Shapiro said in a statement. “We will not allow companies to deploy AI tools that mislead people into believing they are receiving advice from a licensed medical professional.”

The lawsuit seeks for Character Technologies Inc. (developer of Character.AI) to “cease and desist from engaging in the unlawful practice of medicine and surgery.”

A Character.AI spokesperson said in a statement Tuesday that the company’s “highest priority is the safety and well-being of our users.” The spokesperson said that before the lawsuit, Character.AI already featured disclaimers warning that its AI characters are not real, and that they “should be treated as fiction.”

Advertisement

The spokesperson declined to comment on the lawsuit.

Pennsylvania’s lawsuit is not the first Character Technologies has faced. At least one case was brought by the parent of a minor who died by suicide. The company last year adopted a policy to ban minors from engaging “in open-ended chat with AI on our platform.”

The Federal Trade Commission last year also opened an inquiry into the company, along with six other chatbot providers, regarding how they “measure, test, and monitor potentially negative impacts of this technology on children and teens,” according to an agency news release.

It’s unclear what led Pennsylvania regulators to specifically investigate Character.AI. A Department of State spokesperson said the source of the complaint was “confidential.”

Shapiro told CNN, one of several national media outlets that covered the novel lawsuit, that his administration “challenged” the Department of State to conduct these types of investigations “to go and use this technology and see what kind of risks it posed” to Pennsylvanians.

Advertisement

Some details about the effort, which Shapiro first teased in his February budget pitch, are not yet public. Members of the task force are not disclosed online, and the Department of State did not answer questions from Spotlight PA asking for their names or how they were selected. A Department of State spokesperson said the task force consists of 12 of its employees.

As part of the AI fraud initiative, Pennsylvania is crowdsourcing tips on what software the state should investigate through its “Unlicensed Practice by a Chatbot” complaint system and hotline. According to the Department of State, it has received 18 complaints since it launched in February.

Pennsylvania’s moves against AI companies come as they rapidly grow their user bases nationwide, especially children and teenagers.

According to a survey last year from Common Sense Media, a California-based child safety nonprofit, more than half of teenagers access AI platforms at least a few times per month. One-third said they use or view the software as a tool to socialize, including for conversation or relationship practice, emotional support, role-playing, friendships, and romantic interactions.

At least five states have enacted laws restricting chatbots or requiring disclosures, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. California, for example, requires companies to disclose to children that they are interacting with AI. Pennsylvania is not one of them, but the state medical board alleges Character.AI’s actions violated existing law.

Advertisement

In his February budget address, Shapiro called on the General Assembly to take action on artificial intelligence. He urged lawmakers to prohibit chatbots from creating sexually explicit or violent content of minors, mandate that developers require age verification from users, and detect when children mention self-harm or violence. He also wants companies to frequently notify users they’re not interacting with a human.

While You’re Here

Spotlight PA’s nonprofit reporting is a free public service, but it depends on your support. Give now to ensure it can continue.

Lawmakers have not yet adopted those proposals.

House Communications & Technology Committee Chair Joe Ciresi (D., Montgomery) said the body’s staff is “constantly” meeting with Shapiro’s office to discuss how lawmakers should address growing concerns from the public regarding AI.

Advertisement

Ciresi’s counterpart in the GOP-controlled state Senate, Tracy Pennycuick (R., Montgomery), did not respond to questions about the Character.AI lawsuit, Pennsylvania’s AI Task Force, or her staff’s coordination with Shapiro.

Two years ago, Shapiro signed a bill banning ownership or distribution of AI-generated sexual images of children and non-consenting adults, which Pennycuick had sponsored. Last year, he signed another Pennycuick bill criminalizing the use of AI to create a nonconsensual “digital likeness” (including deepfakes) to “defraud or injure” another person.

Pennycuick’s now pushing for legislation that would require disclosures and restrictions for chatbots when they interact with children. In the legislative memo, Pennycuick pointed to past lawsuits filed against chatbot developers to argue “heartbreaking cases underscore the urgent need for safeguards to protect children from unsafe and unvetted AI systems.” Her proposal passed the state Senate in March but has not advanced through committee in the House.

