Italy investigates church painting of angel restored to look like Meloni

ROME, Jan 31 (Reuters) - An angel in a church in central Rome has been restored to look like Italian ​Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni, a national newspaper reported on ‌Saturday, prompting the culture ministry to investigate and Meloni to laugh off the affair.

Reuters

In ‌a front-page story, la Repubblica daily was the first to note that one of two angels in a chapel of the Basilica of St Lawrence in Lucina had been altered to resemble the ⁠49-year-old conservative, Italy's first ‌female prime minister.

The article ran with before-and-after pictures of the painting. It said the angel had previously ‍looked like a "generic cherub".

The culture ministry said it had instructed Rome's top art heritage official to carry out a same-day inspection of the restored painting ​before "deciding what to do next".

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The opposition Five Star Movement complained: "We ‌cannot allow art and culture to risk becoming a tool for propaganda or anything else, regardless of whether the face depicted is that of the prime minister."

The parish priest, Daniele Micheletti, told ANSA news agency that the decorations in the chapel had recently ⁠been touched up following water damage. The ​originals dated only to 2000, so ​were not under any heritage protection.

The restoration was carried out by the same artist who created the original ‍painting, Bruno Valentinetti. ⁠He disputed the suggestion he had altered the image, telling reporters: "I restored what was there before... 25 years ago".

As for ⁠Meloni, she posted a picture of the disputed painting on Instagram, with the ‌caption "No, I definitely don't look like an angel", with ‌a laughing emoji.

(Reporting by Alvise Armellini)

Italy investigates church painting of angel restored to look like Meloni

ROME, Jan 31 (Reuters) - An angel in a church in central Rome has been restored to look like Italian ​Prime Minister Gior...
Demonstrators in Milan protest ICE unit at Winter Olympics

MILAN (AP) — Hundreds of demonstrators gathered Saturday in Milan to protest the deployment of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents during the upcomingWinter Olympics, unbothered by the fact that agents would be stationed in a control room and not operating on the streets.

The protest in Piazza XXV Aprile, a square named for the date of Italy's liberation from Nazi fascism in 1945, drew people from the left-leaning Democratic Party, the CGIL trade union confederation and the ANPI organizations that protect the memory of Italy's partisan resistance during World War II, along with many other people.

Organizers handed out plastic whistles, which participants blew as music blared from a van. The protest was as much against the news that agents from adivision of ICE would participatein security for the U.S. delegation as against what many of those present said they saw as creeping fascism in the United States.

"No thank you, fromMinnesotato the world, at the side of anyone who fights for human rights,'' read one banner. "Never again means never again for anyone,'' read another, and "Ice only in Spritz,'' a reference to a popular aperitif, read yet another.

The ICE agents to be deployed to Milan are not from the same unit as the immigration agents cracking down in Minnesota and other U.S. cities.

News of the deployment of ICE agents has provoked a backlash in Italy. Milan Mayor Giuseppe Sala has said they were not welcome. Interior Minister Matteo Piantedosi has been called to Parliament to testify about the deployment this week.

Protester Silvana Grassi held a sign that read "Ice = Gestapo." She said the scenes of ICE agents in Minneapolis shooting and killing protesters and detaining children were deeply upsetting.

"It makes me want to cry to think of it,'' Grassi said. "It's too terrible. How did they elect such a terrible, evil man?''

Homeland Security Investigations, an ICE unit that focuses on cross-border crimes, frequently sends its officers to overseas events like the Olympics to assist with security. The ICE arm at theforefront of the immigration crackdownin the U.S. is known as Enforcement and Removal Operations, and there is no indication its officers are being sent to Italy.

"Even if it's not the same ones, we don't want them here,'' Grassi said.

Paolo Bortoletto, also holding a banner, was aware that the officers would have an investigative and not a street role.

Still, he said, "We don't want them in our country. We are a peaceful country. We don't want fascists. It's their ideas that bother us."

The Olympics begin Feb. 6 with an opening ceremony that will be attended by U.S. Vice President JD Vance and Secretary of State Marco Rubio.

