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  • Penn Museum unveils a new gallery that examines the struggles and resilience of Indigenous nations

    Penn Museum unveils a new gallery that examines the struggles and resilience of Indigenous nations

    For more than a decade, the Penn Museum has offered visitors an encyclopedic history and perspective on Native American history, with artifacts spanning from Alaska tribes to communities in the southernmost part of the continental United States.

    On Saturday, the museum unveiled a new gallery showcasing the artistic, linguistic, spiritual, and revolutionary traditions of Native Americans across the country.

    The Penn Museum’s “Native North America Gallery: Rooted in Resilience. Resisting Erasure” exhibit features more than 250 cultural items and art pieces.

    A gallery of Native American art is displayed at the Penn Museum on Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Philadelphia. As celebrations of Native American culture and precolonial Philadelphia plants grow, museums across the city prepare for America’s 250th birthday.

    Christopher Woods, Williams director of Penn Museum, said the new gallery builds on the institution’s expansive Native American collection while offering insights into the lives of Indigenous Americans today. It builds on a former gallery, which similarly focused on first-person narratives and consulted with Indigenous curators.

    “We’re an archaeology museum, but this is really about Native American people today, and drawing on the connection between the past and the contemporary world. It’s important to show people that these are vibrant communities,” Woods said during a press preview. “Showing how strong they are, the nature of their resilience, the historical and cultural erasure, and having them speak in their own words is important.”

    These works, which build on the previous exhibition, “Native American Voices: The People – Here and Now,” that closed in July, offer a reframing of Native American history from four regions of the United States, including the Lenape Natives of the Delaware.

    A gallery of Native American art is displayed at the Penn Museum on Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Philadelphia. As celebrations of Native American culture and precolonial Philadelphia plants grow, museums across the city prepare for America’s 250th birthday.

    The immersive, multisensory exhibit includes a floral beadwork collar from the Northeast Lenape, a single-weave square basket from the Eastern Band Cherokee in the Southeast, a centuries-old clay ancestral mug from the Pueblo people of the Southwest, and a fringed ceremonial robe, known as a Chilkat blanket, from the Tlingit people of the Northwest.

    Among the oldest items on view are chipped stone tools historically used by Native Americans, which were pulled from the Penn Museum’s collections. The newest items include a woven piece that was commissioned from Cherokee mixed media sculptor Brenda Mallory.

    The gallery also includes images of regions the tribal nations have inhabited, interactive displays offering insight into the formation of their cultural items, tools, and regalia, and varying stories about their traditions, challenges, and resilience before and after European contact.

    A gallery of Native American art is displayed at the Penn Museum on Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Philadelphia. As celebrations of Native American culture and precolonial Philadelphia plants grow, museums across the city prepare for America’s 250th birthday.

    Alongside co-curators Lucy Fowler Williams and Megan Kassabaum, this comprehensive gallery was developed by cultural educators, archaeologists, and historians who are direct descendants and members of the tribal nations featured in the exhibit.

    Among the eight Indigenous consultant curators, who served as narrative guides, were Jeremy Johnson, cultural education director of the Delaware Tribe of Indians, RaeLynn Butler, secretary of culture and humanities of the Muscogee (Creek) Nation, and Christopher Lewis, cultural specialist of the Zuni Pueblo.

    The consulting curators assisted in creating the narrative flow of the gallery and worked with the Penn Museum to recover lost history and study their ancestors’ practices. They also contributed their own art and cultural items to the gallery.

    Upon seeing the exhibition for the first time on Thursday, Johnson said it was an “emotional moment.”

    “It was overwhelming,” he said. “It’s not just a room with a bunch of paintings or drawings. These are actual people I lived with, know, and are related to. I can tell you about every person here. Being able to give our tribal citizens, considering everyone is a relative, a voice was really emotional. We’ve always been seen as relics of the past.”

    A gallery of Native American art is displayed at the Penn Museum on Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Philadelphia. As celebrations of Native American culture and precolonial Philadelphia plants grow, museums across the city prepare for America’s 250th birthday.

    Kassabaum said the concept of the exhibit began four years ago, but many of the gallery’s elements were shaped by the consulting curators, who willingly shared their stories and welcomed Kassabaum and others into their communities.

    Kassabaum and other Penn Museum consultants traveled to Oklahoma to spend a week with members of the Delaware Tribe. They brought back four items, including the floral beaded collar, and let their protectors relay how they were made.

