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  • Horoscopes: Monday, Dec. 15, 2025

    ARIES (March 21-April 19). Some questions are like Pandora’s box: Once opened, they release more truth and feeling than you expected. Ask only if you’re ready for the shift that follows. Choose your moment carefully. Nothing released from the box ever returns to it.

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Things calm down today, and you’ll get down to business. But remember, fulfillment doesn’t come from merely checking boxes. Your worth isn’t measured by output. What matters isn’t how much you do but how much you love.

    GEMINI (May 21-June 21). What seems like a very small distraction simply takes up too much of your time. You’ll be much more productive when it’s out of the picture. You may finally be in a place where it’s worth it to make the change.

    CANCER (June 22-July 22). Your feelings surge today. There’s a lot of energy running through you, but you can handle this charge. You can use your emotions instead of letting them use you. You’ll organize, compartmentalize and act on that which serves you.

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). While many of your relationships bring sweetness to life, some bring a good amount of stress. You still believe that in time you will be grateful for these relationships, and eventually, you’ll understand their purpose in your life.

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). Remember when you predicted the future accidentally, without even trying to make a psychic statement? You’ll do it again today. Write down your thoughts because you’ll later enjoy today’s uncanny accuracy.

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). You have flexibility in some areas of life. You can rearrange habits, preferences, timing, environment, workflow, attitude, priorities. Then there are those that are the immovable fixtures. Don’t see them as blocks but as architecture you can design around.

    SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Everyone learns the rules of life from parents, teachers and leaders, but your inner guidance has always been the stronger force. Today it matters because something you feel is right for you isn’t reflected in the world around you, so you’ll trust yourself instead.

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21). You don’t have to prove yourself to anyone, not even you, but you challenge yourself anyway because you want to see how far you can take this beautiful life. Keep the heart. Angels are around you, cheering you on.

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). The theme today swirls around issues of character. Of course, there’s a difference between having character and being a character. Somehow, you’ll do both. You find the funny angle in your circumstances and approach with integrity.

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). There’s no substitute for meeting in person. As inconvenient as it may seem, it will be better for building bonds, understanding dynamics and knowing the right thing to do next for the project at hand.

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). Big dreams lead to extraordinary outcomes. They are not always the outcomes that existed in the dream, but they are extraordinary because you dared to dream at all. So keep stretching your imagination around the grand scale.

    TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Dec. 15). Welcome to your Year of the Golden Thread, which brings shimmering connections between seemingly unrelated parts of your life — the hobby that becomes a side hustle, the friend of a friend who changes everything, the random skill that pays off. Your timing is uncanny. More highlights: VIP access to something you’ve dreamed about, a luxury home upgrade and friendships that deepen into chosen family. Cancer and Capricorn adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 8, 4, 5, 31 and 47.

  • Dear Abby | Man’s holiday party could end up being a lonely event

    DEAR ABBY: We have a mutual friend who’s very dear to us. He’s a kind-hearted and generous disabled vet who’s too proud to ask for help. Unfortunately, due to his ill health and physical limitations, his home is unkempt. He lives among piles of dusty trash, empty cartons, unfinished projects, dirty clothes and even animal messes. It smells very unpleasant, especially in the heat.

    The last time I visited, I sat down in what I thought was a “safe” clear spot and came away smelling of cat urine. Despite our repeated offers, he declines our help to clean up. Unfortunately, it’s so bad that people no longer want to visit his home.

    He recently volunteered to host a traditional holiday gathering for our group of friends, but if he does, I’m afraid no one will show. (I’m hesitant to eat anything prepared there anyway, and so are others.) We’ve discussed moving the event, but we’re afraid it would hurt his feelings, since he really enjoys hosting. Plus, what would we say?

    Renting a small hall was our first thought, but he’s insistent and excited for the company. Your advice on how to approach this delicate situation would be appreciated.

    — IN A TOUGH SPOT IN MICHIGAN

    DEAR TOUGH SPOT: Your friend appears to be a hoarder. He may enjoy hosting and want company, but it isn’t going to happen if people are afraid to go to his home and consume anything because of the filth and the odor. The person closest to him has to explain to him that although you all love him, his party would be better attended if the celebration was held off-site. He needs to understand why others are staying away, and he may need physical and psychological help to improve his situation.

    ** ** **

    DEAR ABBY: I’m a young gay man with a problem. I met a cute guy, “Mark,” with a sweet personality, and the sex has been awesome. We spent two consecutive nights together in a hotel, but two days later he went to church, and he’s now convinced that being gay is wrong. Mark still rubs my foot with his under the table while we eat and kisses me on the lips. He tells me he loves me very much, but now I’m getting mixed signals. At night on our dating app, Mark sends nudes of himself, even though he says gay sex is wrong. What should I do?

