Under a cloud, the Olympic flame begins its journey to the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics

ANCIENT OLYMPIA, Greece (AP) — The Olympic flame began its journey Wednesday to the Milan Cortina Winter Games — missing a little of its usual magic.

Bad weather lashing western Greece forced organizers to move the torch-lighting ceremony indoors, from Olympia's ancient stadium and temples to a nearby museum.

The flame is lit by focusing the sun's rays with a concave mirror. But with skies overcast, officials used a backup flame kindled during a brief spell of sunshine at Monday's rehearsal.

Greek rower Petros Gaidatzis launched the torch relay, which, after reaching Italy, will be carried across the host country by about 10,000 runners before the Feb. 6–22 competition.

The sun ultimately made an appearance over rain-soaked OIympia on Wednesday during the indoor ceremony.

"It's incredibly memorable and a little bit emotional for me to be standing here," said IOC President Kirsty Coventry, who was overseeing her first torch lighting after being elected to the post in March. "It feels like the past and the present are really coming together. We are extremely happy that today's ceremony reminds us what the games stand for."

Italy is hosting its third Winter Games, but preparations have been plagued bycost overrunsandconstruction setbacks.

Organizers say there's plenty for fans to look forward to: a program featuring 116 medal events, the debut of ski mountaineering, higher female participation and the return of NHL players to Olympic hockey.

After a short tour of Greece and a handover on Dec. 4, the flame willbegin a 63-day, 12,000-kilometer relaythrough all 110 Italian provinces, highlighting cultural sites and host venues before reaching Milan's San Siro Stadium for the opening ceremony.

"Over the next few weeks, the Olympic flame will pass through all the Italian provinces, 60 cities, 300 towns, 20 regions and all the UNESCO sites. It will travel from the northern peaks to the southern shores," said Giovanni Malago, head of the Milan Cortina Organizing Committee. Speakers at Wednesday's ceremony urged world leaders to recognize the spirit of the Olympic Truce – an ancient Greek tradition pausing conflicts during the games to allow safe participation.

"Today humanity is going through a time of multiple and parallel crises. Wars proliferate from Europe to the Middle East and from Asia to Africa. So we should honestly admit that a society at war is a failed society," the mayor of Ancient Olympia, Aristidis Panayiotopoulos, said. "The flame allows us to again recall the values that guide humanity, values that were born and forged here."

Despite moving indoors, Wednesday's ceremony retained its traditional elements: sculptural dance gestures by performers dressed as priestesses and male kouroi, and invocations in Greek to the ancient gods.

Artemis Ignatiou, the ceremony's artistic director, said the team had prepared for the possibility of bad weather and that, despite the setback, "we gained something special: the energy of the museum and the archaeological space itself."

Speaking to The Associated Press, Ignatiou said dancing among the statues "gave the ceremony a timeless feeling."

A separate flame for the March 6–15 Winter Paralympics will be lit Feb. 24 at Stoke Mandeville Hospital in England, the birthplace of the Paralympic movement.

AP Olympics:https://apnews.com/hub/milan-cortina-2026-winter-olympics

Under a cloud, the Olympic flame begins its journey to the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics

ANCIENT OLYMPIA, Greece (AP) — The Olympic flame began its journey Wednesday to the Milan Cortina Winter Games — missing ...
Why every Thanksgiving (and Black Friday) NFL game is important

NFL games during Thanksgiving weekend are sometimes merely a welcome palate cleanser amidst a sea of turkey and macaroni and cheese: a sprig of parsley or a squeeze of lemon meant only to break up the monotony of a gluttonous few days.

Other times — like this Thursday and Friday — the games are the main dish.

The four NFL matchups Thanksgiving and Black Friday all carry some pretty serious levels of import as we head into the homestretch of the season and teams jockey for playoff position. These aren't games to merely have on in the background while you pretend to care about your cousin's partner's views on the New York mayoral race. These are matchups that feature either a team that's desperate or a team with something to prove.

Here's why every matchup on Thanksgiving and the day after is a significant one.

Green Bay Packers (7-3-1) at Detroit Lions (7-4)

This rematch of a Week 1 game between NFC North foes is the first game on Thanksgiving, and it's a pivotal one for both clubs.

The Packers won the first round, limiting the Lions to only 13 points in the season opener and kicking off a since-constant conversation about Detroit's offense. Both teams were expected to be Super Bowl contenders before the season, and while both have been good, each has also had its struggles.

