How Nick Sirianni came out of nowhere to become Eagles head coach
Updated Jan 24, 2021;
Posted Jan 23, 2021
The Philadelphia Eagles hired former Indianapolis Colts offensive coordinator Nick Sirianni as their new head coach on Thursday.AP
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When Nick Sirianni was a college student at Mount Union, he spent his summers at home in Jamestown, N.Y., working out at the local YMCA alongside future Kansas City Chiefs head coach Todd Haley, who owned a summer home near Chautauqua Lake. Haley, then the Chicago Bears wide receivers coach, noticed Sirianni was in the gym at the same time as him every day.
Courtesy of Myles Aronowitz/Epix
CMU School of Drama grad Brian Muller stars as Pags in the new Epix coming-of-age series “Bridge & Tunnel.”
Courtesy of Myles Aronowitz/Epix
CMU School of Drama grad Brian Muller stars as Pags in the new Epix coming-of-age series Bridge & Tunnel.
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Netflix’s horror series “Archive 81” has been filming in and around Pittsburgh since November and will be joined in a couple of weeks by another Netflix program, “The Chair.” Showtime’s “Rust” expects to film in March.
Three or more factions may scramble for dominance of the GOP: conservatives, Trumpers and moderates. Ultimately, DiSarro believes the party will return to being â(Ronald) Reagan conservative,â but how long it takes to get there and to rebound from the horrendous scenes on TV from the Capitol insurrection remain to be seen. DiSarro does not see a third party for Trump supporters.
âWhat happened in D.C. is an attack on the moral foundation of the Republican Party,â DiSarro said.
The FBI is warning about the potential for more attacks in Washington and the 50 state capitals from Saturday through Presidentelect Joe Bidenâs inauguration on Wednesday.
Pat Benic, a W&J graduate and director of photography for United Press International, was in the U.S. Capitol last Wednesday when it was sacked by supporters of President Trump.
AP
Closing the gap
Democrats in Pennsylvania still have a registration edge of 700,000 over Republicans, with 4.2 million Democrats, compared to 3.5 million Republicans. However, the GOP has been making gains, while Democrats have seen small losses.
Over the last four years, Republicans added 205,000 registered voters, while Democrats saw their total registration slip by 10,000.
Nowhere has this trend been more pronounced than Westmoreland County. As recently as 25 years ago, Democrats there boasted a 2-1 registration edge, but Republicans took the lead in registered voters in 2019. Deb Erdley
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