IOC Struggling To Find Cities To Host Olympics

LONDON (AP) — The Olympics have weathered world wars, boycotts and corruption scandals. These days, the IOC has a new crisis on its hands: Finding cities willing to host the games.

The troubled race for the 2022 Winter Olympics is a case in point. High costs and internal political opposition prevented several potential contenders not to bid. Two candidate cities withdrew and two others could still drop out.

The way things are going, the winner could be decided next year by default. Take the games, please.

“I have not seen anything like this before,” senior Norwegian IOC member Gerhard Heiberg said. “This is urgent. We need to sit down and discuss what is going on. We are at a crossroads here.”

It’s a challenge the International Olympic Committee and new President Thomas Bach need to resolve quickly to ensure the long-term viability of the world’s most prized sports event.

Changes to the bidding process and efforts to reduce the cost of the games are among the key issues being addressed by the IOC as part of Bach’s “Agenda 2020,” his blueprint for the future of the Olympic movement that will be voted on in December.

Watching closely are countries and cities considering whether to bid for the even bigger and more expensive Summer Olympics of 2024.

The financial burden is worrying potential host cities. Specifically, the $51 billion price tag associated with February’s Winter Olympics in Sochi. Olympic officials say most of that huge sum went to long-term projects and that the operations costs of the Olympics were no higher than previous games.

No matter. The public perception is that the games cost too much.

Concerns over Rio de Janeiro’s delayed preparations for the 2016 Olympics have further dampened enthusiasm for hosting the games.

The Olympics continue to succeed as a spectacle, with huge audiences on television and online. But the field for 2022 has taken one hit after the other.

Munich and St. Moritz-Davos withdrew planned bids when voters in Germany and Switzerland voted ‘no’ in referendums. Stockholm, one of the five declared candidates, pulled out in December after the city government declined to offer financial backing. On Monday, the Polish city of Krakow dropped out after 70 percent of voters rejected the bid in a referendum.

That leaves four cities in contention for now: Almaty, Kazakhstan; Beijing; Lviv, Ukraine; and Oslo, Norway.

The bid from Lviv has been on hold because of the turmoil in Ukraine.

It’s possible only three bids will still be in play when the IOC executive board meets in Lausanne, Switzerland, from July 7-9 to decide which cities go to the final stage. Rather than cut the field, the board would likely keep the remaining three. The host city will be selected by the full IOC in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, on July 31, 2015.

Most worrying for the IOC is the uncertain status of the Oslo bid. Polls show 60 percent of Norwegians are opposed. One of the two parties in the governing coalition came out against the bid earlier this month. The government won’t decide until the autumn whether to provide the required financial guarantees.

“We have an image problem,” Heiberg said in a telephone interview with The Associated Press. “People in Norway say we love the games but we hate the IOC.”

Oslo, which hosted the 1952 Winter Olympics, would have been the natural favorite. Norway lives and breathes winter sports and its athletes have won the most medals at the Winter Games. The 1994 Winter Games in Lillehammer, Norway, are widely described as the best ever.

“If there is a referendum today, the ‘no’ side will win by a large margin,” said Heiberg, who organized the Lillehammer Games. “But this could change. We have time.”

Amid all the instability, Almaty and Beijing stand as the most solid bids.

Beijing, which hosted the 2008 Olympics, is bidding to become the first city to host both the summer and winter games, with Alpine events in Zhangjiakou. Almaty, the commercial capital of the former Soviet republic of Kazakhstan in Central Asia, hosted the 2011 Asian Games and will host the Winter University Games in 2017. It looks like the current favorite.

Has the situation reached the stage where the Olympics can only be held in non-democratic countries where money is no object? No public referendums are being held in Beijing or Almaty. Kazakhstan has been ruled by the same leader in 1989. Both countries have been criticized for their human rights records.

“I see a problem in Western Europe,” Heiberg said. “We have to accept the fact that we are not attractive to Western European countries. People think the games have become gigantic, the investments are too heavy.”

The current crisis centers primarily on Winter Games, which also face concerns over whether rising temperatures will prevent countries from holding the event in future decades. But the attention will soon shift to the race for a bigger prize: the 2024 Summer Games.

The U.S., which hasn’t hosted the Summer Games since Atlanta in 1996, is weighing another bid after failed campaigns by New York (2012) and Chicago (2016). The USOC is expected to decide whether to put a city forward by the end of the year.

Still in the mix are Los Angeles, San Francisco, Boston, Washington, Dallas and San Diego.