    Those kinds of connections can’t be made without the help of the consulting curators, Kassabaum said.

    “These aren’t my stories and they’re not my experiences,” he said. “I have not experienced any of the trauma of these communities. I have not experienced the joy of these communities, and everything people have been willing to share with us has been incredible. … No matter how giddy or passionate I am about anthropology and archaeology, I can’t bring the same thing to the gallery. It was totally essential.”

    Unlike other exhibitions sprawled throughout the country, Johnson said Penn’s inclusion of him and his Native “relatives” was based in good faith rather than historical or cultural exploitation.

    “We know certain art museums have been problematic in the past, and are still doing that work,” Johnson said. “But I feel this is the first time we were asked in the right way. It was in the spirit of an actual collaboration, instead of asking for items to display, and that’s it. This was a good process, and we hope it stands as a model for future exhibits.”

    A gallery of Native American art is displayed at the Penn Museum on Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Philadelphia. As celebrations of Native American culture and precolonial Philadelphia plants grow, museums across the city prepare for America’s 250th birthday.

    The opening ceremony of the Native North America Gallery kicked off with remarks from Johnson and the other Indigenous consulting curators.

    Their remarks were followed by traditional dance, songs, and storytelling by New Mexico’s Tewa Dancers. There was also an artist talk by Holly Wilson of the Delaware Nation, curatorial presentations led by Johnson and Joseph Aguilar of the San Ildefonso Pueblo, and a series of family workshops.

    The gallery, which is now on display, is available for online and in-person viewing.

    Visitors can reserve guided, in-person tours on select days. Tickets are priced at $26 for members and $30 for general admission. For more information, visit penn.museum.

    A gallery of Native American art is displayed at the Penn Museum on Friday, Nov. 21, 2025, in Philadelphia. As celebrations of Native American culture and precolonial Philadelphia plants grow, museums across the city prepare for America’s 250th birthday.
  • Letters to the Editor | Nov. 23, 2025

    Letters to the Editor | Nov. 23, 2025

    Public option

    The recent government shutdown was initiated by a Democratic Party trying to protect the 22 million Affordable Care Act participants from the financial impact of ending government subsidies that would more than double insurance premiums. Conversely, Republicans are intent on sunsetting COVID-era ACA subsidies that cost $30 billion per year. What both parties will acknowledge is that the cost of healthcare coverage continues to accelerate at a rate that is unsustainable.

    When President Barack Obama crafted the ACA, he envisioned a public option. A public option is healthcare provided by the government. That means government hospitals, clinics, doctors, nurses, technicians, and administrators. During the incubation of the ACA, the Obama administration realized a public option was far too controversial to be passed by Congress. So it birthed an insurance-based ACA that would use the existing U.S. healthcare structure. The problem is that medical costs and insurance premiums have far outstripped inflation since the passage of the ACA. The ACA has little control over these costs, and therefore, government subsidies are the only option to mitigate the impact on those among us who are most vulnerable to price increases. We cannot depend on the private sector to control the costs of healthcare. ACA government subsidies are a short-term solution. Donald Trump’s direct payments will do nothing to mitigate healthcare’s accelerating costs. Like it or not, the United States will have to implement a public option to control costs and provide a healthcare safety net. The current course and speed are simply unaffordable and will contribute to bankrupting the country.

    Here’s the good news: We can use the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs healthcare infrastructure as the base on which we can make the public option a reality. The VA currently provides service to over nine million vets at a cost of $68 billion a year. There are over 170 VA medical centers, 1,300 outpatient clinics, and other sites. This is a start. Compare that with ACA subsidies of $138 billion in 2025 before factoring in the average individual annual cost of $7,428 (in 2025). Yes, this is a national health system where the government can control healthcare costs. Yes, this will reduce one’s healthcare choices. Yes, this will be an affordable healthcare safety net alternative to the current unsustainable and unaffordable healthcare system.

    William F. Spang Jr., Philadelphia

    Art of deflection

    After the horrific attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, the Bush administration announced that Saddam Hussein, president of Iraq, had weapons of mass destruction and needed to be removed. Thus, the ensuing Iraq War, the removal of Hussein, the loss of over 100,000 civilian lives, and 4,400 American troops, only to discover there were no such weapons of mass destruction. Further investigation determined George W. Bush had plans to attack Iraq even before the terrorist attacks of 9/11. Why? Iraq contained massive reserves of oil.