Green Bay and Detroit each enter with 3-2 records in their last five games. If the Packers win, they'll have a two-game lead over the Lions in the loss column plus the tiebreaker, which would make it incredibly difficult for Detroit to come back and win the division. If the Lions win, they'll be within one game of the North-leading Chicago Bears at worst — which could be extra important this year as Detroit is on the outside of the NFC playoff picture.

Keep an eye on the star pass rushers in this one as Micah Parsons and Aidan Hutchinson are both capable of swinging a game themselves.

Kansas City Chiefs (6-5) at Dallas Cowboys (5-5-1)

The Chiefs and the Cowboys both pulled out huge comebacks in Week 12, as Kansas City came back from two scores down to beat the Indianapolis Colts in overtime and Dallas erased a 21-0 deficit against the Philadelphia Eagles.

We find these two teams in pretty desperate waters, as both enter Week 13 in 10th place in their conferences. Neither side can afford to lose many more games the rest of the season if it hopes to make the playoffs.

This game has the potential to be a classic quarterback duel. Patrick Mahomes and Dak Prescott are ranked second and third in passing yards this season. Prescott is also second in passing touchdowns, with 23.

Cincinnati Bengals (3-8) at Baltimore Ravens (6-5)

The Ravens are one of the hottest teams in the NFL, winners of five straight games to climb out of a 1-5 hole. The headline of this matchup, though, is the return of Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow, who is expected to make his first start since Week 2 after he suffered a turf toe injury.

Burrow has lost four straight games against Baltimore, three of which were decided by one score, the last two of which were decided by a total of four points. In two games vs. the Ravens last season, Burrow threw for 820 yards, nine touchdowns and one interception.

A Ravens win could put them in the driver's seat in the AFC North if the Pittsburgh Steelers continue to flounder. A win for Cincinnati could be start of its own run as the Bengals try to get back in the hunt.

Chicago Bears (8-3) at Philadelphia Eagles (8-3)

Are the Bears for real? There is no better way for Chicago to prove its 8-3 record is legit than by defeating the defending Super Bowl champs on the road.

The Bears, under first-year coach Ben Johnson, have gotten improved play from Caleb Williams this season, as the former No. 1 overall pick has thrown for 2,568 yards, with 16 touchdowns and four interceptions. But six of Chicago's eight wins have come in one-score games, including multiple wins in the final minute. Is the Bears' record in close games sustainable? Or a sign the dam is about to break? Chicago has only one win against teams currently over .500.

The Eagles, meanwhile, are having the 8-3 season from hell. Philadelphia is coming off a dispiriting loss to the Cowboys that ratcheted up the pressure on the struggling offense. A year after they finished seventh in points per game, the Eagles enter Week 13 ranked 17th. Philly's once-vaunted rushing attack has struggled, tumbling from to 179.3 yards per game a season ago to 110.5, 21st in the NFL.

The Eagles need a bounce-back performance to quiet the noise, while the Bears can silence their own doubters with what would be their signature win of the season so far.

Why every Thanksgiving (and Black Friday) NFL game is important

NFL games during Thanksgiving weekend are sometimes merely a welcome palate cleanser amidst a sea of turkey and macaroni ...
'He's back': Bengals activate QB Joe Burrow from IR

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow officially was activated from injured reserve on Wednesday and is expected to start Thursday's game against the host Baltimore Ravens.

The Bengals announced the move over social media and posted a slow-motion video of Burrow along with the caption: "He's back."

Burrow is set to play for the first time since Week 2 after he underwent surgery for turf toe on Sept. 19.

Cincinnati (3-8) went 1-8 without Burrow.

Burrow, 28, has played in 71 career games and has a 40-30-1 record. In his sixth NFL season, Burrow has completed 68.5% of his passes for 19,190 yards with 142 touchdowns and 46 interceptions.

He is a two-time Pro Bowl selection and has twice been named Comeback Player of the Year after his return from serious injuries that ended his 2020 and 2023 seasons.

Also on Wednesday, the Bengals activated safety Daijahn Anthony from injured reserve and placed cornerback Marco Wilson on IR.

Anthony, 25, was placed on injured reserve with a hamstring injury on Aug. 26.

Wilson, 26, sustained a hamstring injury in Cincinnati's 26-20 loss to the New England Patriots this past Sunday.

He has three tackles in four games this season.

Receiver Tee Higgins (concussion) and defensive end Trey Hendrickson (hip/pelvis) will miss the game against the Ravens. Also ruled out were running back Tahj Brooks (concussion) and receiver Jermaine Burton (ankle). Defensive end Cameron Sample (oblique) is questionable.