Demonstrators in Milan protest ICE unit at Winter Olympics

MILAN (AP) — Hundreds of demonstrators gathered Saturday in Milan to protest the deployment of U.S. Immigration and Custo...
Bitter cold takes aim at South as millions remain under winter weather alerts

Around 32 million people are under winter alerts Saturday as Floridians brace for bitter cold and snow takes aim at the southern Appalachians and the Southeast.

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Record lows are likely this weekend in many Florida cities including Daytona Beach, Jacksonville, Orlando, Tallahassee, Pensacola, Miami, Melbourne, Key West, West Palm Beach and Gainesville.

Miami could see its coldest temperatures in over a decade with an overnight low of around 35 degrees. This will be a damaging freeze for Florida, with wind chills hovering in the single digits across northern parts of the state and in the teens across central Florida.

As of Saturday afternoon, snow is falling in parts of the Carolinas, Tennessee and Georgia and will remain persistent through Sunday morning.

There is a dry patch over central parts of North Carolina, which may lower the accumulation in Raleigh, but eastern parts of the state are still expected to see at least 6 to 12 inches of snow by Sunday morning.

The combination of strong, gusty winds near the coast will create near blizzard conditions, which will greatly reduce visibility and cause dangerous conditions late Saturday and overnight. The strong winds will also raise the risk of coastal flooding, with 2 to 4 feet of inundation possible for the Outer Banks of North Carolina.

Parts of North Carolina, including highways, were covered in a fresh white blanket of snow Saturday morning. A semi-truck was stuck in the snow on Interstate 40 near Iredell County along the state's border with Tennessee, according to avideofrom the North Carolina Department of Transportation. Snow began falling in Jacksonville near the North Carolina coast Saturday afternoon.

"For the safety of our crews, first responders and yourself, please avoid unnecessary travel today," the department asked residents.

Acurfewis scheduled to go into effect for the coastal Onslow County on Saturday at 6 p.m. until 6 a.m. daily until further notice due to the winter storm.

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Heavy snowfall rates of 1 inch per hour were forecast for Piedmont, South Carolina Saturday afternoon, according to the National Weather Service Storm Prediction Center.

The storm is expected to intensify and expand Sunday as it heads out to sea, affecting Cape Cod, Nantucket and Martha's Vineyard in Massachusetts. As the low moves offshore mid-morning, snow will come to an end for all except eastern Massachusetts.

A quick burst of snow will continue through Sunday afternoon before coming to an end in the evening. Even after the snow tapers off, the weekend will remian breezy and cold across the Mid-Atlantic and Northeast, with wind gusts of 30 to over 60 mph possible.

Snowfall accumulations as of Saturday afternoon include 9 inches in Gatlinburg, Tennessee, 7.5 inches in Tiger, Georgia and 4 inches in Charlotte, North Carolina.

For the rest of the Northeast, Sunday will be dry, blustery and very cold.

People walk through the snow with a dog outside (Alex Martin / The Greenville News via USA Today Network)

Arctic blast and record cold

Around 133 million people are under cold weather alerts Saturday afternoon in areas that stretch from Texas to Massachusetts.

The cold air has a grip on the eastern half of the ncation, with temperatures 10 to 30 degrees below average, especially from the southern Plains to the East Coast. Highs on Saturday across the Midwest, Ohio Valley and Northeast will remain in a deep freeze, with temperatures struggling to climb out of the teens and 20s.

The freezing temperatures will also affect much of Mississippi, Louisiana and northern Georgia, with the next push of frigid air on Sunday sending temperatures tumbling down in Miami.

The air will warm slightly on Monday, but temperatures across the East Coast will remain below average through most of next week.

Bitter cold takes aim at South as millions remain under winter weather alerts

Around 32 million people are under winter alerts Saturday as Floridians brace for bitter cold and snow takes aim at the s...
Giants co-owner Tisch says he never went to Epstein's island and regrets associating with him

NEW YORK (AP) — New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch said he knew Jeffrey Epstein but denied going to his island after his name was mentioned more than 400 times infiles released Fridayby the U.S. Justice Department.

