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Tuesday, February 16, 2010

NARA, JAPAN: Getting to Nara Park from Osaka Port

by Heather Hopkins Clement

If I had one day at the port of Osaka and had never been to Japan, I would spend the day (6-8 hours) at Nara Park.  I could go on and on about all the reasons why, but just trust me and go see it for yourself.

Here’s How:

(Allow yourself about 1.5-2 hours travelling time, one-way.)

From Tempozan Pier at the Port of Osaka, walk 5 minutes to Osaka-ko station on the Chuo (Green) Subway line (actually at this point its a monorail, but it’s part of the Osaka subway system).

map from tempozan to osakako

When you purchase your ticket at the Osaka-ko station ticket vending machine, PRESS “KINTETSU” FIRST, then select the 830 yen fare button.

Board the train on platform 1 and get off at Ikoma Station.  (This is the 16th stop, about 40 minutes away.)

When you get off at Ikoma station, you will need to transfer to the Kintetsu Line.  Walk upstairs, go through the transit gate (making sure to pick up your ticket on the other side) and board the train on platform 3. 

Take any train bound for Nara for the 15-20 minute ride to Kintetsu Nara station, the last stop at the end of the line.

Inside the station, you will find a Tourist Information Center, so make sure to stop in to get free bilingual maps and brochures.  You can go around on your own or take advantage of several free local guide services. (Note that some guide services require you apply 1-10 days in advance.)

Name: Nara Student Guide

Guide Area: Nara City
We can take you around at your request.
Recommended sightseeing tours are:
1) Kofukuji Temple → Todaiji Temple → Kasuga Grand Shrine and
2) Toshodaiji Temple → Yakushiji Temple → Horyuji Temple.
Apply to the office by phone ((0742) 26-4753, 9am-5pm) or visit Nara Sarusawa Information.
URL: http://www.narastudentguide.org

Name: Nara YMCA EGG (NARA YMCA English Goodwill Guide)

Guide Area: Nara City and Nara Prefecture
We can take you around at your request.
The recommended sightseeing tour is:
Kofukuji Temple → Isuien Garden → Todaiji Temple → Kasuga Shrine → Nara-machi → Horyuji Temple → Yakushiji Temple → Toshodaiji Temple.
You can meet us at JR Nara Station or Kintetsu Nara Station.
Apply at least one day in advance to Nara YMCA office by phone/fax (Tel:(0742) 45-5920, fax: (0742) 47-6459, 9:30am-8:30pm, Mon. thru Sat.) or e-mail (eggnaraymca@hotmail.com).
URL: http://www4.kcn.ne.jp/~eggymca/egghomepage.html

Name: NARA Guide Club (NGC)

Guide Area: Nara City
We can take you around at your request in English, Korean and Chinese.
Major touring spots of our recommendation are:
1) Todaiji Temple, 2) Kofukuji Temple, 3) Kasuga Taisha Shrine, 4) Nara Machi, 5) Heijo Palace site, 6) other cultural assets.
Apply by e-mail (naraguideclub@xqg.biglobe.ne.jp) at least 10 days in advance.
Please put your e-mail title as follows.
e.g. [A Guidance request to NGC] 3 persons, from U.K.
Please fill in the text with your name, schedule, request and so on.
In the case of e-mail by the HTML format, you can type in English, Korean, Chinese and Japanese characters directly.
About the question except the guidance reservation, please contact it to the secretariat staff by e-mail (naraguideclub@xqg.biglobe.ne.jp).
URL: http://web1.kcn.jp/nara-guide-club/eng_index.htm

DOWNLOAD “NARA WALKS” BROCHURE BY CLICKING HERE

S. KOREA AT THE OLYMPICS: Speed skating: South Korea's Lee wins women's 500m


Vancouver (AFP) - South Korea's Lee Sang-Hwa won the women's 500 metres speedskating Olympic title Tuesday, ahead of Germany's Jenny Wolf and China's Wang Beixing.

Lee notched a combined time of 76.09secs for her two runs (38.24 and 37.85), just 0.05secs ahead of hot favourite Wolf. Wang's time was 76.63secs.

View article...

RUSSIA AT THE OLYMPICS: Figure skating: Kavaguti regrets losing title for Russia


Vancouver (AFP) - Japanese-born Yuko Kavaguti said Monday she was sorry for losing the Olympic figure skating pairs gold for her adopted country.  For the first time since 1960 a team from Russia or the former Soviet Union failed to stand on the top of the podium.

"I regret our performance because it was full of mistakes," said Kavaguti, who paired with Alexander Smirnov to finish fourth in the opening Olympic figure skating event won by China's three-time world champions Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo.

"It was our worst performance of the season," said 28-year-old Kavaguti, just a month after lifting her first major title, the European championship.