Paris, Rome and a city from Germany are potential contenders from Europe. Other possible bidders include Doha, Qatar; Istanbul, Turkey, and a city in South Africa.

Dear and the Headlights: I Just Do

Ugh, love songs are so sappy, right? Usually! But every once in a while there’s a glorious exception. Something full-to-bursting with a vital vibrancy. Something earnest and cute without being lame. Dear and the Headlights’ “I Just Do” is one of those songs.

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Leak hints the Galaxy S5 Mini will keep its bigger sibling's sensors

While many have been expecting Samsung to launch a mini version of the Galaxy S5 given the company’s past habits, there have been questions about just what the smartphone would include. Would it be as hobbled as last year’s S4 Mini? Maybe not….

Pentagon Puts Off A Plan To Enlist Young Immigrants

A Pentagon plan to allow a small number of young immigrants who grew up in the United States without legal status to enlist in the military has been delayed by the White House, senior officials there said Saturday, to avoid any conflict with House Republicans considering whether to move on immigration legislation.

An Oil-rich Area South Of Texas Is Mexico's Newest Drug-war Crisis Zone

With unfailing punctuality, the grocer receives text messages from his extortionist on the last day of each month. The medical students leave their lab coats at school, to avoid roaming gangsters who need surgery. The oil man mutters on his two-way radio as he drives behind tinted glass.

Judge: Jodi Arias Can Still Face Death Penalty

PHOENIX (AP) — A judge denied a motion from Jodi Arias’ defense team this week to have the death penalty removed as a sentencing option for the woman whose murder trial became an international sensation.

Arias’ attorneys argued that banning a defense aide from making jail visits last March affected the aide’s relationship with the entire defense team and her ability to prepare for Arias’ new punishment trial in September. Maricopa County sheriff’s officials say mitigation specialist Maria De La Rosa was banned for a week after she took a drawing by Arias out of the jail.

In court documents filed Friday, Judge Sherry Stephens says Arias’ attorneys showed no evidence that banning De La Rosa prejudiced the case. There is no proof the incident would impact the ability to present evidence in Arias’ penalty phase retrial on Sept. 8, Stephens ruled.

Defense attorney Kirk Nurmi declined to comment Saturday.

Arias, 33, was convicted of first-degree murder last year in the 2008 killing of her lover, but jurors couldn’t reach a decision on sentencing. The case captured headlines worldwide and became a cable television staple with its tales of sex, lies and a brutal killing.

She admitted killing Travis Alexander at his suburban Phoenix home but claimed it was self-defense. He was stabbed nearly 30 times, had his throat slit and was shot in the forehead. Prosecutors argued it was premeditated murder carried out in a jealous rage when Alexander wanted to end their affair.

Stephens previously denied a defense motion in February that the Arizona law allowing a retrial of the penalty phase was unconstitutional.

Under Arizona law, while her murder conviction stands, prosecutors have the option of putting on a second penalty phase with a new jury in an effort to secure a death sentence.

If the second panel fails to end in a unanimous decision, the death penalty would be removed from consideration. The judge would then sentence Arias to spend her life behind bars or to be eligible for release after 25 years.

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This Blade Runner Art Show Will Hold You Over Until the Sequel

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El Tri Loses Luis Montes For World Cup In Bittersweet Friendly Win

By Seth Vertelney, Goal.com

Mexico won the battle, but lost the war in a 3-1 friendly win over Ecuador at AT&T Stadium on Saturday.

El Tri scored three times, but lost Luis Montes for the World Cup with a double leg fracture. Captain Rafa Marquez was also taken to the hospital with a toe injury, and his status in unknown. He did, however, post on his Instagram account after the game that he had not fractured his toe.

Mexico had a slight advantage over the game’s first 20 minutes, but Ecuador held firm at the back, limiting El Tri’s chances.

Ecuador got its first big chance of the match when Maza Rodriguez hauled down Jefferson Montero, earning a yellow card. Jorge Guagua couldn’t keep his free kick from 25 yards out down, however.

Mexico broke the deadlock 33 minutes into the match in some style. Oribe Peralta received the ball at the top of the box, and dropped to Luis Montes. The Leon midfielder took a touch onto his left and blasted a shot into the corner from the top of the circle.

Montes was dealt a cruel blow just minutes later. Segundo Castillo went into a challenge on Montes, which left the midfielder with a devastating leg injury. Several El Tri players were in tears as Montes was stretchered off the pitch, with his World Cup dream over.

