Unseen photos of Rosa Parks return to Montgomery, Alabama, seven decades later

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Seven decades after Rosa Parks was thrust indelibly into American history for refusing to give up her bus seat in Montgomery, Alabama, new photos of the Civil Rights Movement icon have been made public for the first time, and they illustrate aspects of her legacy that are often overlooked.

The photos were taken by the late Civil Rights photographer Matt Herron, and they depict Parks at the march from Selma to Montgomery in 1965 — a five-day-long, 54-mile (87-kilometer) trek that is often creditedwith galvanizingpolitical momentum for the U.S. Voting Rights Act of 1965.

History lessons tend to define Parks by her act of civil disobedience a decade earlier,on Dec. 1, 1955, which launched the Montgomery Bus Boycott. On Friday, some boycott participants and many of the boycott organizers' descendantsgathered to mark 70 yearssince the 381-day struggle in Alabama's capital caught national attention, overthrowing racial segregation on public transportation.

The never-before-seen photos released to the Rosa Parks Museum in Montgomery on Thursday, taken a decade after the boycott, are a reminder that her activism began before and extended well beyond her most well-known act of defiance, said Donna Beisel, the museum's director.

"This is showing who Ms. Parks was, both as a person and as an activist," Beisel said.

Never printed before

There are plenty of other photos placing Parks among the other Civil Rights icons who attended the march, including some that were taken by Herron. But others were never printed or put on display in any of the photographer's numerous exhibits and books throughout his lifetime.

Herron moved to Jackson, Mississippi, with his wife and two young kids in 1963 after Civil Rights activistMedgar Evers was assassinated. For the next two years, his photos captured some of the most notable people and events of that time. But in most of his photos, Herron's lens was trained on masses of everyday people who empowered Civil Rights leaders to make change.

Herron's wife, Jeannine Herron, 88, said that the photos going public this week were discovered from a contact sheet housed in a library at Stanford University.

The photos weren't selected for print at the time because they were blurry or included people whose names weren't as well known In Parks' case, the new photos show her sitting among the crowd, looking away from the camera.

Now, Jeannine Herron is joining forces with historians and surviving Civil Rights activists in Alabama to reunite the work with the communities that they depict.

"It's so important to get that information from history into local people's understanding of what their families did," Jeannine Herron said.

A joyous reunion

One of Herron's most frequent subjects throughout the Selma to Montgomery march was a 20-year-old woman from Marion, Alabama, named Doris Wilson. Decades after he captured her as she endured the historic march, he still expressed his desire to reconnect with her.

"I would love to find where she is today," Herron said in a 2014 interview among Civil Rights activists and journalists who witnessed that transformative period in the Deep South.

Herron died in 2020, before he had the chance to reconnect with Wilson. But on Thursday, Wilson joined other residents of Marion, a rural town in the Black Belt of Alabama. Milling around an auditorium in Lincoln Normal School, a college founded by nine formerly enslaved Black people after the Civil War, people looked at black and white photos that Herron took over the years, pointing out familiar faces or backdrops.

Some photos were familiar to the 80-year-old. But others, including ones where she was the subject, Wilson had never seen before.

One of the photos depicts Wilson getting treatment at a medical tent along the path of the march. Wilson had intense blisters on her feet from walking over 10 miles each day.

The doctor who was tending to her injuries, June Finer, also flew in from New York to reunite with Wilson for the first time since Finer gently cared for Wilson's bare feet six decades earlier.

"Are you the one who rubbed my feet?" Wilson asked, as the two women laughed and embraced. Finer, 90, said she wasn't even aware that people were taking photos — she was laser-focused on the safety of the marchers.

Later, Wilson reflected on how meaningful the reunion had been.

"I longed to see her," Wilson said.

Robert E. Wilson, Wilson's eldest son, said he had never seen the photos of his mother that were on display in the old school building where she went to school. He was a young child when she completed the march.

"I'm so stunned. She always said she was in the march, but I never knew she was strong like that," the now 62-year-old who was raised in Marion said.