    Fast-forward to 2025, and the Trump administration is beating the war drums against Nicolás Maduro and Venezuela. Claiming it is responsible for the flow of fentanyl, the president has launched dozens of airstrikes against supposed drug boat smugglers without evidence or with congressional input. New measures are being planned for possible attacks within Venezuela and perhaps boots on the ground. “I have not ruled out using troops,” Donald Trump recently asserted. Our largest aircraft carrier has been stationed just off the Venezuelan coast. Venezuela happens to have the largest oil reserves in South America. There is scant evidence that Venezuela is involved in drug smuggling, unlike neighboring Colombia and its infamous drug cartels. Why no military actions against it? As the Epstein files near release and flagging poll approval numbers, Trump desperately needs a diversion. Venezuela could be just the ticket. Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me. Let’s not be fooled again.

    Angus Love, Narberth

    Join the conversation: Send letters to letters@inquirer.com. Limit length to 150 words and include home address and day and evening phone number. Letters run in The Inquirer six days a week on the editorial pages and online.

  • Dear Abby | Chided boyfriend has nursed a grudge for six years

    DEAR ABBY: My daughter is asking me to apologize to her boyfriend, “Harry,” for yelling at him when I was helping them move six years ago. (I had traveled 250 miles to help.) The day of the move, Harry didn’t take the day off work, so he wasn’t there to help. (They had a second-floor unit with no elevator.) When he finally did show up, he proceeded to slow-walk taking out the recycling stuff.

    At the new place, Harry helped somewhat, but when the food was delivered, rather than continue to help, he decided to sit down and eat while the other two helpers and I continued moving stuff in. (This was 10 hours into the move.) That’s when I lost it. I yelled at him for not helping more. All he had done in his relationship with my daughter was go to work, come home and play video games. He didn’t help around the house or show any interest in helping with their son.

    Over the last few years, Harry has changed somewhat in helping with his son, but my daughter now feels stuck in the middle and wants me to apologize to him for yelling. I have made no disparaging remarks about him since. I even liked some of his posts on Facebook.

    I have gotten over it, but it seems Harry hasn’t. I told my daughter he needs professional help. The last time I visited, he stayed in a hotel for the weekend. My son says it should be an apology going both ways and should come from Harry first. What do you think?

    — FAMILY DILEMMA IN CANADA

    DEAR FAMILY DILEMMA: Face it. Your daughter’s boyfriend is an overgrown child. Count your blessings that she isn’t married to him. Someone has to be an adult, and I am voting for you to fill that role by taking the first step. Hold your nose and apologize to Harry, if only for your daughter’s sake.

    ** ** **

    DEAR ABBY: Should parents be allowed to send birthday invitations to school if only select students are the recipients of the invitation? I’m the parent of a (very) special needs pre-K child. Daily, I feel the heartache of her challenges and her desire for connection with others. On the parent FB group, someone recently posted about their daughter’s birthday. It said those who received an invite should text the cell phone number listed for a change of plans. We never received an invite.

    Were we the only ones excluded? If I’m honest, my emotions may be particularly fragile when it comes to my daughter and inclusion. I do think people should be able to invite only their friends. However, it seems to me that discretion on the part of the parent who is hosting would be more polite and kind. Parents should make a point to know their child’s friends’ parents’ contact information. Do you have an opinion?

    — UNINVITED IN THE EAST

    DEAR UNINVITED: I’m with you 100%, speaking for myself as an adult who was once a child who was excluded. For many reasons, parents should make a point of having their child’s friends’ parents’ contact information. That information could be crucial in case of an emergency.

  • Horoscopes: Sunday, Nov. 23, 2025

    ARIES (March 21-April 19). You’ll present answers. As informed and relevant as you are, it’s your humanity that shines through. That you care enough to not only think deeply into a problem but also bring your creativity and warmth to the solution — that’s what reads.

    TAURUS (April 20-May 20). Truth can be medicine. Truth can be ammunition. The difference today will be about timing. Gradual, graceful, patient and aware — that’s the timing of medicine. Shot from a cannon in a moment of defense — that’s the weaponized version.