    — MIXED SIGNALS IN GEORGIA

    DEAR MIXED SIGNALS: Mark is conflicted about being gay because the church he attends made him feel guilty about it. Talk with him and suggest that you feel he could benefit from counseling to help him become more comfortable about who he is. There are three LGBTQ community centers located in Atlanta. If Mark is unwilling, please understand it could be a long journey for him toward self-acceptance. If you are not prepared to wait, you should move on.

  • NFL playoff picture: Eagles No. 1 seed scenarios, Chiefs eliminated, two teams clinch

    NFL playoff picture: Eagles No. 1 seed scenarios, Chiefs eliminated, two teams clinch

    Thanks to Sunday’s blowout win against the Las Vegas Raiders (2-12), the Eagles (9-5) are in great shape to make the NFL playoffs and even host a game at the Linc.

    How good? The New York Times now pegs the Eagles’ chances of making the playoffs and hosting a wild card game at 99%, thanks in part to the Dallas Cowboys (6-7-1) loss to the Minnesota Vikings (6-8) Sunday night.

    The Birds remained in the NFC’s No. 3 spot, and if the season ended today they’d be hosting the No. 6 seed San Francisco 49ers (10-4) at the Linc during wild card weekend.

    Here’s a look at the current playoff picture for the Eagles and the rest of the NFL:

    When can the Eagles clinch the NFC East?

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    In the NFC East, the Eagles’ magic number — combined wins and Cowboys losses — is now just one. That means the Birds could clinch both the division and a playoff berth with a win in Week 16 against the Washington Commanders (4-10).

    The Birds would also clinch the NFC East with just one more Cowboys loss.

    Even if Dallas manages to win their final three games — at home against the Chargers and on the road against the Commanders and New York Giants (2-12) — they would still need the Eagles to lose out overtake the Birds in the standings.

    Considering the Birds face the Marcus Mariota-led Commanders twice in the final three weeks, oddsmakers see that as impossibly unlikely. As in less than a 1% chance, according to the New York Times.

    Both the Commanders and Giants have already been eliminated from playoff contention, but both could play the role of spoiler in the coming weeks.

    Can the Eagles still end up with the NFC’s No. 1 seed?

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    You’re saying there’s still a chance?

    Despite Sunday’s win, the Eagles still face an all-but-impossible chance to end the season in the NFC’s No. 1 playoff spot.

    What would have to happen? For starters, the Birds need to win their final three games ― against the Buffalo Bills (10-4) and twice against the Commanders ― to even have a shot at the top playoff seed.

    Now comes the tricky part. In all likelihood, the Eagles would need four of the NFC’s top teams to lose two of their final three games, according to Wharton professor and Eagles analytics nerd Deniz Selman — the Los Angeles Rams (11-3), Seattle Seahawks (11-3), San Francisco 49ers (10-4), and Bears.

    All four teams won Sunday, so the Eagles already-slim odds got worst, despite the Birds’ win.

    There are some even less-likely scenarios where the Eagles could win on tiebreakers, but it all points to the road to a Super Bowl repeat not going through the Linc.

    Odds are the Eagles will win the NFC East and enter the playoffs at the NFC’s No. 3 seed, but the Birds could also end up as the No. 2 seed if things fall their way. Having tiebreakers against most of the top NFC teams helps, though not with the Packers because of that pesky tie.

    The Birds entered the playoffs as the No. 2 seed last year, and that seemed to work out well.

    NFC playoff scenarios this week

    Matthew Stafford and the Rams are in the driver’s seat for the NFC’s No. 1 playoff spot.

    Entering Week 15, not a single team in the league had clinched a playoff spot. That changed Sunday, with the Rams officially becoming the NFC’s first playoff team thanks to a 41-34 win against the Detroit Lions (8-6).

    The No. 1 seed will take a few weeks to sort out, thanks to a tight race in the NFC West featuring the Seattle Seahawks (11-3) and 49ers.

    What’s wild is there’s a possibility a team like the Lions, Bears, 49ers, Seahawks, or even Rams could end the season with 12 wins and miss the playoffs due to tiebreakers for the final wild card. That’s never happened in NFL history, though two teams have missed the playoffs with 11 wins — the 1985 Denver Broncos and the 2008 New England Patriots.

    The Tampa Bay Buccaneers (7-7) moved back into the No. 4 seed and lead the NFC South thanks to the Carolina Panthers (7-7) loss to the New Orleans Saints. The Buccaneers and Panthers will face off next week in a game that will likely decide the division.

    Just one NFC team faced elimination in Week 15. The Vikings will officially be booted out of the postseason race with a loss to the Cowboys Monday night.

    AFC playoff picture and scenarios

    The Chiefs were eliminated from the playoffs for the first time during Patrick Mahomes’ career.