Years of searching

Cheryl Gardner Davis has faint recollections of the evening in 1965 when her family hosted the weary walkers on the third night of the march to Montgomery. She remembers hordes of strangers erecting tents on her family's farm in the rural Lowndes County, Alabama. Just four years old at the time, she remembers how her mother and older sister had to mop up mud inside their hallway from people who had come in to use their landline phone.

It wasn't until she was an adult that she fully understood the significance of her family's sacrifice: Her mom's job as a teacher was threatened, the family's power was cut off and a neighbor menaced them with his rifle. For years, she scoured the internet and libraries for photo evidence of their hardship — or at least a picture of her family's property at the time.

Among the hundreds of photos that made their way back to Alabama in the first week of December, were pictures of the campsite at Davis' childhood home. Davis, who had never seen the photos before, said it was a vital way to bring light to the people who often are an afterthought in the recounting of that transformative historical period.

"It's, in a sense, validation. This actually happened, and people were there," Davis said.

Unseen photos of Rosa Parks return to Montgomery, Alabama, seven decades later

MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — Seven decades after Rosa Parks was thrust indelibly into American history for refusing to give up...
Sudan's bloody civil war is worsening a major humanitarian crisis

Sudan is facing what the World Food Programme has called "the humanitarian crisis of our time," as tens of millions struggle through sieges, blockades and aid shortages that have pushed entire cities into famine.

What began as a power struggle between rival generals more than two years ago has since plunged Sudan into a brutal civil war that has killed more than 150,000 people anddisplaced millionsfrom their homes, with mass killings leavingbloody sand visible from spaceand ruined infrastructure.

Sudan "is the largest humanitarian crisis in the world today," Leni Kinzli, the WFP's Sudan communications officer, told NBC News on Sunday. "It can no longer be forgotten or ignored, simply because the severity and the scale is one that has really not been seen at this level."

At least 21.2 million people — roughly 45% of Sudan's population — are now facing high levels of acute food insecurity, according to the latest Integrated Food Security Phase Classification, the internationally recognized system for assessing famine and food insecurity. Famine conditions have been confirmed in Darfur's el-Fasher and Kadugli, where "people have endured months without reliable access to food or medical care," the U.N.'s Food and Agriculture Organization has said.

Kinzli described a landscape where even relatively calm areas remain fragile, while other regions edge deeper into hunger. She said WFP can reach 4 million to 5 million people with food and nutrition support each month and has the capacity to assist 8 million, but "the resources we have available are not keeping pace with the need."

Aid delivery remains extremely difficult in violence-ridden areas, where conflict between the Sudanese army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) continues to shape the crisis.

That includes el-Fasher, which was under siege by the RSF for more than 18 months, during which time "absolutely no" aid supplies were able to get in, added Kinzli. The RSF eventually overran the Sudanese army'slast major strongholdin Darfur in October.

Sudanese girls who fled el-Fasher receive humanitarian aid at the al-Afad camp for displaced people in the town of al-Dabbah, northern Sudan, on Nov. 25. (Ebrahim Hamid / AFP - Getty Images)

In South Kordofan, a drone attack by Sudanese paramilitary forceshit a kindergarten on Thursday, killing 50 people, including 33 children, according to a local doctors' group.

United Nations aid teams in Sudan issued ajoint statementon Thursday warning that the violence "is restricting access to food, medicine and essential supplies, and is limiting farmers' access to their fields and markets, heightening the risk of famine spreading across the Kordofan states."

U.N. human rights chief Volker Türk warned: "We must not allow Kordofan to become another el-Fasher. It is truly shocking to see history repeating itself in Kordofan so soon after the horrific events in el-Fasher."

And on the ground, conditions are already bleak.

"We are seeing pretty much the same exact things in the state of South Kordofan," said Dr. Mohamed Elsheikh, a spokesperson for Sudan Doctors Network. The RSF is "doing the same siege, the same blockade, they are not allowing food or medicine to get into the cities," he told NBC News, adding that between Sept. 20 and Oct. 20 of this year, 23 children died from severe malnutrition.

For the past three months, Sudanese civilians have endured RSF attacks, Elsheikh said, including widespread atrocities and human rights violations, with civilians executed arbitrarily and key infrastructure — such as hospitals, clinics, schools and homes — deliberately targeted by airstrikes.