"I was very calm before skating today. But I had probably wanted to skate clean so much so that I could not properly do what I should do," she added.

Kavaguti, 28, touched the ice and went off balance in the pair's opening element, a throw triple, which would have been a quaduruple if not for a last-minute change.

Smirnov, three years her junior, stepped out of a side-by-side double axel midway through their free skate to the music of "Valese Sentimentale" and "On the Blue Danube."

They ranked seventh in the free skate segment after their third place in the overnight short programme which had put them only 2.25 points behind Shen and Zhao.

Their coach Tamara Moskvina had advised them to open with a triple just before their free skate.

"It was a bit difficult to refocus on it," said Kawaguti.

As a result, Russia lost the pairs title and Kavaguti closed one chapter in her long journey from her native land.

She was branded a traitor in Japan when she changed her nationality in February last year in order to pursue her dream of Olympic gold as Japan is not known for producing world-class pairs skaters.

She has lived and trained in Russia since 2003, teaming up with Smirnov in 2006.

Asked what she wanted to do now, Kavaguti, a Moscow resident, replied: "All I want to do is go home."

Asked whether she could be convinced to continue until her "home" Olympic Games in the Russian resort of Sochi in 2014 when she is 32, she added: "No, I'm not sure."

It was a grim night for Russia with their teammates Vera Bazarova and Yuri Larionov falling in their programme and struggling into eleventh position.

That Olympic pairs domination has now passed to China was summed up as Bazarova said: "We loved being at such a big competition and seeing the elite skaters from China skate."

View article...

CHINA: 15 places worth visiting in China: Heaven Lake

Heaven Lake in Moutain Changbai in Jilin Province is a crater lake. It lies at the top of Baekdu Mountain. Besides water, there are also rocks in the lake, and in recent years, fishes are found in the lake, including the rainbow trout. 

Heaven Lake in Mountain Changbai in Jilin Province is a crater lake. 
It lies at the top of Baekdu Mountain. Besides water, there are alsorocks in the lake, and in recent years, fishes are found in the lake,
including the rainbow trout.

2009-12-01 17:02 BJT

Editor: Jin Lin | Source: China.org.cn

View Article on CCTV

OLYMPICS: Quotes: Who said what at Vancouver Olympic Winter Games

Vancouver (AFP) - Who said what at the Vancouver 2010 Olympic Winter Games on Monday:

"I ate s***. That's what happened. I was pushing it. I made a couple of mistakes that caught me off guard."
- Canadian downhiller Robbie Dixon

"The best part was we got here. And I got to meet Arnold Schwarzenegger in the village."
- Estonian skater Ilja Glebov

"Mom, Dad, look, it's a gold one. Fresh out of the oven!"
- China's Shen Xue after winning figure skating pairs gold

"A little beer, or a little bigger beer."
- David Moeller on how he planned to celebrate his silver medal in men's luge

"Sometimes they don't understand me but that's OK. If they understand 90 percent of the time, then that's enough."
- China's women's ice hockey team coach Hannu Juhani Saintula who is Finnish

"I am normally a police officer. I am studying business journalism, just to do something for my brain. I have met a lot of journalists. Some I like, some I don't."
- Moeller again

"It is the fastest track in the world. It has the highest G-forces and it is really technical so I just had to make sure I've got it all right because I can be a bit of an airhead."
- Australian skeleton entrant Melissa Hoar

"I had a pretty powerful moment packing that thing in my backpack."
- US snowboard gold medallist Seth Wescott on carrying his late grandfather's World War II service flag.

View article...

CHINA AT THE OLYMPICS: Speedy Wang ready to fend off rivals

Posted: Feb 17, 3:06a ET | Updated: Feb 17, 3:06a ET

Since winning the 500m in Torino, Chinese skater has dominated the event

VANCOUVER (AFP) -- China's Wang Meng , who won the 500m to stop South Korea's sweep of Olympic women's short track gold medals in 2006, defends the title Wednesday to kick off her all-conquering bid at the Vancouver Games.

She seems ready to reign supreme, having taken the overall, 500m and 1000m titles at the 2009 World Championships a year after sweeping all world titles in the Olympic distances which also includes 1500m.

Wang also won the 1000m silver and the 1500m bronze at the 2006 Torino Olympics.

"She could win any distance at any time," said China's assistant coach Paul Marchese, an American.

"Everybody looks at her. She's the alpha not just on the team but in the world."

At last year's worlds, the 24-year-old Wang beat South Korean KIM Min-Jung into second spot with teammate Zhou Yang third to claim the back-to-back women's overall titles.

Wang looks still more formidable in the absence of South Korean Jin Sun-Yu, who collected the 1000m, 1500m and 3000m relay golds in Torino. Hampered by injury, Jin could not win a ticket to Vancouver.

Wang, the 500m world record holder, has finished top overall in the 2009-2010 World Cup series, as well as in the 500m and the 1000m. She has swept four 500m rounds.

But Marchese warned of the quirky nature of the sport which is full of crashes and disqualifications.

"Anything is possible in short track," he said.

Wang has refused to talk to reporters since her arrival in Vancouver. But she said earlier: "Our target is beat the South Korean team."

"I am very confident. I am much stronger than four years ago, physically and mentally," she added.

PARK Seung-Hi is South Korea's best in the distance, 10th overall in the World Cup. Lee Eun-Byul , Cho Ha-Ri and Park ranked fourth, fifth and sixth in the 1000m with Lee second behind China's Zhou Yang in the 1500m.

Kalyna Roberge carries Canada's hopes as she finished runner-up to Wang in the 500m World Cup.

American Katherine Reutter , second in the 1000m and third in the 1500m World Cup series, could also be considered a threat with her explosive power.

"I am the fastest in the world in the last four laps. It is the first half of the race that I need to work on. That's where I usually lose," said the 21-year-old in her first Olympics.

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  • Day 2 encore
    Day 2 encore

    Take a look at the short track events from Day 2 of the Olympics, including the men's 1500m and women's 500m and 3000m relay

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View AFP Article on the Los Angeles Times

OLYMPICS: Figure Skating: Rising star Ten carrying Kazakh hope


Vancouver (AFP) - Kazakh teenager Denis Ten will be carrying the hopes of his country when, thanks to him, they make their Olympic figure skating debut in Vancouver.

The 16-year-old's eighth-place finish at last year's worlds enabled his country to secure two spots in the men's competition in Vancouver where he will compete with teammate Abzal Rakimgaliev.

"I'm very pleased that thanks to my good performance last year, I'm able to compete with Abzal," said Ten, a descendant of famous Korean General Min Keung Ho, whose family are part of the Korean minority in Kazakhstan.

"It is a nice feeling to have made history already, but I don't want to leave it at that."

The teenager, the youngest male figure skater at the Games, has been enjoying his Olympic experience since arriving on Friday.

"It is different. Before, I felt more that I was skating for myself, but now I'm skating for my country", Ten said.

"There is more pressure and now I understand how hard it must be for (Canada's) Patrick Chan. Everybody is rooting for him."

Ten was able to test his feet on the ice at the Pacific Coliseum ahead of Tuesday's men's short programme, and he nailed solid triple axels to earn the applause of the crowd in practice.

"It's great for me to practise on the same ice with such accomplished skaters as Stephane Lambiel and Patrick Chan," he said. "I need to focus on my own stuff, but at the same time it is hard not to watch them."

Ten moved to Moscow when he was ten years old to train with Elena Buianova, the 1983 world bronze medallist.

Buianova has high hopes for her protege, the first skater from Kazakhstan to medal at an ISU competition with his gold at 2008 Junior Grand Prix.

"Denis is just very talented," she said.

"In real life, he is actually rather quiet. Very quiet, very shy, but he transforms on the ice and becomes so emotional. He jumps easily, like a cat. He has phenomenal jumping ability."

View article...

RUSSIA AT THE OLYMPICS: Ovechkin scores 2 as Russia dominates Latvia

Posted: Feb 17, 2:21a ET | Updated: Feb 17, 3:44a ET 

By John Dellapina - NHL.com columnist

VANCOUVER -- The day before, Sergei Fedorov said that even though he was a hockey generation older than many of the most prominent players on his team, he was not a coach and didn't intend to make speeches.

Instead, the 40-year-old, three-time Stanley Cup-winner planned to just go out and have a little fun with the kids - and provide his leadership by proving he still could keep up.

That's just what Fedorov did Tuesday night at Canada Hockey Place. Before Alexander Ovechkin , Evgeni Malkin and Ilya Kovalchuk buried Latvia under an avalanche of goals, it was Fedorov who set up the two early tallies that ensured that the Russians would have their wits about them as they began their quest for 2010 Olympic gold with an 8-2 romp.

"We tried to play quick hockey - on net," Fedorov said. "I mean, the first game everybody is always a little bit nervous. That's natural. But we found a way."

The Russians found a way by following Fedorov's lead. And then by unleashing the fury of their generation's superstars.

"Yeah, you know, it's always nice when you get some good moments and a good start," Ovechkin told NHL.com after scoring the two goals that ripped the heart out of the game Latvians. "We were ready for it. But it's just a start and we have to continue how we play."

Especially in the third period, when the Russians saw Latvian blood in the water, circled like the goal-seeking sharks they are and scored four times to break it open.

"Yes," Ovechkin said, "we played better in the third period than in the first two."

Fedorov sensed that that would be the case - especially with a 9 p.m. PT start time contributing late-night haze to whatever opening night jitters the Russians were feeling.

"I think it was important to score right away," Fedorov said. "I figured out it might be a little easier to play with the lead. I felt out of place a little bit - it's a late game, 9 o'clock. We were a little foggy. So I felt it was important to get into the game right away."

Fedorov used his veteran savvy and still-pumping legs to set up goals in the first 7:36 by fellow KHLers Danis Zaripov and Alexander Radulov.

On the first - on his line's first shift of the tournament just 2:38 into the game -- Fedorov held onto the puck with 22 years worth of professional poise until Latvian defenseman Guntis Galvins came to him, leaving Zaripov open to convert his feathery saucer pass across the goalmouth. On the 2-0 goal, Fedorov slashed through the Latvian defense to take a pass from Dmitry Kalinin and then whip a shot on goal that produced a juicy rebound for Radulov to convert. No more Russian nerves.

"It's the first game and guys were a little bit nervous," said Russian center Pavel Datsyuk, who once learned at Fedorov's knee with the Detroit Red Wings. "Once we started getting some goals, we started feeling a lot better."

And on the two occasions when Latvia began to feel good about itself - perhaps dreaming of repeating its opening-game performance of four years before when it stunningly tied Team USA, 3-3 - Ovechkin struck.

The first time, with 35 seconds left in a first period that had settled down, Ovechkin got open between the circles. He then one-timed a puck past overmatched Latvian goaltender Edgars Masalskis after fellow Washington Capital Alexander Semin had pick-pocketed Galvins and fed a perfect pass.

Then, after a goal by Herberts Vasiljevs 33 seconds into broke the spell of Russian goaltender Evgeni Nabokov and pulled Latvia within 4-1, Ovechkin struck again. Only 26 seconds later, Ovechkin wheeled down the left side and whipped a rising wrist shot over Masalskis to pretty much end any suspense about the outcome and touch off a three-goals-in-2:05 Russian blitz.

"Oh yeah, you know, it's mentally important," Ovechkin said of scoring so soon after Latvia had. "After that goal, we just played better and better."

The Russians probably will have to play better when they step up a level in competition in facing Slovakia Thursday and the Czech Republic Sunday. But their opener was a good start - thanks to the old man who knew just how to set the tone and the young stud whose sense of timing couldn't have been better.

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View Article in the Los Angeles Times

OLYMPICS: It's Germany in control at women's luge

WHISTLER, British Columbia (AP) - They came slowly down the start ramp that nobody wanted to use, the world's best women's luge racers wobbling like rookies through the initial curve.

Posted: Feb 15, 11:15p ET | Updated: Feb 16, 1:04a ET

WHISTLER, British Columbia (AP) - They came slowly down the start ramp that nobody wanted to use, the world's best women's luge racers wobbling like rookies through the initial curve.  Germany's Tatjana Huefner handled it all like a champ.

Putting Germany halfway to a sweep of Olympic singles luge gold, Huefner is the midpoint women's leader at the tragedy-stricken Vancouver Games, her two-run time of 1 minute, 23.241 seconds providing a cushion of a mere 0.050 seconds ahead of Austria's Nina Reithmayer .

Another German, Natalie Geisenberger (1:23.400) is third.

"I need to concentrate on me," said Huefner, this season's overall World Cup champion who's primed to become German's ninth women's gold medalist in 13 Olympic luge competitions. "Hopefully, I can have two good runs. We'll see if it's gold."

As for American hope Erin Hamlin , her medal hopes all but vanished into frosty Canadian night air.

Hamlin needs two great - really great - runs just to have a medal shot.

And even that probably won't be anywhere close to good enough.

The reigning world champion from Remsen, N.Y. bobbed up and down the track at the start of her second run, costing her an eternity of time in a sport typically decided by hundredths of seconds. As such, she's 15th through two runs, not even in the top half of the field, 0.813 seconds off the lead and more than a half-second away from third.

Still, she's conceding nothing.

"It's still a race," Hamlin said.

True. It's just not the race anyone expected.

Following the high-speed death of a men's slider in training last week, Olympic women's lugers are starting from the junior ramp, a move that made their course 800 feet shorter than planned.

They're safer for the switch, because there's simply less time for them to pick up speed. And just about every woman in the field is frustrated by moving farther down the track, since the junior ramp is a very short distance away from Curve 6, which is the first one the women need to navigate.

"Everyone tries to make the best of it," Geisenberger said.

And no one, not even the homestanding Canadians, felt like they had enough time to master that new start position.

"I worked for two years at what was the women's start," said Canada's Meaghan Simister . "And now to go into what basically is an ice wall, it's tough."

Not for the Germans.

Nothing about luge ever seems tough for them.

Felix Loch and David Moeller took gold and silver when the men's title was decided Sunday. And their countrywomen - the sport's absolute queens - surely have to be thinking about what would be a third straight Olympic women's luge podium sweep for their homeland.

After Huefner, Reithmayer, Geisenberger and Russian surprise Tatiana Ivanova, the No. 3 German in the field, Anke Wischnewski , is fifth entering Tuesday.

Hamlin's beaten them all before.

But facing this sort of deficit, well, suffice to say she's on a really slippery slope now.

"Could have been better," said Hamlin, who snapped Germany's 99-race winning streak by taking the world title in 2009 on her home track in Lake Placid, N.Y. "We're halfway done and we'll see what happens."

Julia Clukey of Augusta, Maine is 16th and Megan Sweeney of Suffield, Conn. is 27th through two runs. Japan's Aya Yasuda was disqualified after the first run because she carried too much weight on her sled, and Romania's Mihaela Chiras crashed out of the competition in her second run. She walked away, appearing unhurt.

The Americans were hurting too, for different reasons.

"I'm angry, and I want to use words," Sweeney said. "But I want to control myself."

How dicey is that start? Put it this way: Hamlin, who finished the year fourth in the World Cup standings and is a medal threat on just about any track in the world, was 16th in the final training run from the switched start position, all because she didn't hit that first curve precisely along the proper line.

Not the best way to go into the Olympics.

And some sliders said the lower start means anything can happen - and anyone can still be in the medal hunt.

"I wouldn't be surprised if a Latvian got on the podium or a Ukrainian got on the podium or a Russian got on the podium," Simister said, talking about three nations that typically aren't exactly gold contenders in women's luge. "It's a whole new ball game. It's anybody's game now because the regular start is obsolete. Now it's up to that one corner and who can do it without making a hockey stop."

The medal formula now is simple. Good start, you'll have a chance. Bad start, you're off the podium - a lesson Hamlin learned the hard way, after her time to the first checkpoint in Run 2 was about four-tenths of a second slower than her first try, a colossal amount of time in luge.

"Better start ... very important here," Huefner said.

And it's important to note, while many grumbled about the lower start, no one questioned the logic behind the move.

"Safety first," Reithmayer said. "We can't change it."

View AP Article on NBC Olympics

FUKUOKA, JAPAN: Fukuoka Asian Art Museum

FROMMER’S

Walk through Kushida Shrine and turn right into the Kawabata-dori covered shopping arcade. Linking Canal City Hakata and Hakata Riverain, it was once the city's main shopping street but has been overtaken by the two complexes it connects. Halfway down is another float on view year-round that's used in the Yamakasa Festival. At the end of the arcade, across the street, is Riverain, where up on the seventh and eighth floors is the Fukuoka Asian Art Museum, 3-1 Shimo-Kawabatamachi (tel. 092/263-1100; http://faam.city.fukuoka.jp; Thurs-Tues 10am-8pm), the only museum I've seen in Japan devoted to contemporary and modern art from around Asia. From folk pop art to political art, the permanent exhibition presents the cutting edge of art from the Philippines, Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore, Thailand, China, Mongolia, Korea, India, and other Asian countries, with changing displays culled from the museum's own collection. It's very much worth the hour you'll spend here and the ¥200 ($1.65/85p) admission for adults, ¥150 ($1.25/65p) for college and high-school students, and ¥100 (85¢/45p) for junior-high students and younger (special exhibits cost more). The closest subway station is Nakasu-Kawabata Station (exit 6) in front of Riverain; or take the ¥100 Bus to Kawabata-machi (stop no. 12).

LONELY PLANET:

This modern, expansive, and well-lit museum boasts some of the finest contemporary Asian art in Japan, as well as rotating exhibits on the 7th floor. Cutting-edge shows by artists in residence are staged in the free gallery (8th floor). The atrium coffee shop has skyline views, and you get a free postcard if you buy anything at the museum store.

RUSSIA AT THE OLYMPICS: Olympic short program shows there's still one to beat

Posted: Feb 17, 1:14a ET | Updated: Feb 17, 1:53a ET

By Alan Abrahamson

Plushenko returns: the boss is back

Defending champion Plushenko brilliant, but Lysacek keeps pace

VANCOUVER -- When Sochi was bidding for the 2014 Winter Games, the Russian authorities pulled out all the big guns. There, for instance, on the stage during Sochi's final presentation to the International Olympic Committee in 2007, was Vladimir Putin, then the Russian president, now its prime minister.

And there, too, was Yevgeny Plushenko , the 2006 Olympic men's figure skating champion. "Hello, Yevgeny!" purred Russian speedskating champion Svetlana Zhurova.

Hello, Yevgeny, indeed.

Meet the new boss in men's figure skating, ladies and gentlemen. It would appear he may well be the same as the old boss.