--Field Level Media

'He's back': Bengals activate QB Joe Burrow from IR

Cincinnati Bengals quarterback Joe Burrow officially was activated from injured reserve on Wednesday and is expected t...
Higher fees for foreigners visiting US national parks stokes tourism concerns

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — A$100-per-person chargefor foreigners entering Yellowstone, Grand Canyon and other popularnational parksis stoking apprehension among some tourist-oriented businesses that it could discourage travelers, but supporters say the change will generate money for cash-strapped parks.

The new fee was announced Tuesday byInterior Secretary Doug Burgumand takes effects Jan. 1. Foreign tourists also will see a sharp price increase for an annual parks pass, to $250 per vehicle. U.S. residents will continue to be charged $80 for an annual pass.

The change in policy puts the U.S. in line with other countries that charge foreigners more to see popular attractions.

At the Whistling Swan Motel just outside Glacier National Park in northwestern Montana, owner Mark Howser estimates that about 15% of his customers are foreigners. They come from Canada, China, India, Spain, France, Germany and elsewhere, said Howser, who also runs a bakery and general store.

Those visitors already pay up to $35 per vehicle to enter the park. Adding the $100-per-person charge for foreigners, Howser said, "is a sure-fire way of discouraging people from visiting Glacier."

"It's going to hurt local businesses that cater to foreign travelers, like myself," he said. "You're discouraging them from seeing something in the country by attaching a fee to that experience."

A Yellowstone tour operator, Bryan Batchelder with Let's Go Adventure Tours and Transportation, said the charge represents "a pretty big hike" for the roughly 30% of his clientele that are foreigners. That percentage has been going up in recent years after Batchelder switched to a new booking service.

Next summer, he said, will reveal how the new charge plays out among foreign visitors. "They'll probably still come to the country, but will they visit national parks?" Batchelder asked.

The charge also will apply at Acadia, Bryce Canyon, Everglades, Grand Teton, Rocky Mountain, Sequoia & Kings Canyon, Yosemite and Zion national parks.

Interior officials described the new fee structure as "America-first pricing" that will ensure international visitors contribute to maintaining parks.

For Yellowstone park alone, the $100 charge could generate $55 million annually to help fix deteriorating trails and aging bridges, said Brian Yablonski with the Property and Environment Research Center, a free market research group based in Bozeman, Montana. A recent analysis by the group said visitor numbers would drop only about 1% in response to the higher price.

If the charges for foreigners were extended to park sites nationwide, Yablonski said it could generate more than $1 billion from an estimated 14 million international visitors annually.

"Americans are already paying more than international visitors because they are paying taxes," Yablonski said. "For international visitors, this is kind of a no-brainer, common sense approach."

Many other countries charge international visitors an extra fee to visit public sites, said Melissa Weddell, director of the University of Montana's Institute for Tourism and Recreation Research. Foreign visitors to Ecuador's Galapagos Islands, for example, pay $200 per adult, while Ecuadorian nationals pay only $30, according to tourist websites for the islands.

A coalition of current and former employees park service denounced the new charge.

"In a year where national park staff have already been cut by nearly 25%, we worry this will be yet another burden for already overworked employees,″ said Emily Thompson, executive director of the Coalition to Protect America's National Parks.

"National parks should be available and accessible to all, or America's best idea will become America's greatest shakedown,″ she said.

Gerry Seavo James, deputy campaign director for Sierra Club's Outdoors for All campaign, said Trump and his administration have worked for nearly a year toundermine the park service, slashing its budget and firing thousands of staff.

"Gouging foreign tourists at the entrance gate won't provide the financial support these crown jewels of our public lands need,'' he said. "Without that support, we run the risk of our true common grounds becoming nothing more than playgrounds for the super-rich."

Interior Department spokesperson Elizabeth Peace said the agency previously did not collect data on international visitors but will start doing so in January.

Republican lawmakers in July introduced a bill in Congress that would codify the surcharge for foreign visitors to national parks. It's sponsored by West Virginia Rep. Riley Moore and MontanaRep. Ryan Zinke,who served as interior secretary during Trump's firs term.

"President Trump and Secretary Burgum are putting Americans first by asking foreign visitors to pay their fair share while holding entrance fees steady for the American people," Zinke and Moore said in a statement Wednesday.

Daly reported from Washington, D.C.

Higher fees for foreigners visiting US national parks stokes tourism concerns

BILLINGS, Mont. (AP) — A$100-per-person chargefor foreigners entering Yellowstone, Grand Canyon and other popularnational...
Blizzard unleashes Thanksgiving travel chaos, with biggest lake-effect snow of the season still ahead

MINNEAPOLIS –A powerfulwinterstorm is snarlingThanksgivingtravelacross parts of the UpperMidwestWednesday, after pummeling the Northern Plains withsnowand powerfulwindgusts that caused numerous driving injuries and hundreds of crashes.