The Sudan Doctors Network hasdocumented 19 cases of rapecommitted by RSF forces against women who fled the fighting in el-Fasher and arrived at the al-Afad camp in al-Dabbah, said Elsheikh.

Fighting in Sudan began in April 2023, when the Sudanese military, led by the country's top commander and de facto ruler, Gen. Abdel-Fattah Burhan, clashed with his former deputy, Gen. Mohammed Hamdan Dagalo — a former camel dealer widely known as Hemedti, who leads the RSF.

RSF forces walk amid the bodies of unarmed people and burning vehicles, during an attack, near al-Fasher, Sudan, in this image from video released on Oct. 27, 2025. (Social Media / via Reuters)

Both men had previously led counterinsurgency operations against uprisings in the region, a conflict that in 2005 contributed to Omar al-Bashir becoming the first sitting head of state indicted by the International Criminal Court on suspicion of genocide.

Burhan and Dagalo were part of the military establishment that ousted al-Bashir in 2019 after widespread popular unrest. Two years later, they agreed to share power following a coup that brought down the Western-backed government of Prime Minister Abdalla Hamdok.

However, their alliance broke down spectacularly over how to manage the transition to a civilian government. With neither willing to cede power, full-scale fighting erupted, dragging Sudan deeper into conflict and a humanitarian crisis.

With no resolution in sight, the war is only becoming more entrenched and chaotic, Hager Ali, a research fellow at the German Institute for Global and Area Studies, told NBC News. What began as a two-sided struggle has splintered into a tangle of local battles, reopening old regional grievances and eroding whatever central authority once existed, she said.

Both sides have shifted "from trying to win this war to trying not to lose," she added, noting that as the fighting regionalizes, it has produced "smaller fronts, smaller conflicts, which has complicated the chain of command," making even a negotiated ceasefire nearly impossible to enforce.

Sudanese volunteers prepare free meals for those who fled el-Fasher at the al-Afad camp on Nov. 20. (Ebrahim Hamid / AFP - Getty Images)

Nearly 13 million people have been forced to flee their homes in search of safety, according to the U.N. Human Rights Council, and have been displaced within the country or are living in neighboring countries such as Chad, South Sudan, Egypt and Ethiopia.

Funding for the regional response is less than 10% of what is needed, it said, making it impossible to cover basic needs.

But where funding is available, and where fighting has abated, some areas have shown signs of recovery.

Last year, there were 10 areas confirmed to be suffering from famine, said Kinzli, but "now there are only two." Around 3.4 million people who were previously at "crisis" levels are no longer classified as such, reflecting limited stabilization in parts of Khartoum, Al Jazirah and Sennar, where some families have begun to return.

While these gains remain narrow and uneven, and the situation remains dire, "this shows that when we have access and funding, we can reverse famine and improve the situation," Kinzli added. "The humanitarian response can really make a difference if and when we are able to deliver."

Sudan's bloody civil war is worsening a major humanitarian crisis

Sudan is facing what the World Food Programme has called "the humanitarian crisis of our time," as tens of mill...
Billy Hicks/Disney XD via Getty Cameron Boyce (left) and Jo Ann Allen Boyce (right).

Billy Hicks/Disney XD via Getty

NEED TO KNOW

  • Jo Ann Allen Boyce has died from pancreatic cancer at age 84

  • The civil rights trailblazer was a member of the "Clinton 12" and was Cameron Boyce's grandmother

  • "My Nana stuck up for what she believed in and did something amazing," the late Disney star, who died after suffering a seizure in 2021, previously told PEOPLE

Jo Ann Allen Boyce, a member of the "Clinton 12" andCameron Boyce's grandmother, has died. She was 84.

Jo Ann died from pancreatic cancer while she was surrounded by family at her home in California on Dec. 3, according to theLos Angeles Times.

The civil rights trailblazer attended the first integrated public high school in the South after the U.S. Supreme Court's 1954 ruling in Brown v. The Board of Education ordered Clinton High School to desegregate.

Green McAdoo Cultural Center/Facebook Jo Ann Allen Boyce.

