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CONGRESSIONAL COMMITTEE TELLS IOC: MAKE REFORMS OR ELSE....

          Several members of Congress "threatened swift
     retribution" against the IOC "should measures to reform the
     embattled organization be rejected" during the next IOC
     session in December, according to Amy Shipley of the
     WASHINGTON POST.  IOC officials at yesterday's House
     Commerce subcommittee hearings "maintained" that the IOC
     "has been on course for substantive reform" for months. 
     During the hearing, U.S. Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) said, "I
     am convinced that if the IOC does not adopt those [proposed]
     reforms in December, the Congress is not going to have the
     patience any longer to leave the IOC to reform itself." 
     Former Secretary of State and IOC reform panel member Henry
     Kissinger, said, "I am quite optimistic we will succeed." 
     Former White House Chief of Staff Ken Duberstein, who has
     been "highly critical" of the IOC, said that he was
     "impressed" with its "recent efforts at reform." 
     Duberstein: "I think the thrust is very much in the right
     direction" (WASHINGTON POST, 10/15).  USA TODAY's Sharon
     Raboin reports that Congress' message to the IOC was "reform
     or face sanctions" (USA TODAY, 10/15).  In Salt Lake City,
     Linda Fantin writes that Congress said that it "will take
     legislative action to limit" the IOC's "fund-raising power"
     if reforms aren't made (SALT LAKE TRIBUNE, 10/15). In N.Y.,
     Irvin Molotsky writes that members of Congress "subjected
     representatives" of the IOC to "sharp questioning" and "gave
     an indication of how the questioning is likely to go" when
     IOC President Juan Antonio Samaranch "appears before the
     panel" on December 15 (N.Y. TIMES, 10/15).  While former
     ACOG CEO Billy Payne said that the IOC "should ban all gifts
     and pay members' travel expenses rather than billing cities"
     bidding to host the Games, IOC members Anita DeFrantz and
     Jim Easton denied that the selection of host cities was a
     "culture of corruption" (ATLANTA CONSTITUTION, 10/15). 

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