In a performance Tuesday night here at the Pacific Coliseum that within its first minute put him in position to earn a gold medal at the 2010 Vancouver Games, Plushenko -- who took three years off after Torino -- delivered an emphatic statement:

Beat me -- if you can.

To be sure, Plushenko is not a dead-bang lock for gold.

American Evan Lysacek , the 2009 world champion, landed all his jumps -- no quad, all triples -- and executed his entire program with supreme discipline. As soon as he was done, he sank to the ice and held his face in his hands, shaking with joy.

In the kiss-and-cry, Lysacek appeared overcome with emotion -- explaining that he felt the relief of having to perform well as world champ as well as wanting to make up for his disastrous short program in Torino in 2006.

Lysacek received 90.3 points. That's only 55-hundredths behind Plushenko. "I've never been so prepared for anything in my life," Lysacek said.

Japan's Daisuke Takahashi sits third, at 90.25, after a fluid, energetic performance.

Another American, Johnny Weir , entertaining as ever, outfitted in a gauzy black catsuit accented with pink corset-style straps and flamingo-colored shoulder tassles, skated solidly. Sixth, he'll skate in Thursday's final group.

Others in a field that most had said might be among the most potent of all time faltered.

Switzerland's Stephane Lambiel , a two-time world champion and the silver medalist in Torino, is down in fifth, more than six points behind.

Canada's Patrick Chan , the world 2009 silver medalist, overpowered his first jump, a triple axel, and then wobbled during his footwork piece. He's looking up from seventh.

The third American, Jeremy Abbott , the 2010 U.S. national champion, had a night to forget. A triple axel in his program turned to a single. A triple Lutz turned into a double. He's 15th.

For his part, Plushenko created a stir from the moment he appeared on the ice, still rocking that blond mullet, and might he be the only superstar athlete in the world who can pull it off with genuine style?

Particularly when the mullet tops form-fitting black pants, a black shirt with silver spangles and black gloves?

Plushenko opened his short program with a quad toe-triple toe combo. It takes not only extraordinary physical skill but resolute mental toughness to open up with that combination.

Plushenko landed both.

Then came a triple axel.

Then a triple lutz.

All clean.

Within that first minute Plushenko had completed all his jumps. The rest was the footwork stuff the scoring system -- that is, the one implemented after the judging scandal at the Salt Lake Games -- demands.

When he was done skating, someone threw an oversized plush heart onto the ice. Plushenko, sauntering around the rink as if he owned the place, made a motion as if he was thrusting a sword back into its holster.

Hello, Yevgeny, and you are a very, very bad man -- meaning that of, course, in a very good way. Who else would be so nonchalant about executing that quad -triple combo?

"Well, of course," he said, "it's the main thing for the men today to do quadruples ... and I did," adding in a matter-of-fact tone as if this were the case for everyone, "I landed it clean."

France's Brian Joubert went after the same quad-triple combo as Plushenko. Joubert, the 2007 world champ, didn't even do the second jump. And then, later, he fell. He's 18th.

Plushenko's score, 90.85, didn't quite match the best-ever short program number, 91.3, set by -- who else? -- Plushenko at the European champinships in January.

Some observers thought Plushenko's footwork was rather on the pedestrian side. He professed satisfaction. "I am happy with the scores," he said.

It's not that Plushenko can't lose. He could. But in Thursday night's free skate, it may well be the case that Plushenko loses if, and only if, he makes mistakes. That's an enviable position.

Further, a performance like the one Plushenko delivered Tuesday begs the obvious -- what could he possibly have in store Thursday, and how does he plan to trump what he did Tuesday?

Throw a second quad? "We'll see ... watch [Thursday]," he said.

Set a personal best? "We'll see. I am not thinking about medals. I am not thinking about points. I need to skate like I can skate."

Make history? "I think I am in history already," he said.

"He's a true champion," Weir said. "He's a great skater. He will be remembered for years and years and years," adding a moment later, "He just makes us all step our game up a bit."

One more thing, Yevgeny. Do you think the other skaters are afraid of you? Hello? "Ask them," he said.

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RUSSIA AT THE OLYMPICS: Ice Hockey: Ovie's the big man as Russians unite


Vancouver (AFP) - Alex Ovechkin showed off his spectacular hockey skills on Monday in a fast-paced first practice for the Russian Olympic team, then left teammates to explain his importance to their quest for gold.

Racing past reporters as if he were outskating a defender, the flamboyant 24-year-old playmaker simply said, "Sorry guys. Doping control," after the brisk workout uniting top players from Russian and North American leagues.

"He's the best player in the world. He's very powerful," said veteran Sergei Fedorov, a former NHL teammate of Ovechkin with the Washington Capitals.

"He's atomic - a lot of talent with a crazy shot. You've got to channel that and he has been able to so far. Now he can bring that to the national team."