    GEMINI (May 21-June 21). You’ll witness why context matters, especially in regard to relationships. You’ll choose people for how they jibe with a certain version of you. They may fit your need perfectly for this chapter, and later you can reassess.

    CANCER (June 22-July 22). All work and no play may make “Jack a dull boy,” but why is there this pressure on “Jack” to be exciting? What’s “dull” can also be the push that gives an advantage or a breakthrough. Follow your ambition.

    LEO (July 23-Aug. 22). Like your body, your heart is vulnerable to occasional bumps and bruises. When it hurts, it’s OK to say so. And if you don’t, you might hurt more. The attempt to conceal pain makes it more acute. So just let it out.

    VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22). You understand that your truth isn’t the only truth, and you respect the rights of others, including their right to disagree. Respecting another’s truth doesn’t shrink your own; it deepens it. You grow larger each time you make space for difference.

    LIBRA (Sept. 23-Oct. 23). There is art in a concept, but until the plan is executed, the concept is not the art. You can’t build it all in a day, but you can take a few steps. Tonight, you’ll notice what people need. You’ll handle an issue before it’s a problem.

    SCORPIO (Oct. 24-Nov. 21). Your heart is as full, generous and sensitive as the other more demonstrative people in your midst, but you don’t always show it. You have your reasons for this. Just be sure to express yourself when you feel safe to.

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21) Mothers do it. Spouses do it. Teachers, mentors and lovers do it. they deflate the moment not because they dislike you, but because your sparkle rearranges the power dynamic. You become the sun; they need sunglasses. Make the joke anyway. Do it for you.

    CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). The tension between family members is just a normal part of being human. You will always share something with parents and siblings, for better or worse. They are a part of you. Accepting them for who they are is accepting yourself.

    AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18). You’re a kind commenter both in the digital and actual world, and that will be highlighted today. Not only are you an astute observer with a knack for relevant contributions, but you also make people think. They’ll be pondering what you’ve said.

    PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20). You will consciously invest in a relationship. It’s mostly about giving a certain quality of attention. You’ll communicate with the aim of understanding where a person is coming from and what they need, and in this you will succeed brilliantly.

    TODAY’S BIRTHDAY (Nov. 23). Welcome to your Double Dollar Year. You’re rewarded in many meaningful ways, yet it’s the financial piece that keeps everything else possible. Money funds the space, time and freedom where happiness lives and seamlessly weaves comfort into your experiences. More highlights: the end of a trial; winning at games; group fun that produces very special one-on-one relationships. Pisces and Aries adore you. Your lucky numbers are: 6, 13, 2, 10 and 40.

  • Flyers put on offensive clinic, defeating Devils 6-3 on night the franchise honors Bernie Parent

    Flyers put on offensive clinic, defeating Devils 6-3 on night the franchise honors Bernie Parent

    Bernie Parent surely liked an easy night or two between the pipes. He probably also liked it when his team staked him to a big lead.

    On Saturday night, as the Flyers honored the Hall of Fame goalie, who backstopped the Orange and Black to consecutive Stanley Cup championships in 1974 and 1975 and died on Sept. 21 at the age of 80, the Flyers put on an offensive show.

    In front of an announced sellout, they defeated the New Jersey Devils 6-3, giving them two straight wins and three in the past four.

    It’s funny how Bruce Springsteen once sang: “If I should fall behind, wait for me.” Fans should heed that because despite trailing — once again — the Flyers came back.

    This time with authority.

    First, they trailed 1-0 on a Timo Meier power-play goal that saw Sean Couturier’s clearing attempt go off the leg of Nico Hischier and stay in the zone. It led to sustained pressure by the Devils, with Meier just missing at the right post, before the Swiss forward grabbed a puck out of midair, got a shot on goal, and buried the rebound.

    For the record, it is the Flyers’ 11th win of the season and ninth comeback win. But this may have been the flashiest one.

    The Flyers scored five straight goals beginning with Noah Cates 83 seconds after Meier’s goal. Devils goalie Jake Allen knocked away the centering attempt by Cates, but defenseman Egor Zamula, skating in his first game since Nov. 2, hopped on it and put a shot on goal. Allen made the save and then swatted the puck away again, but this time right to Cates for his fifth goal of the season and first since Nov. 6.

    Then from 12:06 to 12:32, the Flyers set a franchise record with three goals in 26 seconds.