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    The No. 1 seed Denver Broncos (12-2) clinched the AFC’s first playoff spot and their second-straight postseason appearance under head coach Sean Payton with a win against the Packers.

    The No. 2 seed New England Patriots (11-2) could have clinched the AFC East, but blew a 21-point lead to Josh Allen and the Bills Sunday.

    The Kansas City Chiefs (6-8) were eliminated from the playoffs Sunday for the first time in the Patrick Mahomes era thanks to their loss to the Los Angeles Chargers.

    The Cincinnati Bengals (4-10) were also eliminated from the playoffs Sunday, clinching their third-straight season without a playoff appearance. No wonder Joe Burrow is frustrated and whirling up the trade rumor machine.

    The Miami Dolphins (6-7) enter Week 15 on a four-game winning streak, but could be booted from the playoffs with a loss to the Pittsburgh Steelers (7-6) Monday night.

    When do the NFL playoffs start?

    The Eagles have made four-straight playoff appearances under Nick Sirianni.

    We’re a little less than a month away from the first playoff game, which will take place on wild-card weekend beginning Jan. 10.

    Six games will take place in the first round of the playoffs, airing across Fox, CBS, NBC, and ESPN/ABC. Amazon will also exclusively stream a wild-card game on Prime Video for the second straight season.

    Full 2025 NFL playoff schedule:

    • Wild-card round: Saturday, Jan. 10 to Monday, Jan. 12
    • Divisional round: Saturday, Jan. 17 to Sunday, Jan. 18
    • AFC and NFC championship games: Sunday, Jan. 25
    • Super Bowl LX: Sunday, Feb. 8

    Where is this year’s Super Bowl?

    Super Bowl LX (or 60, for those who don’t like Roman numerals) is being held at Levi’s Stadium in Santa Clara, Calif., home of the San Francisco 49ers. NBC will broadcast this year’s Super Bowl.

    Here are the sites announced for future Super Bowls:

    • Super Bowl LXI: Feb. 14., 2027, SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, Calif. (ESPN, ABC)
    • Super Bowl LXII: Feb. 2028, Mercedes-Benz Stadium, Atlanta, Ga. (CBS)
  • ‘A cautionary tale’: South Carolina Rep. Jim Clyburn discussed his new book with Gov. Josh Shapiro

    ‘A cautionary tale’: South Carolina Rep. Jim Clyburn discussed his new book with Gov. Josh Shapiro

    When U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn of South Carolina became majority whip, a high-ranking member of Democratic leadership, in 2007 he asked the Library of Congress for photos of eight men to display on the walls of his Washington, D.C., office.

    He recalled, years ago, that a group of visitors stopped and asked who the men were: the first Black U.S. House members from his home state.

    “I thought you were the first,” someone from the group said.

    Clyburn replied: “Before I was first, there were eight.”

    That became the genesis of his new book, The First Eight: A Personal History of the Pioneering Black Congressmen Who Shaped a Nation, which he discussed at length with longtime friend Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro on Sunday as part of the Free Library of Philadelphia’s Author Events series.

    “This book is a cautionary tale: Anything that’s happened before can happen again,” Clyburn told a crowded Parkway Central Library auditorium.

    The Free Library of Philadelphia welcomed U.S. Rep. Jim Clyburn, a Democrat from South Carolina, to discuss his new book “The First Eight: A Personal History of the Pioneering Black Congressmen Who Shaped a Nation” on Sunday. Afterward, Clyburn signed copies of his book.

    Released in early November, The First Eight chronicles South Carolina’s Black members of Congress who served during and after Reconstruction: Joseph Rainey, Robert De Large, Robert Elliott, Richard Cain, Alonzo Ransier, Robert Smalls, Thomas Miller, and George Washington Murray. Ninety-five years later, in 1992, Clyburn became the ninth.

    The book blends history with memoir: Clyburn intends it to be a monument to the legacies of these trailblazers and a discerning commentary on modern American politics. It weaves the men’s careers, which have largely been erased from public discourse, with Clyburn’s experience and observations from his storied three decades in Congress.

    The First Eight “allows us to know where we come from, it allows us to know where we need to go in the future, particularly with the challenges we face today,” Shapiro said.

    Clyburn drew parallels between the men’s histories of bitterly contested elections and domestic terrorism to the MAGA movement and Jan. 6, 2021, riot at the U.S. Capitol; he laid out how a series of events — beginning with the assassination of President Abraham Lincoln, the accession of Andrew Johnson, the end of Reconstruction, and rise of Jim Crow — prevented a Black person from representing South Carolina in Congress for nearly 100 years.

    “History is supposed to be instructive,” he said. “I believe that we are at a junction in our history that we must intervene in this process like we’ve never intervened before in order to check the movement currently going to the right.”