WARNING: Video Might Be Difficult To Watch:

Castillo was also taken to the hospital with a right knee injury.

Mexico’s bad day got even worse when Rafa Marquez also went to the hospital at halftime with a right toe injury.

Fidel Martinez appeared to even the game up for Ecuador 15 minutes into the second half after a scramble in front of the net. However, the referee whistled Frickson Erazo for a hand ball in the build up.

Just a minute later, El Tri had Paul Aguilar to thank after the wingback cleared the ball off the line.

Marco Fabian doubled his team’s lead with 20 minutes to go, and it was absolute belter. The attacker collected the ball on the left flank, cut in on his right, and belted a shot into the top corner from all of 30 yards out.

El Tri got their third when a poor Ecuador clearance found Giovani Dos Santos at the penalty spot. His shot struck the post, then goalkeeper Maximo Banguera’s face and in for an own goal.

Ecuador pulled one back when Enner Valencia rifled in a free kick from just outside the arc.

Freedom Summer II

I spent several days in New York last week with students from around the country who were preparing to head into the heartland to help organize Walmart workers for better jobs and wages. (Full familial disclosure: My son Adam is one of the leaders.)

Almost exactly fifty years ago a similar group headed to Mississippi to register African-Americans to vote, in what came to be known as Freedom Summer.

Call this Freedom Summer II.

The current struggle of low-wage workers across America echoes the civil rights struggle of the 1960s.

Today, as then, a group of Americans is denied the dignity of decent wages and working conditions. Today, just as then, powerful forces are threatening and intimidating vulnerable people for exercising their legal rights. Today, just like fifty years ago, people who have been treated as voiceless and disposable are standing up and demanding change.

Although Walmart is no Bull Connor, it’s the poster child for keeping low-wage workers down. America’s largest employer, with 1.4 million workers, refuses to provide most of them with an income they can live on. The vast majority earns under $25,000 a year, with an average hourly wage of about $8.80.

You and I and other taxpayers shell out for these workers’ Medicaid and food stamps because they and their families can’t stay afloat on what Walmart pays. (I’ve often thought Walmart and other big employers should have to pay a tax equal to the public assistance their workers receive because the companies don’t pay them enough to stay out of poverty.)

Walmart won’t even allow workers to organize for better jobs and wages. In January, the National Labor Relations Board issued a complaint accusing it of unlawfully threatening or retaliating against workers who have taken part in strikes and protests.

The firm says it can’t afford to give its workers a raise or better hours and working conditions. Baloney. Walmart is America’s biggest retailer. Its policies are pulling every other major retailer into the same race to the bottom. If Walmart halted the race, the race would stop.

Don’t worry about its investors. Its largest is the Walton family, whose combined wealth is greater than the combined wealth of the bottom 42 percent of the entire American population.

This week, Walmart employees will go on strike in dozens of cities. A group of “Walmart Moms” is also marching for better hours and better treatment of pregnant women employees. And an employee group has sent a letter and voting guide to shareholders asking that they vote against Rob Walton’s re-election as chair.

Walmart isn’t the only place where low-wage workers are on the move. Two weeks ago, 2,000 protesters gathered at McDonald’s corporate headquarters in suburban Chicago to demand a hike in the minimum wage and the right to form a union without retaliation. More than 100 were arrested.

Giant fast-food companies have the largest gap between the pay of CEOs and workers of any industry, with a CEO-to-worker compensation ratio of more than 1,000-to-one.

Meanwhile, across America, low-wage workers are demanding – and in many cases getting – increases in the minimum wage. Despite Washington’s gridlock, seven states have raised their own minimums so far this year. A number of cities have also voted in minimum-wage increases.

The movement of low-wage workers for decent pay and working conditions is partly a reflection of America’s emerging low-wage economy. While low-wage industries such as retail and restaurant accounted for 22 percent of the jobs lost in the Great Recession, they’ve generated 44 percent of the jobs added since then, according to a recent report from the National Employment Law Project.

But the movement is also a moral struggle for decency and respect, and full participation in our economy and society. In these ways, it’s the civil rights struggle of our time.

It took guts to take on the power structure of Mississippi a half-century ago. It takes guts to take on the power structure of giant companies like Walmart and McDonalds now.

But confronting such powerful bastions is a vital step toward fundamental social change. Freedom Summer II is just the start.

ROBERT B. REICH’s film “Inequality for All” is now available on DVD and blu-ray, and on Netflix. Watch the trailer below: