Nastia Liukin to appear on ‘Gossip Girl’

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All that gossip about gymnast Nastia Liukin, the all-around gold medalist, appearing on “Gossip Girl” turned out not to be mere gossip at all.

After a chance meeting with the show’s producers, she was asked to make an appearance on the popular show. She says it’s one of the coolest things that’s come her way since she won the Olympic gold medal in Beijing.

Yesterday, she was honored as the Women’s Sports Foundation’s Sportswoman of the Year for 2008.

It seems like he’s off to a faster start on the Mary Lou Retton track than Carly Patterson was after winning the all-around title at the Athens Olympics.

source: latimes.com

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IOC chairman Jacques Rogge warns cheats they risk detection eight years after Olympics

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Cheating athletes who evaded detection during the Olympic Games in Beijing will only know if they got away with it in eight years’ time.
Jacques Rogge, the chairman of the International Olympic Committee, which has a statute of limitations on results of eight years, said that the urine and blood samples taken from competitors in Beijing can be repeatedly tested until 2016 as scientists develop new methods of analysis.
The process has already started, with 5,000 samples shipped from Beijing to Lausanne so that they can be tested for Continuous Erythropoiesis Receptor Activator, or Cera, a new generation of the blood-booster drug, EPO discovered recently in the urine of cyclists on this summer’s Tour de France.
Rogge said: “This is the first stage of retroactive testing.
“We are going to keep, to preserve the urine and the blood for eight years.

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Olympics-2016: Tokyo turns on the charm with Olympic committees of the Americas

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Tokyo made its mark in “enemy territory” with its presentation in the Mexican resort of Acapulco bidding to host the 2016 Olympic Games, delighting an audience of Olympic committees from the Americas.
The Japanese delegation generated applause and provoked laughter with its sense of humour, even though the participants of the Pan American Sports Organization (PASO) were geographically nearer to bidders Chicago and Rio de Janeiro, and historically closer to Madrid.
“It was our first opportunity to make the official presentation to the members of PASO, and also to many members of the International Olympic Committee (IOC). I enjoyed it very much,” Ichiro Kono, director of Tokyo 2016, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur dpa.
The Acapulco meeting brought together not only the presidents of 42 Olympic committees of the Americas and international federations, but also various members of the IOC, including its president Jacques Rogge.
For Kono, it was a unique opportunity that he did not consider a battle in hostile terrain. “This is a competition between friends,” he said. “Chicago, Madrid and Rio, they are all my friends.”

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Stern considers NBA games in London possible before 2012 Olympics

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NBA commissioner David Stern said Sunday the league likely would play regular-season games in London before the British capital hosts the 2012 Olympics.
Stern, however, also said the possibility of taking meaningful games to Europe was nowhere near a done deal.
Although we have no plans on the drawing board, it has been suggested to us that we should schedule in the next three years or so some regular-season games here – more than just one – on some regular basis,” Stern said before the New Jersey Nets-Miami Heat pre-season game at the O2 Arena. “It’s fair to say that we’ll see a minimum of one and possibly more regular-season games by 2012.”
Stern sees the Olympics as a springboard to increasing the NBA’s marketability in Britain, which is one of the richest countries in the world.
Dwyane Wade, possibly the most recognized player on the court, said he enjoyed the energy in the building during Sunday’s pre-season game.
We don’t really grow up thinking that people will one day know us worldwide,” said Wade, who scored 18 points for the Heat in the 94-92 loss to the Nets. “It’s a great feeling.”

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Lawsuit filed against Canadian ticket broker over Beijing Olympics

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A Canadian tour operator is being sued by a group of Americans for breaking a deal to provide tickets to the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing.

A lawsuit filed in a Texas court alleges that Winnipeg-based Roadtrips Inc. sold tickets for the opening ceremonies as part of their tour packages but failed to deliver them.
“The people that I represent would not have gone to Beijing had they not believed what Roadtrips said and believed that Roadtrips actually had the tickets that they were selling,” Jim Moriarty, the lawyer representing the three Americans who allege they were scammed out of tickets, said Wednesday.
In a statement filed in court Tuesday, the company characterized the lawsuit’s claims as wildly inaccurate and defamatory.
“Roadtrips did not receive a number of Beijing Summer Games opening ceremony tickets from a supplier which, up until this incident, had been a secure and reputable source in North America,” said the statement from company president Dave Guenther.