    And though the book is South Carolina-centric, there are historical nods to the commonwealth: Smalls, the first Black man to pilot ships for the U.S. Navy, spent time in Philadelphia, according to Clyburn, and Miller graduated from Lincoln University in Chester County, the first degree-granting historically Black university in the nation. (Miller was also a longtime friend of Nelson Nix, the father of Pennsylvania’s first Black representative in Congress, Robert N.C. Nix Sr.)

    Clyburn said the recent results of the consequential governors races in New Jersey and Virginia, as well as the New York City mayoral election, give him hope.

  • Flyers drop second straight game to Hurricanes in 3-2 shootout loss

    Flyers drop second straight game to Hurricanes in 3-2 shootout loss

    RALEIGH, N.C. — It’s a good thing hockey games are 60 minutes.

    After a dreadful opening 19 minutes, the Flyers picked up the pace. Although they did not get the win, they did earn yet another point in a 3-2 shootout loss to the Carolina Hurricanes on Sunday.

    Andrei Svechnikov scored the winner in the shootout. Trevor Zegras hit the post, and Christian Dvorak and Matvei Michkov were stopped by Carolina goalie Brandon Bussi.

    The Flyers have lost after regulation in each of their three meetings with Carolina, including Saturday night in a 4-3 shootout in Philly. There is one more meeting in Game 81.

    Although they extended their point streak to four games, the Flyers have now lost three straight — all after regulation. It is the longest losing streak of the season.

    Zegras tied the game with 1 minute, 52 seconds left in regulation.

    Dvorak split the defense and had a good chance stopped by Bussi. But the Flyers maintained possession and, with a six-on-five, got to work by controlling the boards.

    The puck ended up on Travis Sanheim’s stick, and he put a shot on goal at the boards near the left faceoff circle that was deflected in front by Dvorak. The puck popped out to Travis Konecny, who went cross-crease to the open Zegras for the easy goal.

    It was Zegras’ 13th goal of the season, and he had an assist on the night too, giving him 32 points in 31 games.

    Just over five minutes into the game, and on their eighth shot of the period — the Flyers had zero and didn’t get their first until 7:09 into the game — William Carrier gave the Hurricanes a 1-0 lead.

    Carolina captain Jordan Staal won the faceoff back to former Flyers defenseman Sean Walker, who walked the line. His pass attempt from just inside the blue line went off Konecny, slowing the puck down. Dvorak, with his back turned, tried to knock it away, but Carrier was able to get the shot off quickly and past Dan Vladař.

    Entering the night, Carolina ranked 29th on the man advantage (15.1%), and the Flyers’ penalty kill had fallen to 15th (81.5%). It did stop Carolina on the only pair of power plays on Saturday in Philly.

    But on Sunday, Taylor Hall made it 2-0 on a power play, one of five in the first period between the two teams. In the bumper, Hall redirected an Alexander Nikishin point shot.

    The Flyers struggled to find their legs early on and only mustered four shots in the opening frame, but one found the back of the net.

    Skating six-on-five on a delayed penalty, Zegras and Jamie Drysdale passed it back and forth between the right flank and point before Zegras set up the blueliner for the quick one-timer. Drysdale’s third of the season, which came off the stick of Carrier, cut into the Carolina lead with 53 seconds left in the period.

    And it seemed to spark the Flyers, who, while still getting outshot, had not just more chances, but more quality chances too.

    Hurricanes’ Jordan Martinook (48) jumps over a shot by teammate William Carrier (28) for a goal during the first period.

    They almost tied it with 42 seconds left in the first on a shot by Owen Tippett. But Carolina defenseman Jaccob Slavin, back in the lineup for the first time since Oct. 11 against the Flyers, stuck out his leg to steal a sure goal. Seconds later, Michkov tried to sneak the puck in at the right post but was blocked by Jalen Chatfield.

    In the second period, Zegras made a play in the neutral zone that allowed Konecny to skate and put a quality shot on goal. Bussi stopped it, and then the rebound attempt by Dvorak as he crashed the net.

    Drysdale had a good chance with just over nine minutes left in the middle period when he picked off a stretch pass and drove to the net. His shot just missed.

    And the Flyers’ new power play units started to look better as the game wore on — and they got plenty of chances to build chemistry with four opportunities, although one was cut short. Late in the second period, the unit of Drysdale, Zegras, Bobby Brink, Noah Cates, and Tippett had several good looks with shots just missing. The Flyers missed the net on 13 chances in the game.

    But the man advantage in the third period had its best look. Zegras sent a one-timer from the right flank that Bussi stopped, but he couldn’t control it. Cates, atop the crease, was robbed by the Hurricanes’ goalie.