    Matvei Michkov gave the Flyers a 2-1 lead with his fifth of the season and fourth in seven games. Couturier tipped a cross-ice pass by Meier inside the Flyers’ blue line, forcing Hischier to skate past the puck. Couturier then sent the puck to Michkov as the Russian winger, skating in his 100th NHL game, split through the defense and outskated three Devils before beating Allen stick-side.

    In the blink of an eye, technically nine seconds later, it was 3-1 Flyers. Off the faceoff, won by Cates, they transitioned the puck up the ice with Travis Konecny sending the pass across to a flying Cates. He dipped the shoulder on Juho Lammikko and sent the puck from the right face-off circle to Tyson Foerster in the left circle for the one-timer.

    Foerster scored again, 17 seconds later, this time from the right circle. Defenseman Nick Seeler poked the puck away in the neutral zone, and Cates scooped up the puck, creating a three-on-two for the Flyers. Cates dished the puck over to Foerster, and he sent a blistering wrister past Allen. He now has seven goals on the season.

    In the second period, Bobby Brink added to the goal total with his sixth of the season. Along the boards in front of the Flyers’ bench, Couturier protected the puck from Devils defenseman Dougie Hamilton and then forward Connor Brown before finding Brink as he looped in the neutral zone. The Minnesotan skated in and appeared to use Devils defenseman Jonas Siegenthaler as a screen to beat Allen and give the Flyers a 5-1 lead.

    Hischier did score in the middle frame to make it 5-2, taking a pass from defenseman Luke Hughes. And he scored again with 6:33 left in regulation when he deflected in a Šimon Nemec point shot.

    But goalie Dan Vladař also came up big in his own right. In the third period, he stopped Meier off a cross-crease pass on a two-on-one and robbed Hischier between his pair of goals when the Devils captain had two big chances while shorthanded. And he got some help on a weird carom, with Jamie Dyrsdale and Cates keeping a loose puck in the crease out of the net.

    Trevor Zegras then put the game away when he roofed his shot on a breakaway. In the Flyers’ end, Christian Dvorak knocked the puck away from Brown, and Owen Tippett tracked it down to feed Zegras. It was the seventh goal of the season for Zegras, who scored just 12 times last season and bested his high from 2023-24 when he was held to 31 games due to injury.

    Breakaways

    Zamula and Seeler each had a plus-minus of plus-5. … Flyers defenseman Travis Sanheim skated in his 599th NHL game.

    Up next

    The Flyers begin a four-game road trip on Monday against the Tampa Bay Lightning (7 p.m., NBCSP).

  • Temple falls to Tulane, 37-13, placing its bowl eligibility in jeopardy

    Temple falls to Tulane, 37-13, placing its bowl eligibility in jeopardy

    One month ago, the Temple Owls seemed like a sure thing to make their first bowl game since 2019. The Owls were 5-3 and riding a two-game win streak.

    Now Temple’s hopes are on life support.

    The Owls dropped their third straight game in a 37-13 loss to No. 24 Tulane on senior day at Lincoln Financial Field. The loss placed the Owls’ record below .500 for the first time all season.

    Temple (5-6, 3-4 American Conference) recorded just 204 yards of offense and quarterback Evan Simon went 21-for-32 for 168 yards and two touchdowns. Tulane (9-2, 6-1) racked up 406 yards of offense.

    “Tulane is a really good football team,” Temple coach K.C. Keeler said. “Our execution level versus their execution level, it was not the same. So disappointing and we have one more shot at this thing.”

    The Owls’ last gasp of making bowl eligibility lies in their ability to beat a North Texas team that is tied for first in the American.

    Stagnant offense

    Temple’s offense hit a snag against Army and East Carolina in its last two games before the bye week. The Owls offense looked to get back on track against a Tulane defense that ranked last in the American in passing defense.

    Instead, Temple’s offense continued to struggle.

    The Owls recorded just 21 yards on their first two drives as Tulane jumped in front, 7-0. Temple seemingly unlocked the Green Wave defense with a methodical 75-yard drive to tie the game late in the first quarter.

    Then, it disappeared again. The Owls’ lack of offense allowed the Green Wave to open up a three-possession halftime lead.

    Temple quarterback struggled to produce offense as he faced increased pressure.