Green McAdoo Cultural Center/Facebook

Now, life-size sculptures of Jo Ann and 11 of her fellow students stand in the Green McAdoo Cultural Center in Clinton, Tenn., to honor the courage they showed when they walked the hallways of the school, despite intense backlash and daily harassment.

"We've lost such a caring and humble soul," the centerwrote in a tributeto Jo Ann. "The people who met her were in awe and entirely grateful for her kindness. A student was so inspired by her story that they wept when they met her, and Jo Ann was quick to offer them a warm hug."

"Jo Ann inspired everyone she met," the statement continued. "Today is a tough one for all of us she did. We send our love and care to the Boyce family."

In January 2021, Cameron — whodied that July after suffering a seizure— told PEOPLEhow inspiring his grandmother's story was to him.

"My Nana stuck up for what she believed in and did something amazing," he said at the time. "Things are going to happen in your life, and you're going to face adversity, but if you grow from that and learn from that, you're a better person because of it."

Escalating violence and assaults forced Jo Ann and her family to leave Tennessee for Los Angeles in 1957. At the time, her father, Herbert Allen, told reporters, "We're not leaving here with hatred in our hearts against anyone."

Only two of the Clinton 12 ultimately graduated from Clinton High.

Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human interest stories.

Jo Ann, whose story was told in Disney XD and Disney Channel'sBe Inspiredshort film series, previously opened up to PEOPLE about the feeling of returning to Clinton High School so many years later with her family.

"It was overwhelming. It was emotional," Jo Ann said in 2021. "I could go back and remember the days that me and my friends walked down that hill together."

Billy Hicks/Disney XD via Getty Cameron Boyce and Jo Ann Allen Boyce with others in 'Be Inspired.'

Billy Hicks/Disney XD via Getty

"All of us, all of our parents, every single student that walked down the hill with me, all of our parents wanted us to do better, she continued.

Adde Jo Ann: "They wanted us to have better opportunities, so therefore education was number one for them. They told us, 'It may be difficult, but you guys go ahead. We are with you.' "

In another interview right before his death, Cameroncredited his grandmotherfor providing him with a blueprint on giving back and making a difference in the world.

"There's a long line of difference makers in my family. I'm following in the footsteps of some really strong men and women who have showed me what it means to give back; it's the greatest way to fulfill yourself," he toldHaute Livingin May 2019.

Read the original article onPeople

Cameron Boyce’s Grandmother, Civil Rights Activist and Member of the Segregation-Busting Clinton 12, Dies at 84

Billy Hicks/Disney XD via Getty NEED TO KNOW Jo Ann Allen Boyce has died from pancreatic cancer at age 84 The civil rights trailblazer wa...
Indiana jumps to No. 1 in AP Top 25 ahead of Georgia, Ohio State in final rankings before playoff

Indiana is the No. 1 team inThe Associated Press Top 25 college football pollfor the first time after going through the regular season and Big Ten championship game 13-0, ending Ohio State's 14-week run atop the rankings.

TheHoosiers' 13-10 win over the Buckeyesin Indianapolis on Saturday night made them the unanimous pick for No. 1 and theylocked up the top seedfor their second straight appearance in the 12-team College Football Playoff.

Georgia, whichbeat Alabama by three touchdownsin the Southeastern Conference title game, moved up one spot to No. 2 for its highest ranking of the season. Ohio State, the defending national champion, slipped two spots to No. 3.

Texas Tech, a27-point winner over BYUin the Big 12 championship game, also has its highest ranking of the season after rising one rung to No. 4.

Oregon was No. 5 and followed by Mississippi, Texas A&M, Oklahoma, Notre Dame and Miami. Miami moved up two spots and returned to the top 10 for the first time since mid-October. Alabama and BYU each dropped one spot, to Nos. 11 and 12.

Among Group of Five teams, American Conference champion Tulane jumped four spots to No. 17 for its highest ranking in two years. Sun Belt Conference champion James Madison remained No. 19.

The final AP Top 25 will be released Jan. 20, the day after the national championship game.