Associated Press FILE - New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch arrives for NFL owners meetings, in New York, Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2025. (AP Photo/Richard Drew, File) New York Giants owner Steve Tisch sits with fellow owner John Mara during during a news conference to introduce new head coach John Harbaugh at the teams NFL football training facility Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger) New York Giants owner Steve Tisch sits with fellow owner John Mara during during a news conference to introduce new head coach John Harbaugh at the teams NFL football training facility Tuesday, Jan. 20, 2026, in East Rutherford, N.J. (AP Photo/Adam Hunger)

Giants Tisch Epstein

"We had a brief association where we exchanged emails about adult women, and in addition, we discussed movies, philanthropy and investments," Tisch said in a statement provided by the NFL team. "I did not take him up on any of his invitations and never went to his island. As we all know now, he was a terrible person and someone I deeply regret associating with."

According to emails that were among the 3 million pages of documents, Epstein connected Tisch to numerous women. Tisch, 76, was never charged with any crime connected to the investigation.

Tisch won an Academy Award in 1994 for producing "Forrest Gump" and is chairman and executive vice president of the Giants. He has been involved with the team since his father, Preston Tisch, bought 50% of it in 1991 from the Mara family.

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The documents were disclosed underthe Epstein Files Transparency Act, the law enacted aftermonths of public and political pressurethat requires the government toopen its fileson the late financier and his confidant and onetime girlfriend, Ghislaine Maxwell.

Epsteinkilled himself in a New York jail cellin August 2019, a month after being indicted on federal sex trafficking charges.

AP NFL:https://apnews.com/hub/NFL

Giants co-owner Tisch says he never went to Epstein's island and regrets associating with him

NEW YORK (AP) — New York Giants co-owner Steve Tisch said he knew Jeffrey Epstein but denied going to his island after hi...
NASCAR delays preseason race at Bowman Gray Stadium to Monday

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR has postponed the preseason exhibition race at Bowman Gray Stadium until Monday night because of ice and snow blanketing the Winston-Salem area.

The Clash was supposed to be a two-day event beginning Saturday, with the main event held Sunday evening. NASCAR late last week cut it to a Sunday-only event in anticipation of poor weather, and as snow blanketed the Carolinas on Saturday, NASCAR made the call to run the race Monday.

"Nothing matters more than the safety of our fans, even when the weather doesn't cooperate," said Ben Kennedy, NASCAR executive vice president and chief venue & racing innovations officer. "We were ready to fight the weather, and appreciate the collaboration with Winston-Salem and N.C. officials to make the best decision. Our operations team is hard at work for a Monday race."

The roads around Winston-Salem had not yet totally been cleared from last weekend's ice storm and then more snow arrived Saturday morning. Forecasts call for as much as 12 inches.

NASCAR said parking lots for fans will open at 9 a.m. Monday, with practice and qualifying scheduled for 11 a.m.

The race is scheduled for 6 p.m. and could possibly be run in the coldest temperatures in NASCAR history.

"I don't know if I've ever competed when it's that cold, but thankfully for us, we're inside of a stock car, which is basically like a oven, so that'll help," two-time champion Kyle Larson said Saturday. "It'll feel fine for us inside the car. I wouldn't be surprised if you still break, you know, somewhat of a sweat in there.

"I feel for the crews and mechanics and fans and NASCAR officials, everybody who's there outside in the cold. But you know, we love the sport, and we'll compete in many conditions. I just look forward to the challenge."

Larson said he never expected The Clash to run Sunday and planned to spend Saturday sledding with his three children.