    During all this, Vladař played the angles well and was stellar in goal. After allowing two goals on 14 shots in the first period, he stopped the next 16, including a breakaway chance by K’Andre Miller, in regulation.

    In overtime, he stopped two shots, with one coming off the stick of Sebastian Aho during a power play for Carolina, which went 1-for-6.

    Breakaways

    Defensemen Ty Murchison and Egor Zamula, and forward Nic Deslauriers were healthy scratches. … Captain Sean Couturier skated in his 904th career game, surpassing Hall of Famer Bill Barber for third on the Flyers’ all-time games played list. … Sanheim played 31:06, one second shy of his career high set in November 2024.

    Up next

    The Flyers head north to take on the Montreal Canadiens on Tuesday (7 p.m., NBCSP).

  • Organizers of Philly area Hanukkah celebrations call for resilience after Australia attack

    Organizers of Philly area Hanukkah celebrations call for resilience after Australia attack

    As Jews around the world celebrate Hanukkah, a deadly attack in Australia has shocked Jewish communities in the Philadelphia region, leading some to increase security at services.

    Authorities said two gunmen opened fire at an event on Bondi Beach in Sydney at 6:45 p.m. local time, killing at least 15 people.

    Rabbi Yitzchok Kahan of the Chabad in Medford said the attack on a Chabad Hanukkah celebration in Australia was devastating.

    Kahan’s son Yosef is studying in and running youth programs in Melbourne, and had communicated with one of the victims shortly before the attack. A yeshiva student who was later shot in the attack had asked Yosef Kahan to deliver menorahs to Melbourne residents, Yitzchok Kahan said.

    “The fact that it comes as we Jews are beginning the holiday that conveys just the opposite of what this did — it conveys light. It conveys positivity. It conveys making a difference in a good and kind way,” Yitzchok Kahan said. “So the message we must take from it: not to capitulate to darkness, not to capitulate to hate; rather to strengthen our commitment, our dedication to who we are as Jews.”

    Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro, who is Jewish, said the story of Hanukkah is “a story of resilience and strength in the face of adversity, and one that reminds us to be proud of our faith. Those lessons are so important today.”

    Shapiro was the target of an assassination attempt in April, when a man set the governor’s mansion ablaze while Shapiro and his family slept, hours after celebrating Passover. Cody Balmer, who told investigators that he harbored a “hatred” for the governor, pleaded guilty to attempted murder in the attack.

    On Sunday, Shapiro urged Pennsylvanians to “pray for the loved ones of those killed and for a full recovery for those injured in Australia and continue to bring light into the world.”

    The frigid weather in Cherry Hill did not dissuade some 100 people from coming out to the Barclay Farms Shopping Center for Chabad Lubavitch of Camden County’s 32nd annual Hanukkah celebration with a menorah lighting ceremony, car parade, latkes, hot chocolate, and LED sticks.

    Rabbi Mendel Mangel, founder and codirector of the Chabad, addressed the crowd of bundled-up families alongside his son Laizer Mangel and his father, Nissen Mangel, a survivor of the Holocaust who lives in Brooklyn.

    “I spent two years beginning my rabbinical ordination in a yeshiva in Sydney, Australia, and I know some of those friends, some of those fellows, [whose] lives were cut short today, no different than it was 2,000 years ago,” he said, referencing the origins of the holiday. “But my friends, we know we never back down in the sight of evil. While they take out the fires of AK-47 we take out the fire of light, of holiness and goodness.”

    Cherry Hill Mayor David Fleisher and other local officials joined the event as well.

    “Very simply, I want you to know that we will light the menorah as a celebration,” said Fleisher. “Tonight, we will light the menorah with determination, and tonight, we will light the menorah in defiance of hate and in the belief that life will prevail.”

    They prayed for the recovery of those injured in Australia.

    Rabbi Laizer Mangel helped organize the event, and said it was particularly painful to learn of the attack on another Chabad, which is a Jewish outreach organization with local affiliates around the world.

    The audience watches the lighting of 18 ft. menorah by Chabad Lubavitch in Cherry Hill Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025.

    Mangel said Cherry Hill police planned to provide additional security for the celebration.

    The Cherry Hill Chabad has increased security over time as a result of previous antisemitic attacks, Laizer Mangel said. Its security team met Sunday to discuss taking further steps as a result of the Australia attack, though hadn’t made a final decision on what they would be, he said.

    For Jonathan Bloom, 57, a Cherry Hill resident who works in finance, it was an emotional evening that brought him to tears. It was his first time attending the menorah lighting ceremony.

    “There’s not a lot of Jewish people in the world, so it’s important that I show strength,” Bloom said.

    Danielle Margulis, 42, a financial planner in Mount Laurel, brought her 6-year old daughter Raya to participate in the car parade for a third year in a row. They had already planned to attend, but following the Sydney events, she felt it was “even more important” to show youth “that you have to persevere,” she said.