Lawmakers have also been working to address another aspect of the AI industry, the growth of data centers and backlash to them in some communities. In Shapiro’s February budget address, he said, “no sector of our country’s economy is growing faster than data centers and artificial intelligence.” He announced incentives for data center developers to follow stricter environmental and transparency standards.

BEFORE YOU GO… If you learned something from this article, pay it forward and contribute to Spotlight PA at spotlightpa.org/donate. This story was funded in part thanks to the support of the Lancaster County Local Journalism Fund. Learn more about how we are supported here.

Advertisement



Source link

Continue Reading

Pennsylvania

Hersheypark in Pennsylvania could be forced to close this summer

Published

on

Hersheypark in Pennsylvania could be forced to close this summer


Hersheypark in Pennsylvaniacould be forced to close this summer amid a dispute between the site’s operators and union employees, according to a report. ​

The amusement park is scheduled to open seven days a week starting May 21 in a shift from its weekend-only operation before the summer, despite a looming vote among employees about whether to go on strike. ​

Over 200 union maintenance employees at Hersheypark, The Hotel Hershey and Giant Center rejected a contract offer from Hershey Entertainment & Resorts on May 7, according to Inside the Magic. The park’s operators described the proposal as their “last, best and final” offer.​

Over a three-day period this week, employees will vote on whether to strike after rejecting the offer, which is the third from the park’s operators. A strike could close the park just in time for the start of the busy summer season when families head on vacation.

Advertisement
Hersheypark could be forced to close over the summer amid a dispute between the park’s operators and union maintenance workers
Hersheypark could be forced to close over the summer amid a dispute between the park’s operators and union maintenance workers (Getty/iStock)

​The list of employees considering going on strike includes ride mechanics, electricians, plumbers, welders, painters, machinists, utilities technicians, carpenters, garage auto mechanics and sign artists. ​

In mid-March, the union and Hershey Entertainment & Resorts agreed to extend a former contract for 60 days to allow for continued negotiations. ​

According to Inside the Magic, union workers are seeking fair wage increases, more affordable care plans and higher pay premiums for less-desirable shifts. The union has also said that it will reject new contract offers that lower professional standards, devalue skilled trades or open the door to lower wages in maintenance roles in the future. ​

The Independent has contacted Hershey Entertainment & Resorts for comment about the possible strike.

Hersheypark, located 15 miles east of Harrisburg, is the largest amusement park in Pennsylvania. Founded in 1906, the 121-acre site boasts more than 70 rides, a water park with 17 water attractions and an 11-acre North American Wildlife Park, according to Hersheypark’s website. ​

It’s named for and themed in conjunction with the popular candy company.

Advertisement
Over 200 workers rejected a contract offer from Hershey Entertainment & Resorts on May 7, according to a report
Over 200 workers rejected a contract offer from Hershey Entertainment & Resorts on May 7, according to a report (Getty)

However, a different park in the Keystone State was named as the top amusement park in the U.S. on TripAdvisor’s Best of the Best list. ​

It was Knoebels Amusement Resort in Elysburg, 42 miles north-northeast of Harrisburg, that topped the list. In doing so, the little-known park was ranked higher than Dollywood, Disney World’s Magic Kingdom, Disney’s Hollywood Studios and Universal Islands of Adventure that also made the top 5. ​

“It’s got it all: roller coasters, kid-friendly rides (bumper cars, a haunted mansion), swimming, camping, a mining museum, and even a championship 18-hole golf course,” TripAdvisor wrote. “The accommodating staff, clean facilities, and fun attractions make for a memorable family-friendly visit.”​

Knoebels is the U.S.’s largest free-admission park, although tickets for individual rides cost a fee. ​



Source link

Advertisement
Continue Reading

Pennsylvania

Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling on cast vote records creates uncertainty for counties

Published

on

Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling on cast vote records creates uncertainty for counties






Source link

Continue Reading
Advertisement

Trending