    “I think they started getting a little more pressure and Evan didn’t have the time [in the pocket],” Keeler said. “Typically, in the past, when he has pulled the ball down, he’s been able to get some positive yards. [Tulane] is pretty athletic and pretty talented. They’re the 24th-ranked team in the country for a reason.”

    The Owls offense finally got back on the board with a 2-yard touchdown pass from Simon to wide receiver Colin Chase. But it was not a factor in the final outcome.

    The running game was especially stagnant for Temple. The Owls had just 20 rushing yards on 20 carries in the game, with their leading rusher Jay Ducker picking up only 17 yards on seven carries.

    Secondary struggles

    The Owls secondary has been a point of concern all season, and it took just two plays for Tulane to exploit that weakness.

    Quarterback Jake Retzlaff delivered a 69-yard strike to wide receiver Shazz Preston, who beat Temple corner Jaylen Castleberry on Tulane’s second offensive snap to take a 7-0 lead. Retzlaff routinely found open receivers. He finished 17-for-28 for 231 passing yards and two touchdowns.

    “We thought they would lull us to sleep a little bit, then take their shots downfield,” Keeler said. “The first drive of the game, I guess the second play of the game [is a shot downfield]. We’re there, we just don’t make a play.”

    Temple’s secondary was also undisciplined. Castleberry and safety Jamere Jones were flagged for pass interference and holding, respectively, on passes downfield. The penalties helped the Green Wave get in position to score another touchdown and take a two-possession lead.

    Mixed results stopping the run

    Retzlaff’s calling card is his rushing ability from the quarterback spot. He entered the game as Tulane’s leading rusher with 557 yards and 11 rushing touchdowns. The Owls have struggled to stop dual-threat quarterbacks.

    Temple successfully contained Retzlaff on the ground, holding him to 8 rushing yards on five carries, and one rushing touchdown.

    However, it failed to stop the rest of the Green Wave’s rushing attack.

    Running back Jamauri McClure gashed the Owls for 122 yards on 17 carries. Javin Gordon added 27 yards on eight carries as Tulane finished with 175 total yards on the ground.

    Up next

    Temple will hit the road for its final game of the regular season against North Texas (10-1, 6-1) on Friday at 3:30 p.m. (ESPN).

  • Lane Johnson does not need surgery and may be back sooner than expected

    Lane Johnson does not need surgery and may be back sooner than expected

    FORT WORTH, Texas — The Eagles didn’t place right tackle Lane Johnson on injured reserve on Saturday after they learned he wouldn’t need foot surgery and may be back earlier than original estimates, NFL sources told The Inquirer.

    Johnson suffered a Lisfranc injury in the first quarter against the Lions last Sunday and didn’t return. Initial tests indicated he would miss four to six weeks, which would have likely sent him to IR until the postseason.

    The inflammation in Johnson’s right foot needed to go down before he could have X-rays. The results may be the best-case scenario for the 13-year veteran and the Eagles.

    If Johnson were to miss just three games, the perennial Pro Bowl offensive lineman would be back in time for the Raiders game on Dec. 14. The Eagles’ next three games are at the Cowboys on Sunday, home vs. the Bears on Black Friday, and at the Chargers on Dec. 8.

    Fred Johnson, who has jumped in at right tackle several times this season, will be at the position at AT&T Stadium in Arlington, Texas. The Eagles are 120-62-1 in games Lane Johnson has played and 15-24 in games he has not, including the playoffs, over his career.

    He played in each of the first 10 games of this season, but has missed parts of four with various dings. Johnson has endured his share of injuries in his career, playing through many. In 2022, he delayed surgery to a torn adductor tendon in his groin until after the Eagles played in the Super Bowl.

  • Penn caps its football season with a win over Princeton

    Penn caps its football season with a win over Princeton

    For the first time since 2017, Penn defeated Princeton, 17-6, at home on Saturday.

    A dominant defensive showing from the Quakers left Princeton (3-7, 2-5 Ivy), which entered the matchup on a four-game losing streak, unable to move the ball. Penn (6-4, 4-3 Ivy) kept Princeton scoreless in the second half, which included a game-sealing interception from safety Ty Cortez.

    Penn’s offense needed just three scores to put the game away, fueled by quarterback Liam O’Brien, who threw for 243 yards and two touchdowns.

    “There is no love lost about beating Princeton,” said coach Ray Priore. “Penn football, basketball, Penn-anything vs. Princeton. I don’t know what it is … it’s a great rivalry.”