    “Light in the face of darkness is a lot of what Judaism is about,” Margulis added.

    Mendel Mangel founded the Chabad Lubavitch of Camden County in 1993, shortly after he studied in Sydney in the late 1980s. One of the victims in the shooting was the son-in-law of a close mentor.

    “It’s very, very painful, but you know, I’m sure I hold hands with people around the entire world — Jews, non-Jews alike — who are disgusted by this kind of evil, this absolute hatred for no reason,” said Mendel Mangel. “In a day like today, when there’s so much darkness, in the last year, too, and the pain and the suffering, evil, and cruelty — the message is that light can dispel all of that.

    “I would add how proud I am of our community to come out and celebrate. It’s very impressive to see that we all get together and hold hands and support each other, and generations support each other. We’ve overcome hardships in the past, and we will overcome hardships again.”

    An 18 ft. menorah is lighted for Hanukkah by Chabad Lubavitch in Cherry Hill Sunday, Dec. 14, 2025.

    New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy said in a statement he was horrified by the attack, adding that antisemitism is a growing global problem that must be condemned forcefully and unequivocally.

    Murphy said that while there were no specific threats to New Jersey at this time, “out of an abundance of caution, we are boosting security at synagogues and community Hanukkah celebrations throughout the state.”

    Murphy directed state officials to meet Sunday with rabbis concerned about the safety and security of their houses of worship.

    The Jewish Federation of Greater Philadelphia said in a statement it and other Jewish federations were “on full alert” for holiday celebrations in their communities, and working with local law enforcement.

    “We will use every tool at our disposal to make sure our communities are safe and that our lights burn all the brighter,” the statement read.

    In Montgomery County, Chabad of Penn Wynne planned a menorah lighting Sunday at the Penn Wynne Library.

    “Darkness does not win by force — it loses when light appears,” said Rabbi Moshe Brennan.

    A Philadelphia city police spokesperson said the department is actively monitoring the situation after the Australia attack, and maintaining communication with law enforcement partners.

    “We will continue to be vigilant in safeguarding our local Jewish places of worship to ensure the safety of all community members,” the spokesperson said, adding that there is no known connection to Philadelphia with the attack.

    Staff writer Gillian McGoldrick contributed to this report.

  • Philadelphia police arrest a suspect in the killing of a 93-year-old Logan man

    Philadelphia police arrest a suspect in the killing of a 93-year-old Logan man

    Philadelphia police have arrested a suspect in the Dec. 5 killing of 93-year-old Logan Dailey, police announced Sunday.

    Coy Thomas, 53, was arrested at the intersection of North 22nd Street and Lehigh Avenue and charged with murder, police said.

    Dailey was found dead in his home on the 4500 block of North 16th Street when medics were called there.

    Police identified Thomas as a suspect a week later.

    Dailey had suffered a laceration to the chest and trauma to his head, police said. A medical examination found he died from multiple stab wounds.

    Police found that Dailey’s wallet, keys, and vehicle were missing from his home. They found his car, a white Chrysler 300 sedan, several days after his death.

    Philadelphia has recorded 209 homicides this year, through Saturday. That’s 39 fewer than through the same date last year, and more than 60% less than a similar time period in 2021, the recent high year for homicides in the city.

  • The Eagles can still get to the Super Bowl, but only if their defense drags them there

    The Eagles can still get to the Super Bowl, but only if their defense drags them there

    For an Eagles team desperate to stop a losing streak, a coach turned to Scripture the other day to inspire a few members of the one unit that has been pretty much beyond reproach. Jeremiah Washburn, who’s in charge of the Eagles’ defensive line, shared a message with the team’s tackles and ends from Isaiah 6:8: Then I heard the voice of the Lord saying, “Whom shall I send? And who will go for us?” And I said, “Here am I. Send me!”

    “The perspective of the D-line — it’s like, ‘Send me,’” tackle Moro Ojomo said. “That was kind of our mentality heading into this game.”

    So on Sunday against the two-win Las Vegas Raiders, the Eagles sent Ojomo, who had a sack and two quarterback hits. And they sent Brandon Graham, who had two sacks while lining up at tackle. And they sent Zack Baun, who had four tackles and an interception. And they sent the Raiders back to the Strip wearing the scarlet letter of having produced the worst offensive performance of any Eagles opponent ever. It wasn’t just that the Eagles won 31-0 — their first shutout in nearly seven years. It was that they allowed the Raiders to gain just 75 yards of total offense.