Detroit's Pavel Datsyuk, a possible linemate of Ovechkin when the Russians open against Latvia, was amazed at the speed of the gap-toothed player whose dazzling solo efforts for goals have become NHL legends.

"I would enjoy it better if I was a little faster," Datsyuk said, adding that his best strategy was likely to give Ovechkin the puck and get out of his path to the goal.

"It's a good idea," Ovechkin said. "If you don't move you will be crushed."

On a diverse 20-man squad that features nine players from Russia's Kontinental Hockey League (KHL), Ovechkin has taken a locker-room leadership role, reserve goaltender Evgeni Nabokov said.

"He's the greatest player in the world and he's also a normal guy," Nabokov said. "He's the same in and out of the locker room. You can joke and have a good time with him."

The Russian lineup also includes Pittsburgh's Evgeni Malkin, an NHL teammate of Canada star Sidney Crosby, Ovechkin's top league rival. Malkin said he and Crosby spoke about their Olympic rivalry before the NHL's Olympic break began.

"We said 'Good luck' to each other and we will never say anything bad about each other," Malkin said.

Asked if he will be willing to slam his body into Crosby if necessary, Malkin replied, "Yes, and not (only) once. At the same time we are good friends."

Blending NHL and KHL standouts will be critical, but many KHL players have spent time in the NHL.

"NHL gives good experience. KHL gives good experience," said Fedorov, a veteran of both. "It's a solid group."

Coaching has been an issue for past Russian teams, old-school federation bosses meeting a new generation of players. But Olympic coach Vyacheslav Bykov, a former player, has been just the answer.

"So far he is. He understands our young players," Fedorov said. "What's good is he was a player. He's got that experience."

Fedorov, 40, would not call this team the most talented he has played upon, deferring to the Soviet Union squads that dominated until the nation's breakup.

"I played in the Soviet era. We had talented teams then too," Fedorov said. "In this age, we have really good players. We have an exciting team. We're having fun."

Fedorov hopes to turn back the clock and return Russian talent to the top of the Olympic podium.

"I'd like my career to go out with a bang," he said. "I'd like to just touch that style of play I once had. If I can touch that level it would be great."

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JAPAN AT THE OLYMPICS: Japan wins its first pair of Olympic medals in Vancouver in men's speed skating 500m

Keiichiro Nagashima (silver), Tae-Bum Mo (gold), and Joji Kato (bronze). Men's 500m speed skating.

Keiichiro Nagashima (silver), Tae-Bum Mo (gold), and Joji Kato (bronze). Men's 500m speed skating.  (AP Photo/Kevin Frayer)

February 16, 12:53 AM

By Joshua Williams

Japan won its first medals in the 2010 Vancouver Olympics – a silver and bronze – in the men’s 500m speed skating race on February 15th.


Japan’s Keiichiro Nagashima took Silver with a two race combined time of 69.98 seconds, just +.16 seconds slower than gold medal winner Tae-Bum Mo of South Korea.


Joji Kato took the bronze with a combined time of 70.01, +.19 seconds behind the gold.


Two other Japanese athletes, Yuya Oikawa and Akio Ohta, finished 13th with a time of 70.42 and 17th with a time of 70.66, respectively.


After learning of their victories, both athletes skated around the race rink waving the Japanese flag in celebration. Supporters back in the two athletes’ hometowns and work places cheered, shouted, and banged noise-makers together. NHK newscasters in Japan showed messages sent in via the internet and fax by fans shortly the news broke, “Congratulations, everyone’s so happy,” one person wrote.


Nagashima commented to TV reporters, “Of course I wanted the gold, but I’m extremely happy to have taken a medal.”

Both Nagashima and Kato belong to a speed skating team sponsored by Nidec Sankyo Corporation. Nidec Sankyo has four speed skaters total participating in this year’s games.

View Article in The Examiner

TIANJIN, CHINA: Tianjin FAW Xiali Automobile Co

File:Xiali N3.jpg

CHINA'S northern economical passenger car maker

Tianjin Xiali is an automobile manufacturer in China. There are two different entities under Tianjin Xiali. One is a fully subsidiary division of First Automobile Works known as Tianjin Xiali FAW Automobile Co. Ltd. While a joint venture between Toyota and First Automobile Works in 2000 known as Tianjin FAW Toyota Motor Co. Ltd.

Before the Toyota joint venture, Tianjin Xiali produced the TJ7100 hatchback and TJ7101U sedan. These cars, based on the 1987 Daihatsu Charade, were very popular in China as taxicabs until they were gradually replaced by larger Volkswagen and Hyundai cars. Production at the Tianjin Xiali plant has now shifted to more modern Toyota vehicles, for example the Xiali 2000 is based on the Toyota Platz/Vitz. Toyota also builds and sells vehicles in China under its own brand.