Meanwhile, the FOX Forecast Center istracking a second winter stormthat will impact millions across more than 40 states, just as manyholidaytravelers return home. Even more intense wind gusts and heavy snowfall are forecast for the centralU.s.with the potential to cause significant delays at major airports.

Thanksgiving Week Storm Live Tracker: Radar, Flight Delays And Cancellations And Forecasts

Treacherous travel conditions remain acrossMinnesota,WisconsinandMichigan, as the first of two winter storms races across the Upper Midwest during the busy Thanksgiving travel rush.

Interstate 29 remained shut down early Wednesday morning betweenFargo,North DakotaandWatertown,South Dakotabefore reopening as the fast-moving system cleared out of the area.

On Wednesday evening, parts of northern Wisconsin reported between 12 and 18 inches of snow. With one report in Brule, Wisconsin measuring 23 inches of snow, according to National Weather Service data.

Watch Fox Weather Live

Whiteout driving conditions with wind gusts over 70 mph were reported across the Dakotas and Minnesota. Minnesota officials reported more than 250 crashes, with 30 resulting in injuries, between Tuesday afternoon and Wednesday morning.

Jackknifed semitruck Wednesday morning on Interstate 94 neat Moorhead, Minnesota.

More than 30 semi-trucks jackknifed resulting in the closure of Interstate 94 Tuesday evening into the overnight hours in the northwestern part of the state.

Tens of thousands of customers were without power in northern Wisconsin and Michigan's Upper Peninsula by Wednesday afternoon, according to PowerOutage.com.

Thanksgiving National Forecast: Tracking The Good, Bad And Ugly Weather Across America

Winds will remain an issue for airports across the Midwest through Wednesday, as powerful wind gusts will trigger ground stops and ground delays.

More than 1,100 flights were disrupted across the country by late Wednesday morning.

As this first system moves out of the area, the biggestlake-effect snowevent for the season thus far will begin for the Great Lakes Snowbelt Wednesday afternoon.

The FOX Forecast Center said snow totals will be measured in feet, before the snow finally tapers off Saturday morning. Periods ofwhiteout driving conditionsare expected.

Snow has already fallen across Michigan's Upper Peninsula and the National Weather Service (NWS) office inMarquettesaid people should avoid traveling Wednesday and on Thanksgiving Day, if possible.

What Is A Winter Storm Warning?

More than a foot of lake-enhanced snow has already fallen in parts of northern Minnesota and northern Wisconsin.

The Great Lakes Snowbelt inOhio,Pennsylvania, westernNew York, and New York's Tug Hill Plateau are also expected to receive feet of lake-effect snow, with the worst of the snow expected to fall on Thanksgiving Day.

Safety Tips For Driving Through Winter Weather

Winds are expected to be strong enough to carry lake-effect snow bands intoSyracuseandAlbanyin central Upstate New York and New York's Capital Region, impacting drivers, especially along Interstate 90.

Meanwhile, cold temperatures will settle across the majority of the country on Thanksgiving Day itself, setting the stage for a dangerous winter storm that will impact more than 40 states beginning Friday, with the potential to cause more delays at major airports across the Central U.S.

These Are Expected To Be The 10 Busiest Us Airports This Thanksgiving

As millions begin to return home or head out for Black Friday shopping, an area of low pressure will develop in the Rockies, and is expected to bringDenver's first snow of the season.

The storm will move across the Central Plains Friday into Saturday, and is expected to bring 5-8 inches of snow across portions ofIowa, southern Wisconsin, andIllinois, according to the FOX Forecast Center.

Snow in Chicago on Feb. 12, 2025

Chicagois expected to see 8-12 inches of snow beginning Friday, which could rival its snowiest two-day total in November since records began in 1884, according to the Forecast Center.

Chicago,MilwaukeeandDetroitairports could all see significant delays due to wind and heavy snow.

How Pilots Navigate Through Dangerous Weather Conditions

South of Interstate 70, the mid-MississippiValley and points south and east will see repeated rounds of heavy rain beginning Saturday, with rain reaching the East Coast by Sunday.

Travel impacts are expected to last into Monday.

Original article source:Blizzard unleashes Thanksgiving travel chaos, with biggest lake-effect snow of the season still ahead

Blizzard unleashes Thanksgiving travel chaos, with biggest lake-effect snow of the season still ahead

MINNEAPOLIS –A powerfulwinterstorm is snarlingThanksgivingtravelacross parts of the UpperMidwestWednesday, after pummelin...

 

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