    Uncertainty ahead

    Penn will graduate 27 seniors, including major contributors in O’Brien, receiver Jared Richardson, team-leading tackler linebacker John Lista, and star defensive tackle Carter Janki, among others.

    With 10 of those players being starters on offense, the roster will see a major overhaul heading into 2026 — which isn’t a worry for Priore.

    “It’s always sad to see kids graduate,” Priore said. “Did we know Liam O’Brien was going to be Liam O’Brien? … We have really good young players.”

    Failing to win an Ivy League championship for the ninth consecutive season, Priore says the Quakers need to get back to work.

    “It never stops,” he said. “I have my phone blowing up, we have kids that are going to get accepted early decision here. The process is ongoing, but it’s something you love to do.”

    Hello to history

    Richardson became the first Penn receiver to eclipse 1,000 receiving yards in a single season since Justin Watson in 2017. Richardson hit the mark with a 9-yard reception in the third quarter.

    An earlier 9-yard catch in the second quarter gave the Monroe County native 2,445 career receiving yards, good for third all-time in in program history.

    “It’s special knowing that Penn was the only Division I school that gave me an offer,” Richardson said. “It was a blessing. Thank you, Coach P, I appreciate the opportunity.”

    Richardson had 97 yards on 12 receptions Saturday to finish the season with 1,035 receiving yards and 2,507 all-time.

    Saying goodbye

    Senior Davis Ellis recorded his first collegiate touchdown on a 2-yard screen pass to cap Penn’s first offensive drive.

    On defense, Janki tied his career high in tackles with nine — while also receiving two snaps in the backfield on offense. Adding to the trickery, Penn’s final meaningful offensive snap was a failed pass attempt from Richardson to O’Brien.

    Despite the disappointing season, Richardson, O’Brien, and Janki all had smiles on their faces leaving the post-game news conference.

    “We all came in freshman year, we were all hungry,” O’Brien said. “We all had that same desire of loving football and wanting to be on the field. We all had our own journeys, it’s unique on how we got there. The one thing that was consistent was that we all knew how to work.”

  • ‘The sorrow that never goes away’: Mother of Mount Airy man who died in Northeast Philadelphia plane crash describes her grief during remembrance event

    ‘The sorrow that never goes away’: Mother of Mount Airy man who died in Northeast Philadelphia plane crash describes her grief during remembrance event

    Amira Brown doesn’t feel hope or joy seeing pictures of her son, Steven Dreuitt Jr.

    When she seeks solace, she instead turns to the people and things that Dreuitt touched, she told a gathering Saturday in an East Mount Airy church basement ballroom. She thinks of a young girl nicknamed “Precious” — a girl her son mentored and trained to play basketball, and who grew up to be a coach.

    “Every time I see her play, that puts a smile on my face,” Brown said. “I know that Steven taught her. Steven did that.”

    Dreuitt was among those killed when a medical jet crashed on Cottman Avenue in Northeast Philadelphia earlier this year. All six people who were aboard the plane — including an 11-year-old girl — died; at least 24 people were injured, and dozens of nearby homes caught fire or were damaged by debris.

    “I just keep trying to keep my head up, and I just keep going,” Brown said of the grief. “I just keep pushing.”

    Brown retold the events of Jan. 31 before a somber, 50-person crowd at Oxford Presbyterian Church as part of an annual remembrance service for grieving families. She said she had been messaging with her grandson Ramesses Raziel Dreuitt Vazquez on Jan. 31 just before the crash, which occurred a little after 6 p.m.; Dreuitt’s older son was at home waiting for his parents to return, she said.

    Dreuitt, 37, was driving his fiancee, Dominique Goods-Burke, and Ramesses, then 9, home from Macy’s when the Learjet medical transport plummeted from the sky, slammed into the ground, and exploded.

    The father — a family man who loved playing video games with his sons and cooking at his job at the Philadelphia Catering Co. — died at the scene. Goods-Burke, 34, described by her family as a fierce woman of “confidence, warmth, and creativity,” was hospitalized for months before she died of her injuries. Ramesses suffered serious burns to more than 90% of his body, requiring extensive medical treatment.

    Ramesses, now 10, has been transferred from a Boston hospital to one in New Jersey, according to Brown. His mother recently told CBS Philadelphia the boy hopes to be home by Christmas.