    Combine those two figures, the 0 and the 75, and you get what was, statistically speaking, the best game any Eagles defense has ever played. You get a game in which the Raiders’ longest gain on any play was 15 yards … on an unnecessary roughness penalty by Cooper DeJean. And as pitiful as Las Vegas was Sunday and has been offensively all season — the Raiders entered the game last in the NFL in points and next-to-last in yardage — you still got a glimpse of what might yet be the Eagles’ saving grace in their quest to win a second straight Super Bowl. As ragged and inconsistent as their offense has been, their defense is good enough to get them there.

    “Our mindset, regardless, is, ‘If they don’t score, they don’t win,’” Ojomo said. “You saw that today. That’s the mindset we’ve got to have. The offense has to have the mindset of not necessarily depending on us, and what you get is that perfect marriage. They do their thing. We do our thing. We’re always going to raise the standard.”

    “If they don’t score, they don’t win,” Moro Ojomo (right) said after Sunday’s victory.

    They have to. Maybe Jalen Hurts, Saquon Barkley, and the rest of the offense will raise their level of play over the next three weeks and beyond. Maybe this dominant performance against a terrible team can allow the Eagles to get their groove from last season back. But to be in their locker room after Sunday’s game was to observe a different collective disposition from one side of the ball to the other.

    Hurts delivered one curt, clipped answer after another in his postgame news conference, as if he were offended that the people in the room had pointed out that he’d committed five turnovers six days earlier against the Los Angeles Chargers. Nick Sirianni, Landon Dickerson, and other members of the offense kept up that same standoffish pose. Meanwhile, the team’s defensive players were ebullient and enthusiastic and generally have been all season. With the exception of the 281 rushing yards they gave up to the Chicago Bears two weeks ago, they have done their part to keep the Eagles in contention in the NFC.

    They let the Eagles get away with victories against the Green Bay Packers and the Detroit Lions. They surrendered a touchdown on the Chargers’ first possession last Monday night, and they haven’t given up another in the 20 possessions since. They have a high standard, and they keep meeting it, and it was telling to hear, for instance, linebacker Nakobe Dean describe a lesson he learned from the unit’s perfect performance Sunday.

    “There are plays we’re going to look back at and be like, ‘Oh, man, we could have [done] this better,’” he said. “I had a blitz. I was too high. I didn’t have great pad level. I got blocked by [running back] Raheem [Mostert], and the last couple of weeks I’ve been running through guys. So it’s like, yes, I have something to build on. I got blocked trying to bull [rush]. Now it’s time to stick/swat. Now it’s time to spin, do something like that. At first, I was thinking I was going to do it from the beginning. It was ‘Do this until they block it.’ Now it’s blocked. Now you can add a little something.”

    Eagles linebacker Nakobe Dean (center) and cornerback Adoree’ Jackson stop Las Vegas Raiders tight end Brock Bowers in the fourth quarter of Sunday’s win.

    The striking aspect of this dynamic — the inconsistency of the offense, the consistent excellence of the defense — is the lack of dissension within the locker room. Dean and Ojomo and their defensive teammates would be well within their rights to resent how much they’ve had to carry the Eagles. But there’s no indication that such a fissure exists. That’s a credit to coordinator Vic Fangio, sure, and it’s a credit to a unit full of young, homegrown players who aren’t surly, cynical veterans, who aren’t mercenaries, who don’t know any better but to ball out.

    “We’re hungry, and we run around, and we want to be great,” Ojomo said. “We want to go and get it. It’s like this perfect thing, but the reality is, we’ve got to do it again.”

    And again. And again. And again into January, if the Eagles are to have any hope of playing into February. A Super Bowl is still possible for them. Their defense will have to drag them there.

  • Brandon Graham proves ‘you can teach an old dog new tricks’ with two sacks as Eagles shut out Raiders

    Brandon Graham proves ‘you can teach an old dog new tricks’ with two sacks as Eagles shut out Raiders

    Brandon Graham was going home to an empty house Sunday evening. His family was out of town, and so one of Graham’s first thoughts after he registered his first sacks since coming out of retirement nearly two months ago was: What am I going to eat?

    Graham had an answer. He was thinking Chinese. More specifically, he was thinking David’s Mai Lai Wah, the Chinatown staple at 10th and Race Streets.

    Graham likes the sweet and sour chicken, the General Tso’s chicken, and the salt and pepper chicken wings at David’s. Why choose one? Graham more than earned himself a whole Peking duck.

    The Eagles had their first shutout in almost seven years during their 31-0 victory over the Las Vegas Raiders. They allowed just 75 yards, the fewest the franchise has allowed in the Super Bowl era. The Raiders averaged just 1.8 yards on their 42 offensive plays. They did not possess the ball past the Eagles’ 33-yard line.

    In the middle of it all was Graham, playing defensive tackle and not defensive end as the Eagles play without Jalen Carter. Graham sacked Kenny Pickett twice, two of the four sacks the Eagles were credited with on the day.