___ AP auto racing:https://apnews.com/hub/auto-racing

NASCAR delays preseason race at Bowman Gray Stadium to Monday

WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) — NASCAR has postponed the preseason exhibition race at Bowman Gray Stadium until Monday night b...
Billie Jean King's Ex-Husband Says He Found Out She Was Gay Just One Day Before It Hit the Press

Matthew Stockman/Getty

People Billie Jean King and Larry King in 2023. Matthew Stockman/Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Billie Jean King and her ex-husband Larry King are opening up about their marriage and their eventual divorce, including the moment he learned she was gay

  • Despite discussions about divorce and having "an open kind of relationship," Billie Jean and Larry stayed married until 1987

  • Give Me the Ball! premiered at the Sundance Film Festival on Jan. 27

Billie Jean Kingand her former husband, Larry King, are reflecting on their marriage and eventual divorce, including the moment he learned she was gay — just one day before the story became public.

In the new documentaryGive Me the Ball!, which premiered Jan. 27 at the Sundance Film Festival, Larry reveals he was unaware of Billie Jean's relationship with Los Angeles hairdresser Marilyn Barnett until shortly before it became front-page news in 1981, when Barnett sued the tennis legend for palimony and publicly outed her. At the time, Larry, now 81, says he and Billie Jean, 82, had "an open kind of relationship."

"I didn't know that this was going on," Larry says in the film. "Billie Jean never mentioned it to me until the day before it hit the press."

Billie Jean King and Larry King at the 1981 press conference where she admitted her affair with Marilyn Barnett. Bettmann/Getty

Bettmann/Getty

Billie Jean, who met Larry while they were both attending California State University and married him in 1965, says her sexuality wasn't something she understood at the time. "I didn't have much experience with sex at all or anything. One girl kissed me in college. That was it," she explains in the documentary. "Everybody thinks I was hanging with girls. I wasn't at all. We had a great time, fell in love. I thought he was the one.… Larry was different from other guys. He was a feminist."

Larry, who says in the documentary that he "thought she was the cat's meow" when he first met Billie Jean, says that while he supported her career, it ultimately took a toll on their relationship. "Billie Jean changed women's tennis. And she wanted to change the world," he says. "I tried to fit into that plan, but it was more the life that Billie Jean wanted. It wasn't the life I wanted."

Adds Billie Jean, "He wanted us to have children and everything, but I started to realize something isn't right."

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Larry King and Billie Jean King in 1966. Charlie Ley/Daily Mirror/Mirrorpix/Getty

Charlie Ley/Daily Mirror/Mirrorpix/Getty

After an abortion that was made public by Larry — "I wasn't gonna tell anybody," Billie Jean says — the early '70s were "really bad" for the couple, eventually leading to discussions about divorce. "I thought when we got married forever, it was forever," Larry says. "I considered the divorce stuff to be more nonsense than reality."

"It wasn't right for Larry and I to stay married," Billie Jean adds. "I didn't know what I was doing. I hadn't figured out who I was, and he shouldn't have been suffering through that either. I kept pleading with him to divorce me, and he wouldn't do it. It was all about me; it wasn't about him. I was the one having challenges. I was so confused."

Despite having an open relationship by the time Billie Jean began her secret romance with Barnett, Larry says he didn't view the hairdresser as a serious threat. "I didn't really look at Marilyn Barnett as a real threat," he says. "It would have bothered me a lot more if she had male friends, but it didn't bother me that she had female friends because I didn't really look like I was competing with them."

From left: Ilana Kloss, Larry King and Billie Jean King in 2023, Matthew Stockman/Getty

Matthew Stockman/Getty

Larry stood by Billie Jean's side during the press conference where she admitted to the affair and remained close to her until their divorce in 1987. (Larry has been married to Nancy King since 1990.) Today, Billie Jean — who married former tennis playerIlana Klossin 2018 — says everyone involved has found happiness. "Larry and I, we're still friends," she says. "[He and Nancy] have two children. We're the godmothers. Ilana and I are so happy now."

Give Me the Ball!premiered Jan. 27 at the Sundance Film Festival and screens through Feb. 1.