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Beijing blood samples to be retested for new-style EPO

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The International Olympic Committee is to retest frozen blood samples taken from athletes during the Beijing Games in August for traces of Cera, the so-called “third-generation erythropoietin“.
It announced the move after Tour de France officials confirmed on Tuesday that the German rider Stefan Schumacher and the Italians Riccardo Ricco and Leonardo Piepoli had tested positive this year for Cera, which is a form of EPO that has a longer-lasting effect in boosting the blood’s oxygen delivery system.
The IOC intends to retest the samples collected this summer during the Olympic Games in Beijing,” the IOC spokeswoman, Emmanuelle Moreau, said. “Substances that will be tested for across all sports include EPO Cera.
All samples are currently being repatriated to the Wada [the World Anti-Doping Agency]-accredited laboratory in Lausanne where Olympic samples are usually stored after the Games. The details of the retesting procedure are currently being discussed with Wada.

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2012 Olympics will have ‘party atmosphere’, says Boris Johnson

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London Games will be much more fun than those in Beijing, says London mayor

Boris Johnson said today that the 2012 Olympics would be “much, much more fun” than the Beijing Games as he unveiled a vision of the “party atmosphere” they could bring to London.

Giving evidence to a committee of MPs, the London mayor suggested that visitors could be issued with BlackBerry-style gadgets to help them follow events.

And he also insisted that the cost of the Games would not rise above the £9.3bn ceiling set on the budget, even with economic conditions worsening.

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At its first hearing since the Beijing Olympics, Johnson told the Commons culture committee that the event in China was “fantastic” but that he wanted the London Games to excel in a different way.

The 2012 Olympics would be “more friendly, more intimate”, he said. The venues would be “cosier”.

“We can produce a Games that’s just as good, if not better, without spending all that money,” said Johnson, referring to the £20bn cost of the Chinese Olympics.

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Town Welcomes Home Its Golden Champ

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For days, Albert Kirchmayr has been melting, molding and cooling gallons of milk chocolate, all for the glory of Michael Phelps. For as many mornings, Darlene Castle has lain in bed, composing rhyming couplets for her grandkids to chant in praise of Phelps and his eight gold medals from this summer’s games.
Others around town have been rehearsing songs and crafting everything from “Will you marry me?” posters to canvas oil paintings detailing step by step Phelps’s journey toward the Beijing Olympics. And yesterday, all of them converged on Towson, Md., to try to throw the largest and most extravagant parade ever for the swimmer.
It was a day of glory not only for Phelps, who looked relaxed in a hoodie and sunglasses as he rode in a military Humvee past the throngs of screaming fans, but also for the town he came from. As with any hometown parade, part of it — the fireworks, crowded streets and adulation — was about pride in claiming this hero as one of their own, as though to catch reflected glory for everyone around him.
“Towson’s pretty much still a small town,” said John Cadigan, who manages the pool where Phelps trained. “It’s a source of pride, a sense that one of us from little Towson went off into the big world and did something great.”

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Equestrian stripped of Beijing result for doping

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Equestrian rider Rodrigo Pessoa has been stripped of his fifth-place finish at the Beijing Olympics and banned from competing for 4 1/2 months after a positive drug test on his horse.

The sport’s governing body Friday also fined the 36-year-old Brazilian $1,766. He is suspended until Jan. 10, 2009.

Pessoa’s horse Rufus tested positive Aug. 23 for nonivamide, a banned pain-relieving medication.

They placed fifth in the individual jumping final. Pessoa lost in a jump-off for the bronze medal won by Beezie Madden of the United States.

Pessoa was defending the individual title he won at Athens in 2004. He also won bronze medals for Brazil in team jumping at Atlanta in 1996 and Sydney in 2000.

from: ap.google.com

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Olympics drive strong U.S. August sports web traffic

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Interest in the Beijing Summer Olympics and the start of the football season drove a 26 percent boost in August traffic on U.S. sports websites viewed at work, a unit of Nielsen Co said on Thursday.
The number of unique visitors accessing sports websites from their office locations grew to 42.3 million in August, up from 33.4 million last year, according to Nielsen Online.
With broad interest in the Olympics, and the ramp up of the college and professional football seasons, August was a busy month for online sports fans,” Jon Gibs, vice president of media analytics at Nielsen Online, said in a statement.
The Web offered 24/7 access to news, results and video, and fans demonstrated a healthy appetite for information about their favorite athletes and teams,” he added.

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Olympics boosts Chinese language promotion

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Michael Phelps who claimed a record eight gold medals at the Beijing Olympic Games said it was harder for him to learn Chinese than to win swimming races.
Before the American came to China for the 2008 Games he seriously took a few Chinese lessons. A popular online video shows how hard he tries to imitate the voice of a Chinese learning multimedia software in saying such basic words as “guo zhi” (juice), “nan hai’er” (boy) and “nu hai’er” (girl).
But still, the 23-year-old rated his Chinese language studies as the most difficult thing he had tried in his life. “Learning Mandarin is even harder than winning eight gold medals in the pool.
In primary school Phelps took French and German courses, but the swimming ace said, “all the words, characters and pronunciations in Mandarin are so different. All of them are hard to manage.”
He was not the only star athlete trying to learn some Chinese language and culture. When gymnast Nastia Liukin arrived back home in Dallas, Texas, with five medals around her neck, the Russian-born blonde appeared in front of her reception wearing a black T-shirt with two big Chinese characters “Beijing” in the front. (blog)
The Beijing Olympics have brought world attention to the Chinese civilization and further enhanced the utility of the Chinese language worldwide,” said Zhao Guocheng, the Office of Chinese Language Council International (OCLCI) deputy director general.

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Olympics Gear for Sale, With Sichuan in Mind

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Chinese Olympians auctioned off everything from swimsuits to ping-pong paddles in Beijing last night in a benefit for Sichuan province, amid calls to turn the nation’s attention back to the quake-stricken region after the distraction of the Games.

Auction proceeds from the memorabilia offered by 23 Chinese athletes raised about four million yuan, or roughly $600,000, while the fundraising event raised 19 million yuan overall, according to the Chinese Athletes Fund, one of the organizers of the auction. About 80% of the money will be used to build youth sports facilities and infrastructure in Sichuan, the fund said, while the rest will be used provide training courses for retired athletes and coaches in fields including language skills, sports management and entrepreneurship education.


Guo Jingjing and her blue swimsuit

Guo Jingjing and her blue swimsuit

Female table tennis champion Zhang Yining’s ping pong paddle fetched 400,000 yuan, the highest price for an individual item. One sought-after item was the blue swimsuit worn by gold medal diver Guo Jingjing, which was sold for 300,000 yuan.

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Host of the 2016 Olympic Games?

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The selected host city for the 31st Olympic Games in 2016 will be announced tomorrow (Thursday) at an IOC meeting in Copenhagen. There are currently four cities competing to host what is one of the most prestigious sporting events in the world.

Chicago (USA) is the favourite to win the rights to host the 2016 Games, followed by Rio de Janeiro (Brazil), Madrid (Spain) and Tokyo (Japan).

The other cities on the shortlist were Prague (Czech Republic), Baku (Azerbaijan), and Doha (Qatar), however they have now been eliminated.

Hosting the Olympic Games is likely to have a positive impact on the winning nation’s property market. Average property prices in the run-up the Olympic Games in the last five host cities – Beijing (China), Athens (Greece), Barcelona (Spain), Atlanta (USA) and Sydney (Australia) – appreciated at a significant pace, outstripping average national property price growth.


source: homesoverseas.co.uk

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The London 2012 Olympic Games are about the athletes

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The flags will remain there, fluttering above the capital, until the Games in 2012. As experiences go it was right up there with the moment I walked into an Olympic stadium wearing a British vest for the very first time.

Now that we are the next host city of the summer Olympic and Paralympic Games, there are five areas we want to focus on in the weeks and months ahead.