    “It just felt good,” Graham said. “I was like, ‘Dang, Kenny, I’m sorry. But, brother, you’re in the way.’”

    Brandon Graham leaves the field after the Eagles shut out the Raiders on Sunday.

    The Eagles followed up a disastrous Black Friday performance vs. the Chicago Bears — who piled up 281 rushing yards against the Eagles’ front — with two of their best performances of the season. They allowed a touchdown on the Chargers’ first drive last week, but haven’t allowed one since. The touchdown-free streak reached 20 possessions by the end of Sunday.

    “Thankful that nobody turned on each other,” Graham said. “Nobody wavered. Everybody continued to keep pressing, bringing the energy.”

    Graham has been bringing the energy in a new room. He has, for the last two weeks, lined up as a defensive tackle and has been in the meeting rooms with the other interior defensive linemen. Graham has been learning new techniques, working on his moves after practice. He picks up on things by watching his teammates, too.

    It’s quicker, Graham said, rushing from the inside compared to the edge. But he looks the part through two games. Jordan Davis wants him to stick around even after Carter returns. Davis called Graham a “tweener” and is hoping the Eagles can do a “a little custody split” to keep him around.

    Graham’s personality has long been infectious around the NovaCare Complex, and his fellow interior linemen are getting a closer look at it lately. “He loves on people, and you want to love on him,” said Moro Ojomo, who picked up his fifth sack of the season Sunday. Graham said the positivity flows both ways. There are days when it’s his teammates picking him up and not the other way around.

    Davis was the position group’s elder statesman before Graham’s position switch. He will be 26 next month, 11-plus years younger than Graham, who on Sunday became the oldest Eagles player to register a sack.

    “I always say you can teach an old dog new tricks,” Davis said. “I’ve seen it with BG.

    “You’re never too old. I know Philip Rivers is playing today. Truly, it’s all about a mindset. BG just comes in to work. He’s getting that juice, he’s getting that flow back. He never lost a step.”

    Graham said Sunday would be a confidence booster for the Eagles as they head into the home stretch, trying to close out a consecutive division title and moving toward the playoffs.

    “I’m happy to be able to come back, because I feel like we can make another run,” he said.

    Speaking of another run, a two-sack performance begged the question: Is this Graham’s last season? He gave a tearful goodbye just nine months ago, only to return seven months later to a defense that needed his leadership and, apparently, his talent, too.

    “We ain’t there yet,” Graham said. “I’m just trying to finish this year and enjoy the whole thing. Right now, I’m thankful that we got the win today, and we’re just trying to keep building for the next one.”

    But first, it was time to eat.

  • Philly schools will open late Monday

    Philly schools will open late Monday

    With snow on the ground and temperatures below freezing, Philadelphia schools will open two hours late Monday.

    “The safety and well-being of our students are our top priorities,” Superintendent Tony B. Watlington Sr. said in a message to district families. “We are encouraging students, families and staff to travel safely tomorrow morning.”

    Students who arrive late because of weather challenges won’t be marked late, and weather-related absences will be excused if a parent or guardian sends a note.

    All outdoor activities are also canceled, Watlington said.

    “Parents and guardians should plan for possible delays with the district’s yellow bus services and on SEPTA’s subway, trolley and bus routes,” Watlington wrote. “If you anticipate delays or have questions or concerns, please reach out to your child’s principal or school.”

    Archdiocesan high schools and parish and regional Catholic elementary schools in the city will also operate on a two-hour delay. (Catholic schools in suburban counties generally follow their local districts’ lead.)

    Frigid temperatures and stiff winds are expected to follow the season’s first snowstorm, complicating the Monday morning commute with possible ice and slush.

    Other area school districts that are opening on delayed schedules include, in Pennsylvania: Bensalem Township, Cheltenham, Coatesville Area, Downington Area, Great Valley, Lower Merion, Lower Moreland Township, Marple Newtown, Neshaminy, Norristown Area, North Penn, Pennridge, Perkiomen Valley, Pottsgrove, Southeast Delco, Souderton Area, Spring-Ford Area, Tredyffrin-Easttown, Unionville Chadds Ford, Upper Merion Area, Upper Moreland Township, Upper Perkiomen, West Chester Area, William Penn, and Wissahickon.

    Area school with delays in New Jersey include: Bellmawr, Black Horse Pike Regional, City of Burlington, Burlington Township, Camden City, Clearview Regional, Clementon, Deptford Township, Eastampton, Lenape Regional High, Logan Township, Mantua Township, Medford Township, Mount Holly Township, National Park, Pemberton Township, Pitman, Rancocas Valley Regional High, Riverside Township, Shamong Township, Swedesboro-Woolwich, Washington Township, Westampton Township, and Winslow Township.