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For information on submitting an obituary, please contact Reading Eagle by phone at 610-371-5018, or email at obituaries@readingeagle.com or fax at 610-371-5193. Most obituaries published in the Reading Eagle are submitted through funeral homes and cremation services, but we will accept submissions from families. Obituaries can be emailed to obituaries@readingeagle.com. In addition to the text of the obituary, any photographs that you wish to include can be attached to this email. Please put the text of the obituary in a Word document, a Google document or in the body of the email. The Reading Eagle also requires a way to verify the death, so please include either the phone number of the funeral home or cremation service that is in charge of the deceased's care or a photo of his/her death certificate. We also request that your full name, phone number and address are all included in this email. All payments by families must be made with a credit card. We will send a proof of the completed obituary before we require payment. The obituary cannot run, however, until we receive payment in full. Obituaries can be submitted for any future date, but they must be received no later than 3:00 p.m. the day prior to its running for it to be published. Please call the obituary desk, at 610-371-5018, for information on pricing. STATE COLLEGE – Penn State football fans and Nick Singleton himself had been waiting for the kind of performance he gave Saturday at Beaver Stadium. Singleton gained 143 all-purpose yards and scored three touchdowns in a 27-24 loss to No. 2 Indiana. He caught a 19-yard touchdown pass that put the Nittany Lions ahead with 6:27 to go, but the Hoosiers mounted an 80-yard drive and scored the game-winning TD on a 7-yard pass from Fernando Mendoza to Omar Cooper Jr. with 36 seconds left “If we win, that’s all that matters,” Singleton said. “I know I played a good game, but we didn’t win as a team. It doesn’t feel right. I’m upset about that.” He carried 10 times for 71 yards and two touchdowns, including a season-long 59-yard burst to the Indiana 2 that set up his 1-yard plunge early in the fourth quarter and drew the loudest cheers of the day. His longest rush of the season before Saturday had been 16 yards. “It felt like the old me,” he said. “I wish I could have scored the touchdown, but the O-line got me in there. … If a player makes a big play, it hypes everybody up, the fans and our team. That brings momentum. It felt good.” Singleton, a former Gov. Mifflin star, caught three passes for 22 yards and one score and returned two kickoffs for 50 yards. He has 41 career rushing touchdowns, two behind Saquon Barkley’s school record. He also has 51 touchdowns overall in his career, two behind Barkley’s school record. Singleton credited quarterback Ethan Grunkemeyer’s passing for opening room in the running game. “Everybody’s trying to stop the run and stacking the box,” Singleton said. “Grunk made good throws down the field. He opened everything up. That’s why I got that long run.” Grunk shines: Grunkemeyer made his third straight start against a ranked opponent and a top-10 defense the best one of his brief starting career. He completed 22-of-31 passes for 219 yards and one touchdown with one interception. “He threw that interception coming out of halftime, but he bounced right back,” interim Penn State head coach Terry Smith said. “He started making some good throws. He gave us a chance to win. He led us back. He took control of the huddle. I thought he was big time. “I’m just looking forward to him getting better and continuing to develop.” As Smith had promised, Grunkemeyer threw down the field. Trebor Pena caught six passes for 99 yards, including a 43-yarder that set up a second-quarter touchdown. Freshman Koby Howard made two catches for 28 yards, including a 22-yarder. Smith was asked why Penn State enjoyed success with its vertical passing game. “We made calls to throw the ball down the field,” he said. Grunkemeyer’s performance impressed Indiana coach Curt Cignetti. “Penn State’s a good football team,” he said, “and maybe they found their quarterback, too, a guy that can lead them to more wins the rest of the season.” Injury report: Penn State sophomore quarterback Jaxon Smolik and freshman defensive end Chaz Coleman were listed as out on the Big Ten availability report. Smolik was in street clothes wearing a cast on his left wrist. He was injured last month in a 25-24 loss at Iowa and was not on the travel roster for the Ohio State game last week. Coleman was seen at practice Wednesday night during the periods that were open to the media. He is a promising player who has 3.5 tackles for loss, one sack and two forced fumbles. Indiana played without wide receiver Elijah Sarratt, who has 45 catches for 609 yards and 10 touchdowns. Sarratt tested his injured hamstring before the game, but did not play.