New Jersey
Light snow forecast expands to nearly half of N.J. after rain, high winds today
A cool, damp day is in store for New Jersey with rain during the day and northwestern areas of the state getting a dusting of snow at night, forecasters say.
Rain totals have been dialed back but Thursday’s moisture is “still a generous and much needed precipitation event,” especially for North Jersey, the National Weather Service said in its morning forecast discussion.
“The signal remains clear that the heaviest rain will fall across our northern zones with considerably less to the south, but overall, forecast precipitation has diminished slightly.”
By the time the last of the moisture pushes away from the state on Friday night, precipitation amounts will range from 1.5-2 inches in northwestern regions to a tenth to quarter inch in southern New Jersey. Central portions of the state should wind up with a half-inch to an inch of rain.
Overall, the rain will help New Jersey’s drought, but won’t come close to alleviating it.
New Jersey will receive some much-needed rain on Thursday, Nov. 21. Northern parts of the state will also get a dusting of snow at night.National Weather Service
“The drought is much too extensive and too significant to be resolved by one storm,” AccuWeather.com said.
The other story Thursday will be gusty winds that could reach as high as 25 mph inland and 40 mph along the Jersey Shore.
Rain will be mainly light, though heavier showers are possible at times, according to the weather service’s New York office, which covers Bergen, Essex, Hudson, Passaic and Union counties.
High temperatures will top out in the low 50s around mid-afternoon.
Rain will change to light snow tonight in northern New Jersey with less than an inch expected in general. Hilly areas in Sussex and parts of Passaic counties could see slightly higher totals. Lows will be in the 30s.
Some scattered light rain is expected Friday before it tapers off at night from west to east, according to forecasters. It’ll be a chilly, breezy day with highs only in the 40s before temps dip into the 30s overnight.
Dry weather returns for the weekend with mostly sunny conditions and highs in the low 50s both days. The forecast is the almost the same for Monday and Tuesday, though temps will be slightly warmer.
Current weather radar
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Jeff Goldman may be reached at jeff_goldman@njadvancemedia.com.
New Jersey
Love at first slice! Dough-kneading dream girl goes viral tossing pizzas at NJ eatery
She’s hotter than a brick oven right now.
A New Jersey pizza slinger with model-worthy good looks is going viral while tossing dough at her family restaurant — with more than 1.5 million followers lining up to watch videos of her smoke show.
Julia Molinari, 21, who goes by Jumo, posts footage of herself cooking everything from classic caprese to artichoke-topped pies as she banters with her uncle and other workers at Molinari’s Restaurant in Neptune City.
“The Italian-American pizza maker and influencer known as Jumo from Molinari Pizzeria in New Jersey can literally compete with Sydney Sweeney!” @mamboitaliano__ wrote on X.
“Her popularity is skyrocketing and so are her pizzas!”
Another fan gushed, “Jumo’s got sauce and not just on the pizza.”
A recent video shows the dough-kneading dream girl making a pizza with “house dressing on top” — as she flips her waist-length hair.
“Tomatoes from the family garden,” she says, adding the topping.
“You know what’s funny? It’s November in Jersey, and we’re still getting tomatoes,” she says while standing next to an industrial oven in the eatery’s kitchen.
She then tastes a slice and calls it “a winner.”
But plenty of pizza buffs cringed at the thought of a long, loose hair ending up in their mouths.
“Tie your hair back if you are in the kitchen,” a viewer scolded — as another quipped, “There is seventeen feet of hair in that pie.”
A third person added, “Who makes pizza while wearing rings or has her hair loose??
“I don’t buy my pizza because of how the cook looks, I only buy pizza by the taste!”
But any way you slice it, Molinari is fun to watch, fans said.
“Bro, Jumo is straight fire. Way hotter than Sydney Sweeney imo, and those pizzas look insane,” a viewer wrote.
New Jersey
N.J. congresswoman charged in ICE jail melee returns to the facility after detainee’s death
U.S. Rep. Lamonica McIver returned to the Delaney Hall immigrant detention center in Newark on Tuesday for the first time since May, when an encounter with a federal agent resulted in criminal charges against her that are still pending in federal court.
McIver’s return was for a congressional oversight visit two days before Christmas and 11 days after detainee Jean Wilson Brutus died on Dec. 12, the day he arrived at Delaney Hall.
“It is very traumatic to be back here, personally,” McIver, D-10th Dist., told news crews during a press conference, when she offered her condolences to Brutus’ family. “But I had to put aside my traumatic experience here, and come back here and represent for them what is happening inside of this awful detention center.”
In a Dec. 18 announcement of Brutus’ death, ICE said the 41-year-old Haitian immigrant had died from what the agency said were “suspected natural causes.”
ICE said its officers arrested Brutus on Dec. 11 on criminal mischief charges. Local police had arrested him four times previously and released him each time. He initially entered the United States illegally through the port of Hidalgo, Texas, on June 20, 2023.
The case is being investigated by the Office of Professional Responsibility, or OPR, a kind of internal affairs bureau within the U.S. Department of Homeland Security, ICE’s parent agency, said U.S. Rep. Rob Menendez, D-8th District, who was with McIver on Tuesday and during the May 9 oversight visit.
They are among members of Congress demanding information on Brutus.
