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Olympics

IOC TELLS SALT LAKE IT CAN BREATH EASY; COCA-COLA PLEASED?

          Though the IOC "is expected to ask as many as a dozen
     of its members to resign next week, it will take no action
     against" the SLOC for cash and gifts it gave to voters in
     the bid process for the 2002 Winter Games, according to John
     Powers of the BOSTON GLOBE.  IOC Exec Board member Jacques
     Rogge, who is on the six-member panel investigating the
     scandal, said, "The people who were in the bid are no more.
     They took the actions they thought were needed."  Last week,
     SLOC President Frank Joklik and Senior VP Dave Johnson
     resigned under pressure.  Rogge said the IOC is also looking
     "into charges" that Sydney officials were approached for
     payoffs during their bid to host the 2000 Summer Games. 
     Rogge dismissed calls for IOC President Juan Antonio
     Samaranch's resignation: "He is not a corrupt man. ... Why
     should someone resign at a moment of crisis?  We need
     leadership.  We do not need resignations" (BOSTON GLOBE,
     1/14).  USA TODAY's Mike Dodd reports that the IOC sent
     letters to 13 of its members "demanding explanations of
     activities" around Salt Lake's bid (USA TODAY, 1/14).
          CHANGE IN THE PROCESS: IOC VP Anita DeFrantz called for
     an "overhaul of the selection process for Olympic Games
     sites, saying all-expense-paid visits and gifts from bidding
     cities to IOC members should be banned."  DeFrantz: "No
     visits, no gifts, and (therefore) no more press stories." 
     She said the "major work of studying bidding cities should
     fall to a small committee of professional and technical
     experts, and representatives from the Olympic community." 
     Reacting to calls for her resignation from former USOC
     President Robert Helmick, DeFrantz said, "I thank him for
     his suggestions and I will take them under advisement" (Amy
     Shipley, WASHINGTON POST, 1/14).
          A PAYNE-FUL PROCESS FOR MICHAEL? IOC Marketing Dir
     Michael Payne met with Olympic sponsors Coca-Cola and UPS,
     and also spoke by phone with officials from USOC sponsor
     Home Depot.  After the meeting, Coca-Cola spokesperson Ben
     Deutsch said, "We're confident that they are going to do
     what they said they would do -- take swift and decisive
     action" (ATLANTA CONSTITUTION, 1/14).
          SALT LAKE NOTES: Salt Lake City Mayor Deedee Corradini,
     on giving gifts to IOC execs during the city's bid process:
     "If they like to ski, we take them skiing.  If they like
     basketball, we take them to dinner and a Jazz game.  I never
     thought anything improper was going on.  I have no
     recollection of payments being made" (USA TODAY, 1/14).

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