One: Put the athletes first. This hasn’t changed since the day we submitted the bid and, if anything, my commitment has strengthened after visiting Beijing this summer. Put simply, there are no Games without the athletes, no breathtaking moments of sporting brilliance, no spine-tingling magic that lives in the memory long after the Games are over.

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Bradley Wiggins hasn’t spoken to Mark Cavendish since Beijing Olympics

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Speaking to the Guardian, Wiggins admitted that he had been struggling to give his all in the event after winning gold in the individual and team pursuits, and the pair finished only eighth despite being reigning World Champions.
Wiggins said: “Cav is like my little brother and I love him dearly. But we left the stadium without saying a word to each other and we’ve yet to speak.
The Belgium-born cyclist, who also won gold, silver and bronze in Athens, admits the result in Beijing was a shock to both of them.
“We should have been good enough to win the Madison but in the past I’ve always been the leader so it was weird when the roles were reversed.

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China marks Olympics, spacewalk for National Day

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China kicked off its National Day celebrations Monday by highlighting its hosting of the Beijing Olympics and the country’s first spacewalk, two hard-won successes in a tumultuous year marked by natural disasters, ethnic unrest and another food safety scandal.

The spacewalk on Saturday boosted a wave of Chinese pride and patriotism stemming from the Olympics, which is still a big news story in the domestic media one month after it ended. China’s Olympic heroes were honored in a three-hour ceremony at the Great Hall of the People that was broadcast live on national television.

State broadcaster CCTV showed the three returning astronauts, with flower garlands around their necks, waving and smiling as they were treated to a homecoming parade in Beijing. Their mission, including China’s first spacewalk, put the country closer to building a space station and landing a man on the moon.

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UK will pay ‘whatever it takes’ to protect the Olympics

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The London Olympic Games budget will break through the 10 billion ($A22 billion) barrier, largely because officials have ”vastly underestimated” the cost of protecting the event from terrorists, The Independent on Sunday has revealed.

Security costs for the 2012 Games were now likely to reach $A3.3 billion nearly three times the original estimate, a senior official involved in planning the event said.

The army was to be drafted to help protect athletes and spectators from an atrocity, the official revealed. Military helicopters would patrol overhead and jets would be on standby to intercept any suspect private plane heading for the main Olympic stadium in east London. Under Treasury rules, the Ministry of Defence would charge the Olympic authorities for such a deployment.

The security operation is expected to be the largest in peacetime Britain, with the two-week event classed in Whitehall as a major terrorist target. Yet detailed planning for policing and security has barely started.

Insiders said a price could not be put on preventing a large-scale terrorist attack on the main Olympic site or in London’s parks, where thousands will watch the events on giant TV screens.

The London bombings of July 7, 2005, took place the day after the capital celebrated winning the 2012 bid.

”It will cost whatever it takes to ensure terrorism does not once again try to rob London of celebrating the 2012 Games,” a source said.

The insider said security planning was ”basically starting from scratch. There are no detailed plans yet but of course it will cost far more, around 1.5 billion [$A3.3billion].”

Balancing security concerns with ensuring spectators can enjoy a friendly and open atmosphere in contrast to Beijing’s rigid controls is proving to be the greatest headache for organisers, alongside transport.

Officials want the experience of 2012 to be open and shared by all Londoners, with street parties similar to those in Sydney at the turn of the millennium. Giant video screens will be placed in Hyde Park and at other sites where events will take place.

In addition to police officers from Scotland Yard and other forces, tens of thousands of volunteers will be needed to check bags and tickets. Unmanned military planes, as used to monitor the Taliban in Afghanistan, could be deployed to monitor suspected terrorist aircraft.

The transport network is likely to carry 240,000 passengers an hour during the Games. Extra officers will be needed to identify suspected bombers, and stadiums will be built with special blast-proof material, including shatter-proof glass.

Officials from the Cabinet Office and the Home Office have been meeting regularly to discuss the operation.