Poll points

— Indiana, which had the most losses in major college football history prior to Curt Cignetti's arrival two years ago, had never been ranked higher than No. 2 before Sunday. That was the position the Hoosiers held for seven straight weeks before they rose to the top. They were 100 ballot points ahead of Georgia. The Bulldogs were just 12 points ahead of Ohio State.

— With the limited schedule of games, all teams that were in the Top 25 remained in the poll.

— Virginia took the biggest fall after losing in overtime to Duke in the ACC championship game, going from No. 16 to No. 20.

Conference call

SEC (8 ranked teams): Nos. 2 Georgia, 6 Mississippi, 7 Texas A&M, 8 Oklahoma, 11 Alabama, 13 Vanderbilt, 14 Texas, 25 Missouri.

Big Ten (5): Nos. 1 Indiana, 3 Ohio State, 5 Oregon, 16 Southern California, 18 Michigan.

Big 12 (4): Nos. 4 Texas Tech, 12 BYU, 15 Utah, 20 Arizona.

ACC (3): Nos. 10 Miami, 21 Virginia, 24 Georgia Tech.

American (3): Nos. 17 Tulane, 22 Navy, 23 North Texas.

Independent (1): No. 9 Notre Dame.

Sun Belt (1): No. 19 James Madison.

Get poll alerts and updates on the AP Top 25 throughout the season. Sign uphereandhere(AP News mobile app). AP college football:https://apnews.com/hub/ap-top-25-college-football-pollandhttps://apnews.com/hub/college-football

Indiana jumps to No. 1 in AP Top 25 ahead of Georgia, Ohio State in final rankings before playoff

Indiana is the No. 1 team inThe Associated Press Top 25 college football pollfor the first time after going through the r...
Max Verstappen falls just short of a 5th straight F1 title after stunning comeback

NoFormula 1driver puts pressure on his rivals quite like Max Verstappen.

The Red Bull star did it to Lewis Hamilton in 2021, winning his first title on thelast lapof the season and preventing Hamilton from clinching a record eighth F1 title.

Verstappen came close to winning the title again this year, mounting an incredible late charge to crank up the pressure on Lando Norris and Oscar Piastri. Earlier in the season, the McLaren teammates were contesting the F1 title between themselves.

But Verstappen changed all that.

Heading into Sunday's season-ending Abu Dhabi Grand Prix, it had become athree-way battle.

Verstappen did all he could.

He won in Abu Dhabi from pole position for athird straight race win, a season-leading eighth and 71st of a stellar career.

It was not quite enough to overtake Norris, whowon his first F1 titleby placing third in the race and ending up just two points ahead of Verstappen in the standings.

But it showed why Verstappen commands so much awe.

"This Max guy is pretty hard to beat," McLaren CEO Zak Brown told broadcaster Sky with a large dose of understatement.

One race earlier, at the Qatar GP, Brown had jokingly compared Verstappen to a horror movie ghoul who keeps resurfacing.

"He's like that guy in a horror movie, that right as you think he's not coming back, he's back," Brown said in a podcast interview before the Qatar race. "What an unbelievable talent he is. He never makes mistakes. He seizes every opportunity. We've never thought he was out."

Stunning comeback

After winning theDutch GPon Aug. 31, Piastri led Norris by 34 points and was 104 ahead of Verstappen, who back then had won just two races compared to seven for Piastri. Verstappen took advantage ofMcLaren's errorsto barge his way back into contention.

"(When) you lose the championship by two points it looks painful. But on the other hand, if you look from where we were in Zandvoort, more than 100 behind, then it's not too bad," Verstappen said. "I'm very proud of the whole team. We could have also very easily given up at that point."

Verstappen is already considered among the F1 greats, alongside Hamilton, seven-time F1 champion Michael Schumacher and Ayrton Senna.

Despite his relatively young age, the 28-year-old Dutchman is already third all-time for race wins behind Schumacher (91) and Hamilton (105). Verstappen has 127 podium finishes and 48 pole positions — one area where he is not as clinical as Hamilton (a record 104 poles) was in his prime with Mercedes.

Turning the tables

When Norris won the Brazil GP sprint race in early November, he moved 39 points ahead of Verstappen with four races to go.

A few weeks later, Verstappen had dramatically turned the tables and all the pressure was on Norris and Piastri.

"It's probably fair to say that the world discovered an even more extraordinary Max this season," Red Bull team principal Laurent Mekies said. "A bit because of the magnitude of the comeback. A bit because he has been so relaxed."

Verstappen has been more amiable since becoming a father earlier this year, and has made a concerted effort to reign in his occasionally scathing rants over team radio.

He was all smiles and friendly with Norris when they watched highlights of Sunday's race in the cool-down room.

In the past, bursts of rage or flashes of frustration would get the better of Verstappen.

Less so now.

But one thing that hasn't changed is his intense desire to win and deep self-belief, whatever the odds.

"The fightback has been really fun," Verstappen said. "I don't see it like losing (the championship)."

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

Formula 1:https://apnews.com/hub/formula-one

Max Verstappen falls just short of a 5th straight F1 title after stunning comeback

NoFormula 1driver puts pressure on his rivals quite like Max Verstappen. The Red Bull star did it to Lewis Hamil...
ATLANTA, GA - JANUARY 20: A detailed view of the trophy after the Ohio State Buckeyes versus Notre Dame Fighting Irish College Football Playoff National Championship game on January 20, 2025, at Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, GA. (Photo by David Rosenblum/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images)

TheCollege Football Playoffselection committee decided to move Miami ahead of Notre Dame at the last minute.

After keeping the Hurricanes behind the Fighting Irish for weeks, the people in charge of the 12-team bracket moved the Hurricanes ahead of Notre Dame on Sunday and into the postseason.

The Fighting Irish fell out of the playoff entirely as Alabama stayed in the fielddespite losing the SEC title game to Georgia on Saturday. The Crimson Tide are the first three-loss team to make the field as an at-large.

Notre Dame had been ahead of Miami for every iteration of playoff rankings this season despite losing to the Hurricanes in Week 1. The two teams finished with the same 10-2 record and neither played on conference championship weekend. It would have made much more sense for Miami to move ahead of Notre Dame in the penultimate rankings on Tuesday if the committee was going to make this decision. Instead, the committee waited until the final set of rankings to invoke Miami's win over the Irish.

Why? CFP committee chair Hunter Yurachek said that the committee didn't compare Miami and Notre Dame against each other like it did Saturday night and Sunday morning because BYU was in between them in the rankings. Notre Dame was at No. 10 on Tuesday night, BYU was at No. 11 and Miami was at No. 12.

"The first in that was we felt like the way BYU performed in their championship game, a second loss to Texas Tech in a similar fashion was worthy of Miami moving ahead of them in the rankings," Yurachek, the Arkansas athletic director said on ESPN. "And once we moved Miami ahead of BYU, we had that side-by-side comparison that everybody had been hungry for of Notre Dame and Miami and you look at those two teams on paper and they're almost equal in their schedule strength, their common opponents, their results against their common opponents but the one metric we had to fall back on, again, was the head-to-head."

Yurachek said that the committee waited so long to compare Miami and Notre Dame head-to-head because of where Miami started the rankings. While Notre Dame was in the top 10 of every CFP ranking until Sunday, Miami was at No. 18 in the first set of rankings on Nov. 4.

Miami's inclusion into the field means the ACC did not get left out of the playoff.

Miami didn't win the ACC title or even play in the ACC title game. The 10-2 Hurricanes lost out on a five-way tiebreaker for second place in the conference to a five-loss Duke team. The Blue Devils took down Virginia in the ACC championship game on Saturday night but ended up ranked behind five other conference champions in the CFP rankings.

The field is made up of the five highest-ranked conference champions and seven at-large teams. American champion Tulane, Big Ten champion Indiana, Big 12 champion Texas Tech, SEC champion Georgia and Sun Belt champion James Madison got the automatic berths. JMU is the first Sun Belt team to ever make a College Football Playoff.

The first round features two regular-season rematches. Tulane, which lost 45-10 to Ole Miss in September, will visit the Rebels again. Alabama, which lost to Oklahoma at home in November, will visit the Sooners for the second straight season.

