Jamey Hoose, the Manager of Canton’s Pump and Pantry and a member of WR Croman PTSO welcomed all and taught the students the fine art of pizza making. The children had a wonderful time learning about pizza dough ingredients; making and eating their pizzas, all while locals drank coffee and watched.
On October 16, first graders from Troy’s WR Croman elementary had a wonderful field trip that was sponsored by their PTSO.
Jamey Hoose, the Manager of Canton’s Pump and Pantry and a member of WR Croman PTSO welcomed all and taught the students the fine art of pizza making. The children had a wonderful time learning about pizza dough ingredients; making and eating their pizzas, all while locals drank coffee and watched. Current residents and former residents of the Bradford County area, this is your opportunity to purchase a bit of history, enjoy a game of cards, and help the Canton Elementary School raise funds to build a much needed playground.
Each student will be selling Bradford County Playing cards which have illustrations of local buildings and the 52 cards are colorized and digitally painted to bring local history back to life. The cards are made by Barclay Mountain Playing Card Company out of LeRoy. The Canton Area School District received $37,192.80 in earned income tax collections through Berkheimer in September.ere to edit.
The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania paid $27.48 to the Canton Area School District in September for Access. The Canton Area School District received $300 from Thompson's Sports & Apparel for a sponsor decal to be displayed in the gymnasium.
By Bailey Clark and Jewell VanRyn Students at Canton High School
Thousands of males and females of all ages are diagnosed with all types of cancers. The most occurring cancer is breast cancer. One in eight women are diagnosed, and then, one in one thousand men are diagnosed (“U.S. Breast Cancer Statistics”). It forms in the cell, milk-producing ducts, and glands of the breast. Most commonly noticed symptoms are swelling, redness, increase of size, discharge other than breast milk, and lumps or nodes of the breast (“Breast Cancer- for Patients”). See someone immediately if you find something out of the ordinary. If you find something out of the ordinary, you should think of these risk factors. Some risk factors include women over sixty more than likely to be diagnosed, weight gain during adulthood, and early menstrual cycle due to long lifetime exposure of hormone change. Other unexpected factors include constant alcohol consumption, taking birth control, and radiation exposure. However, many people are unaware of the Human Epidermal Growth Factor Receptor 2 (HER2) gene, which triggers the growth of cancer cells (“HER2 Status”). To reduce the chances of growth in cancer cells, one should exercise regularly four to seven hours a week, change life style or eating habits, avoid known cancer-causing agents, and take medications to treat precancerous conditions to keep cancer from forming. There is no certainty that you will not obtain cancerous cells, but these precautions will lower the risk (“Causes and Prevention Research”). If one has breast cancer, it can include four main stages. Stage zero is identification of cancer cells, and they have not left where they have started. Stage one is where the tumor measures up to two centimeters. Stage two (invasive) includes a two-to-five centimeter tumor which has spread to the lymph nodes. Stage three (locally advanced) is a tumor more than two inches in length and has spread to more than one lymph node. Stage four (metastatic) is when the tumor has spread beyond the breast, underarm, and internal mammary lymph nodes. If one identifies the cancer in one of the last two stages, it can be deadly from not receiving treatments. If someone goes into remission and then is diagnosed later on in life, it is a possibility that it will reoccur as a different type of cancer (“Stages of Breast Cancer”). The Troy football team played host to the Binghamton squad and came away with a, 48-45 victory in an offensive shootout on October 2.
Troy's ground game was unstoppable, compiling a staggering 546 yards on 79 carries. Troy attempted only pass, and it was a Clark Jackson completion to Nate Swain, good for 38 yards and a touchdown. Collin Binford returned five Binghamton kicks for a total of 80 yards, and everything else for Troy came via their irresistible ground game. Ben Sherman was the workhorse, amassing 324 yards on 45 carries and five touchdowns on runs on 5, 1, 4, 50 and 1 yard. Kurtis Roupp scored on a 14 yard run for Troy's final score. Roupp carried the ball 12 times for 94 yards, Clark Jackson gained 60 yards on 14 carries; Collin Binford had 30 on five carries. Nate Swain carried the ball once from scrimmage, good for a 27-yard pickup. Cody Ercolino gained 11 yards on two carries. Troy's ball control offense worked to perfection, and Binghamton ran just 28 plays in the game (only nine in the second half). Two onside kicks successfully recovered by Troy were big factors as Binghamton scored each time it had the ball. Each team had seven touchdowns. Collin Binford converted four of five extra point kicks, and Clark Jackson had one two-point conversion. Canton FFA Fruit Sale is on through October 29. Please see any FFA member or go to the Canton School District web site and click on either Fundraisers OR High School in order to link to the FFA e-commerce site. The money is needed when ordering and the fruit will be available for pick-up behind the high school on or around November 17th. Troy Homecoming 2015 is scheduled for October 9. At 5:15 the Homecoming parade will start in Troy on West Main Street. 5:30: a tailgate party will be held in the gate 2 parking lot. 6:00 Introduction of Court. 7:00 Kick off the football game between Troy and Wellboro. Halftime: Band Field Show and Crowing of the King and Queen All evening: Alumni booth under the grandstand Students of the Month for September in Canton High School include: seventh grade, Joel Schoonover and Lylah Smith; eighth, Jasmine Cook and Adrian Spencer; ninth, Dennis Saar and Katlyn Krise; tenth, Randi Jennings and Nate Schoonover; eleventh, Hunter Palmer and twelfth grade, Kimberly Splieth and Bruce Comerski. |
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