    While Brown spoke extensively about her pain, she also used the pulpit to recognize and bring light to the nearly 150 lives celebrated at the event, led by funeral director Ervina White Beauford.

    “When things happen, people talk,” she said. “But once the talk stops, there’s no one there but us. We all have different stories, but the one thing we all have in common is the pain, the hurt, and the sorrow that never goes away.”

  • Villanova takes care of business against Sacred Heart to end regular season on a high note

    Villanova takes care of business against Sacred Heart to end regular season on a high note

    Villanova wrapped up its regular season in convincing fashion, dispatching Sacred Heart, 34–10, for its eighth straight win.

    Villanova (9-2), which is ranked No. 7 in the Football Championship Subdivision Coaches Poll and No. 9 in the Stats Perform FCS Top 25, has won 22 straight home games. The Wildcats sit in second place in the Coastal Athletic Association with a 7-1 record.

    Sacred Heart (8-4) played an independent schedule this year, but will join the CAA next season. Villanova will leave the CAA for the Patriot League.

    Graduate quarterback Pat McQuaide threw for 216 yards and two touchdowns, one each to sophomore running backs Ja’briel Mace and Isaiah Ragland.

    Mace also scored two touchdowns on the ground, rushing for 165 yards on nine carries. Ragland compiled 71 yards on a team-leading 11 carries.

    Villanova’s Ja’briel Mace (4) jukes the defensive line of Sacred Heart on Saturday.

    The Wildcats also honored their seniors in the final regular-season home game.

    “I’m really proud of our team today,” said coach Mark Ferrante. “We talked this morning in the locker room before we took the field, and you always want to hopefully go out with a win on Senior Day, because the seniors are always going to remember their last home game of the regular season.

    “Guys took care of business and we got the victory, and that’s the most important thing.”

    Mace leads the way

    The Wildcats had a rough start after Sacred Heart forced and recovered a fumble from Mace on just the second play of the game. It was a rare turnover for Villanova, which had conceded just four this season, the fewest in the FCS.

    The Pioneers converted the turnover into a 37-yard field goal, while the Wildcats went three-and-out on their next possession.

    However, Mace began a monumental first half with an 80-yard touchdown run late in the first quarter.

    “We practice ball security, and there’s no reason why I should’ve fumbled the ball,” Mace said. “But [McQuaide] picked me up and said, ‘We’re going to go right back to you,’ and on the next play, I scored. But all the credit goes to the guys up front. They’re amazing.”

    To start the second quarter, McQuaide launched a 57-yard pass to sophomore wide receiver Chris Colby, bringing Villanova to Sacred Heart’s 19-yard line. Mace delivered once again, taking the ball the rest of the way for a 14-3 lead.

    The Wildcats finished the first half with a lengthy drive, covering 80 yards in 14 plays, and ending on a 10-yard touchdown pass from McQuaide to Mace with just 27 seconds left in the second quarter.

    Mace finished the first half with 106 rushing yards on just four carries.

    Defense delivers late

    Three linebackers — redshirt freshman Anthony Hawkins, senior Shane Hartzell, and graduate Richie Kimmel — led the defense with six tackles each. Sacred Heart, ranked fifth nationally in FCS rushing, was limited to just 88 yards on the ground.

    After keeping Sacred Heart out of the end zone through three quarters, Villanova allowed the Pioneers to score on a six-yard pass to open the fourth.

    Villanova’s Turner Inge (5) takes down Sacred Heart’s quarterback Jack Snyder (14) on Saturday.

    With 7 minutes, 37 seconds remaining, McQuaide completed an 11-yard touchdown pass to Ragland to extend the lead to 34-10.

    The Pioneers threatened again, completing a 46-yard pass at Villanova’s nine-yard line. But the Wildcats forced a turnover as junior defensive back Jon Wyatt broke up quarterback Jack Snyder’s pass, and graduate defensive back Kaleb Moody intercepted it.

    “There is a lot of confidence on this team, but sometimes that can turn into arrogance, and we’ve done a good job of holding that back,” Hartzell said. “As we keep rolling we gain confidence. The amount of energy that can come out in a game, that’s what is going to spark the big plays.”

    Playoff potential

    The Wildcats will await a FCS playoff bid, which will be announced at the Selection Show at noon on Sunday (ESPNU).