Given the way the committee handled the rankings, Notre Dame has every right to feel aggrieved. Whichever of Miami, Alabama or Notre Dame would have had a legitimate case if it was left out of the playoff. But Notre Dame has to feel especially salty given the way it was treated by the committee in the weeks leading up to the final rankings.

Miami did not play Duke or Virginia during the regular season. Neither did Notre Dame. The only team on either Miami or Notre Dame's schedule that played on conference championship weekend was Boise State. And the Broncos won the Mountain West title over UNLV on Friday night.

Notre Dame beat Boise State by three touchdowns. In theory, the win over the Broncos was strengthened between Tuesday and Sunday. Instead, the committee decided to change its mind days after both Miami and Notre Dame's seasons ended.

College Football Playoff field

First-round byes

  • No. 1 Indiana (13-0)

  • No. 2 Ohio State (12-1)

  • No. 3 Georgia (12-1)

  • No. 4 Texas Tech (12-1)

First-round games

  • No. 12 James Madison (12-1) at No. 5 Oregon (11-1)

  • No. 11 Tulane (11-2) at No. 6 Ole Miss (11-1)

  • No. 10 Miami (10-2) at No. 7 Texas A&M (11-1)

  • No. 9 Alabama (10-3) at No. 8 Oklahoma (10-2)

Full College Football Playoff Top 25 rankings

1. Indiana (13-0)

2. Ohio State (12-1)

3. Georgia (12-1)

4. Texas Tech (12-1)

5. Oregon (11-1)

6. Ole Miss (11-1)

7. Texas A&M (11-1)

8. Oklahoma (10-2)

9. Alabama (10-3)

10. Miami (10-2)

11. Notre Dame (10-2)

12. BYU (11-2)

13. Texas (9-3)

14. Vanderbilt (10-2)

15. Utah (10-2)

16. USC (9-3)

17. Arizona (9-3)

18. Michigan (9-3)

19. Virginia (10-3)

20. Tulane (11-2)

21. Houston (9-3)

22. Georgia Tech (9-3)

23. Iowa (8-4)

24. James Madison (12-1)

25. North Texas (11-2)

College Football Playoff: Miami jumps Notre Dame as Alabama gets in 12-team field and Irish get left out

TheCollege Football Playoffselection committee decided to move Miami ahead of Notre Dame at the last minute. After keeping the Hurricanes ...
Government waives part of a Biden-era fine against Southwest Airlines

The U.S. Department of Transportation is waiving part of afine assessed against Southwest Airlinesafter the companycanceled thousands of flightsduring a winter storm in 2022.

Under a 2023 settlement reached by the Biden administration, Southwest agreed to a $140 million civil penalty. The government said at the time that the penalty was the largest it had ever imposed on an airline for violating consumer protection laws.

Most of the money went toward compensation for travelers. But Southwest agreed to pay $35 million to the U.S. Treasury. Southwest made a $12 million payment in 2024 and a second $12 million payment earlier this year. But the Transportation Department issued an order Friday waiving the final $11 million payment, which was due Jan. 31, 2026.

The department said Southwest should get credit for significantly improving its on-time performance and investing in network operations.

"DOT believes that this approach is in the public interest as it incentivizes airlines to invest in improving their operations and resiliency, which benefits consumers directly," the department said in a statement. "This credit structure allows for the benefits of the airline's investment to be realized by the public, rather than resulting in a government monetary penalty."

The fine stemmed from awinter stormin December 2022 that paralyzed Southwest's operations in Denver and Chicago and then snowballed when a crew-rescheduling system couldn't keep up with the chaos. Ultimately the airline canceled 17,000 flights and stranded more than 2 million travelers.

The Biden administration determined that Southwest had violated the law by failing to help customers who were stranded in airports and hotels, leaving many of them to scramble for other flights. Many who called the airline's overwhelmed customer service center got busy signals or were stuck on hold for hours.

Even before the settlement, the nation's fourth-biggest airline by revenue said the meltdown cost itmore than $1.1 billionin refunds and reimbursements, extra costs and lost ticket sales over several months.

Government waives part of a Biden-era fine against Southwest Airlines

The U.S. Department of Transportation is waiving part of afine assessed against Southwest Airlinesafter the companycancel...

 

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