Read the original article onPeople

Billie Jean King’s Ex-Husband Says He Found Out She Was Gay Just One Day Before It Hit the Press

Matthew Stockman/Getty NEED TO KNOW Billie Jean King and her ex-husband Larry King are opening up about their...
Hospitals on alert as Egypt readies for opening of Rafah crossing to Gaza's wounded

A key border crossing betweenthe Gaza Stripand Egypt is expected to partially open on Sunday morning, with Egyptian officials readying help for sickand injured Palestinians.

NBC Universal Image: FILES-PALESTINIAN-GAZA-ISRAEL-US-CONFLICT-DIPLOMACY (Said Khatib / AFP - Getty Images)

Dozens of Egyptian ambulances have assembled in front of the Rafah crossing gateon the Egyptian side. Hospitals in North Sinai are also on high alert and prepared to receive Palestinians arriving from Gaza in need of care.

Israel's Coordinator of Government Activities in the Territories said in a statement that the crossing will open on Sunday for the "limited movement of people only," with entry and exits from Gaza permitted "in coordination with Egypt, following prior security clearance of individuals by Israel."

For residents who left Gaza during the war, re-entry will only be permitted after clearance by Israel and additional screening and identification processes, the statement said.

The Associated Press, citing an Israeli official, has reported that only 50 medical evacuees will be permitted to exit Gaza each day. Medical evacuations were similarly prioritized under past ceasefire deals.

The opening comes just days after the remains ofthe last hostage held by Hamasin Gaza, 24-year-old police officer Ran Gvili, were returned to Israel on Monday, completing a key pillar of the truce after tensions over delays and accusations of ceasefire violations. Israel has repeatedly postponed reopening the crossing, signaling it would not open until the bodies of all the hostages were recovered.

Khaled Mujawir, the governor of Egypt's North Sinai province, told Egyptian state television earlier this week that officials are "100% ready" for the crossing to open, according to the Anadolu news agency. He also expressed hope that the crossing would be opened to aid convoys.

The Rafah crossing, the main checkpoint between Gaza and Egypt, has long been the primary gateway to the rest of the world for Palestinians living in the enclave, and now it is a considered a lifeline for the tens of thousands in need of treatment outside the territory, where the majority of medical infrastructure has been destroyed.

The reopening marks the first major step of the U.S.-brokered ceasefire's second phase, after the first phase came into effect nearly four months ago.

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The second stage of the truce will alsorequire the disarmament of Hamas, a key sticking point in negotiations, as well as the development of Trump's international force to oversee security in Gaza.

For months, only Gvili's remains had yet to be returned, with Israel announcing their recovery Monday after launching a sweeping operation to locate them amid mounting pressure from the Trump administration to move forward with the next phase of the deal.

Hundreds of thousands of families across Gaza have been forced to wait out the first phase of the ceasefire in makeshift tents with little protection from the winter weather, as heavy rains flooded campsites.

While the ceasefire brought an end to the most severe attacks on the enclave, Israel has killed more than 500 people in Gaza since the ceasefire began, according to the Palestinian Health Ministry in the enclave, with Israel and Hamas both accusing the other of violating the truce.

Hospitals in Gaza saidIsraeli strikes killed at least 29 Palestinians Saturday, one of the highest tolls since the October ceasefire began.

Israel's military said in a statement that Saturday's strikes followed what it described as ceasefire violations a day earlier, when the army killed at least four militants emerging from a tunnel in an Israeli-controlled area.

For Palestinians on the ground, the crossing reopening would be a small glimmer of light.

"We hope the Rafah crossing opens so we can travel freely and meet many of our family members, those who have been forcibly displaced outside the Gaza Strip," Duaa Basem Al-Masri, a 26-year-old pharmacist from Beit Hanoun, told NBC News earlier this week.

She hoped the progress would soon also see the entry of "medical aid, medicines and proper shelter equipment into the strip, to ease the suffering" in Gaza.

"We hope there will be international pressure on them from President Donald Trump," Basem Al-Masri said.

Hospitals on alert as Egypt readies for opening of Rafah crossing to Gaza's wounded

A key border crossing betweenthe Gaza Stripand Egypt is expected to partially open on Sunday morning, with Egyptian offic...

 

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