If organisers are to keep to budget promises, cuts will have to be made elsewhere, such as in the construction of stadiums and the Olympic village to house 17,000 athletes, and in the funding of the 2012 ”legacy”, intended to promote sport in the community.

source: canberratimes.com.au

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Post-Olympics Beijing car restrictions to take effect next month

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Beijing has announced a series of post-Olympics car restrictions, which will take effect next month and hopefully sustain the hard-won smooth traffic and good air quality during the Games.

Under the new traffic restrictions, 30 percent of government vehicles will be sealed off as of October 1, said a circular issued by the Beijing municipal government on Saturday.

The remaining 70 percent of government vehicles, as well as all corporate and private cars, will take turns off the roads one out of the five weekdays as of October 11, it said.

Cars whose number plates end with 1 or 6 will be taken off roads on Monday, while those ending with 2 or 7 will be banned on Tuesday, 3 or 8 on Wednesday, 4 or 9 on Thursday and 5 or 0 on Friday. The ban does not apply on weekends.

The ban will be applicable within the Fifth Ring Road inclusive, from 6 a.m. to 9 p.m. for private cars and round the clock for government and corporate vehicles.

The new restrictions will take effect on a trial basis on October 11 for six months until April 10, but does not apply to police wagons, ambulances, fire engines, buses, taxies and other public service vehicles.

“It’s expected to reduce Beijing’s average road traffic flow by6.5 percent and speed up traffic within the Fifth Ring by 8 percent at least,” said Wang Zhaorong, an official with the Beijing Municipal Committee of Communications, at a press conference on Sunday.

In compensation, the restricted vehicles will be exempt from one month of vehicle tax and road maintenance fee a year. Drivers who are caught to have breached the new rule will not enjoy the exemption, according to Wang.

While most people applaud the ban on government and corporate vehicles, the ban on private cars, however, has sparked an outcry from car owners, many of whom complain it is “unfair”.

“I need to take my daughter home from boarding school on Friday night,” said Beijing bank clerk Zhang Min, whose number plate ends with “0″ and will be banned on Friday. “Probably we need to buy another car.”

More than 2,400 people posted online comments on China’s leading portal website sina.com within two hours after it published the ban. Very few postings were supportive of the ban on private cars.

“To ban should not be the ultimate way to ease Beijing’s traffic woes,” reads one of the postings. “Instead, our city should be better planned and the road network better designed.”

While most people were tolerant of the two-month ban on vehicles on alternate days during the Olympics and Paralympics, many are now fed up with the idea to take public transport just once every week.

But to like it or not, the Olympic traffic ban, which took nearly 2 million cars off the roads, was not only successful in easing congestion but also cleared the skies.

During the ban, traffic flow within the Fifth Ring was reduced by an average 21.2 percent and the average speed at rush hours increased by 25.8 percent to 30.2 km per hour, according to the Beijing Municipal Committee of Communications.

The city returned to its normal congestion after the ban was lifted on Sept. 21. Urban streets are unbearably jammed in the rush before the week-long National Day holiday set to start on Monday.

The debate over whether the ban should stay after the Games has lasted for weeks and Beijing authorities, apparently hard to find a solution that is effective and acceptable to all, are rather late in announcing the new ban.

Alongside the ban, city authorities have also encouraged employers to adopt more elastic working hours — even to work at home, if possible — in order to ease congestion.

Downtown department stores have been advised to open at 10 a.m. instead of 9 a.m., as of Oct. 11 and close one hour later than before.

Except for schools, governments and the public service sector, many Beijing organizations will be advised to readjust their office hours to avoid the rush hour.

The government is also considering raising downtown parking fees to ease congestion but no details are available yet.

To improve the city’s air quality, Beijing plans to ban a total of 357,000 “yellow label” vehicles from entering the Fifth Ring starting on Jan. 1, said Du Shaozhong, deputy chief of the municipal environment protection bureau.

By October next year, all the yellow label vehicles, mostly tippers and heavy-duty trucks, will be banned across Beijing, he said.

Beijing’s vehicles were issued green or yellow labels according to their emission levels and cars with a yellow label were banned from entering the city center during the day since two years ago.

Exhaust emission from a yellow label vehicle is equal to that from 28 low-emission vehicles of Euro-IV standards, said Du.

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