The charges against McIver stem from her May 9 attempt to shield Newark Mayor Ras J. Baraka from arrest by a federal officer just outside Delaney Hall’s barbed wire security fence. Charges of assaulting and impeding a federal officer are pending against her in U.S. District Court.
The two were joined Tuesday by another House Democrat, U.S. Rep. Yvette Clarke of New York, who chairs the Congressional Black Caucus.
Menendez said the State of New Jersey would conduct an autopsy on Brutus, though the congressman did not know how long the OPR investigation would last or when the autopsy would be performed.
The City of Newark’s top lawyer, Corporation Counsel Kenyatta Stewart, offered his condolences to the Brutus family on behalf of Baraka, who was traveling on Tuesday.
Stewart said the city expected a thorough investigation into the death, and criticized ICE for being less transparent about the people it held than officials of the Essex County Detention Center are about the criminal suspects they hold in the big jail right next door.
McIver said she was traumatized by the events surrounding Baraka’s arrest, but that whatever she suffered was nothing compared to what the families of Brutus and other detainees were going through.
McIver and her House colleagues said detainees complained of dehumanizing conditions including bad food served at odd and restricted hours; overcrowding and inadequate medical attention, a particular concern in the wake of Brutus’ death.
The House members noted that Brutus was one of four ICE detainees to die in a four-day period this month.
Spokespeople for ICE did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday afternoon.
Several members of the Brutus family appeared outside Delaney Hall on Tuesday, though they declined to talk to reporters.
One of their lawyers, Oliver Barry, said the family had received little information on what had happened. But he said the family was heartened by the concern they saw outside Delaney Hall on Tuesday, when immigrant rights advocates from Pax Christi, Eyes on Ice and other groups were demonstrating.
“They are glad that there are so many people in the community who are taking this matter very seriously and coming out to show respect for their loved one who is no longer with us,” Barry said of the family.
His co-counsel is Joseph Champagne Jr., a former mayor of South Toms River who in 2010 became one of New Jersey’s first Haitian-American elected officials.
The House members said several detainees told of being taken into custody by ICE after emerging from asylum hearings or otherwise complying with the legal immigration process. They also said others recounted being arrested at their jobs or other habitual locations despite having visas or working papers.
“These people are not criminals,” said Menendez, a vice chair of the Congressional Hispanic Caucus. “These people have been part of our community for decades.”
Menendez put the number of Delaney Hall detainees at 952, close to the 1,000 capacity under a 15-year, $1 billion contract between its private owner and operator, the GEO Group of Boca Raton, Florida, and ICE.
GEO did not immediately respond to requests for comment on Tuesday.
The House members said some detainees told them they had been waiting for months even after agreeing to be deported.
Clarke said the mass incarceration of immigrants was motivated by greed, and likened the repeated transfer of prisoners to human trafficking.
“I was searching my heart as I drove from Brooklyn, and I thought about the fact that this is the holiday season,” Clarke said. “They were showing up for their asylum hearings. They had viable cases within immigration courts, only to be kidnapped and trafficked across the country.”
And it’s all at taxpayers expense, Clarke said.
“Many of them have been circulating throughout the private prison system around this country, and brought back,” Clarke said of detainees. “How could that be?”
New Jersey
Devils Shake Up Forward Lines on Island; Markstrom Starts | PREVIEW | New Jersey Devils
Emotional Stakes
Beyond the lineup, the Devils know the emotional stakes of the night are real. A three day break follows, and the difference between going into it with a win or a loss can linger.
“We’ve got three days to think about this game,” defenseman Brenden Dillon said. “A win, you’re in good spirits. A loss, you’re wanting the next game to come right away. With how things have gone the last couple weeks, we’re trying to build momentum, and if we have a slip up, we want to fix it right away and not let it snowball.”
Dillon was quick to stress that recent returns to the lineup do not change the responsibility of the group as a whole.
“The three guys aren’t going to win the hockey game for us,” he said. “They’re three really important players and we want them in the lineup, but at the end of the day it’s a team game. We have to go out there and earn the two points.”
Stopping Barzal
That mindset mirrors Keefe’s own message. With the Islanders featuring dynamic players like Barzal, discipline and structure will be essential.
“Top players like that play a little bit outside the structure,” Keefe said. “They play on instincts, and it can be hard to predict. For us, it’s trying to keep the puck out of his hands, and if he gets it, protect the good ice, put him into bad spots, and outnumber him. You also have to be aware of the people away from him because he’s so good at drawing coverage and moving it.”
Keefe noted the Devils see similar challenges daily in practice.
“We have guys like Jack Hughes and Jesper Bratt who play very similarly,” he said. “So we talk about it often when we’re playing against top guys like that.”
Rest Over Practice
As the season’s pace has taken its toll, the upcoming break is welcomed. Keefe acknowledged the grind, especially with the injuries New Jersey has navigated.
“It’s been a condensed schedule and it adds up,” he said. “We’ve asked a lot of guys to play big minutes. We’ve practiced very little this season, the least I ever have as a coach, because you’re opting for rest to keep guys fresh.”
For Brown, the objective is simple.
“At this point it’s pretty clear what the performance needs to look like and what our identity needs to look like,” he said. “It’s just important getting into it right away.”
Dillon framed it in even more direct terms.
“They’re a team we’re going to be battling with all the way to the end,” he said. “It’s a good test. We have to want it more tonight and earn our break.”
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