Since 1984, a subsidiary of First Automobile Works had manufactured the Daihatsu car in China rebranded as Huali. Currently Huali offers the first generation Daihatsu Terios and first generation Daihatsu Move.

Tianjin Xiali produces the Miles ZX40, an electric version of the Daihatsu Move which became the first Chinese-built vehicle sold in the United States when it was offered in mid-2006 by Miles Automotive Group.

Source:  Wikipedia

S. KOREA AT THE OLYMPICS: Will Mo challenge Davis in 1000?

Posted: Feb 17, 12:19a ET | Updated: Feb 17, 12:33a ET

South Korean won 500m on Day 4; Davis holds WR in 1000m

RICHMOND (AP) -- Suddenly, the race is on.

All those who considered Shani Davis a lock to win the 1000m at the Richmond Olympic Oval might want to hedge their bets just a bit. There's an up-and-comer from South Korea who's already claimed gold at the Vancouver Games, and he's looking forward to giving Davis a serious challenge in his best event Wednesday.

Watch South Korean Mo Tae-Bum claim the men's 500m gold medal.

Mo Tae-Bum was a surprising winner in the 500m, setting himself up quite nicely for a race that's twice as long, the one in which Davis is the world-record holder and defending Olympic champion.

"I'm even more confident going into my other events," Mo said, who gave himself quite a present Monday for his 21st birthday.

Davis, on the other hand, might be having a few doubts after his first two events of these Olympics. He finished 12th in the 5000m -- nearly 14 seconds behind winner Sven Kramer -- and didn't even bother finishing the 500 after placing 18th in the first of two heats.

Deciding it was time to start focusing on the 1000m, Davis called in a day, leaving the spotlight to the 21-year-old South Korean who likes fast cars, fast motorcycles -- and going fast himself.

"The 500 meters was not my strongest," Mo said through a translator. "However, I am looking forward to the 1,000 and will try to do my best."

Indeed, coming into the Olympics, Mo was only ranked 14th in the 500m, having failed to crack the podium in any event this season. But he's second to Davis in the 1000m standings, and there's already been a bit of gamesmanship between the two during their previous encounters.

"I asked Shani before about the corner techniques and he said, 'Oh, we are rivals, we are competitors, so I won't be able to talk about that,'" Mo said.

Don't count out Davis by any means based on his first two events.

He's already the first African-American to win an individual gold medal at the Winter Games, capturing the 1000m title four years ago in Torino, and his entire focus leading up to Vancouver has been on his two best events. (He won silver in the 1500m in 2006.)

"Everything's OK, everything's fine," Davis said early in the week. "I'm really looking forward to the challenges that lie ahead of me."

He decided there was no need to take part in the second heat of the 500m. A medal was out of reach, and he would only risk hurting himself in the all-out sprint.

"I think above all he wants to be fresh for the 1,000, and he wants to get ready for the 1,500 as well," said Nathaniel Mills, a former Olympic speed skater who is serving as Davis' spokesman. "The 500 has one of the greatest risks of injury, and he just wanted to play it safe since he got everything he wanted to get out of this race."

At least one skater was willing to make a prediction on Wednesday's showdown.

"I think Shani will win," said fellow American Tucker Fredricks .

If nothing else, Davis seems more at ease than he did at his two previous Olympics. He dealt with allegations that a fixed race got him on the 2002 short track team as an alternate, and a high-profile feud with teammate Chad Hedrick overshadowed their brilliant performances on the long track in Italy.

"I'm telling myself to keep on enjoying, enjoying, enjoy the Olympics. I had two Olympics beforehand that weren't quite good for me. This time, it's a whole different story. I'm having a lot of fun," Davis said. "I'm really excited to go out there and showcase what I can do. I'm just itching to do it. I just can't wait to go out there and do it."

The U.S. speed skaters could sure use a boost after a slow start at the oval.

It's been a different story for the South Koreans.

A country known more for its prowess on the short track already has won a pair of medals at the big oval. Lee Seung-hoon claimed an unexpected silver in the men's 5000m on Saturday. Mo did even better, winning his country's first Winter Olympics gold in a sport other than short track.

"I absolutely did not expect it," he said. "I dreamt it, imagined it, but I didn't expect it at all."

His bio on the Olympic information system was rather barren. Heck, there wasn't even a picture.

So, tell us a little about yourself.

"I'm am a person who likes dangerous stuff," Mo said. "I like scary things and dares."

How about this one: Can you knock off Davis in his signature event?

Tune in Wednesday.

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OLYMPICS: It's Germany in control at women's luge

WHISTLER, British Columbia (AP) - They came slowly down the start ramp that nobody wanted to use, the world's best women's luge racers wobbling like rookies through the initial curve.

Posted: Feb 15, 11:15p ET | Updated: Feb 16, 1:04a ET

WHISTLER, British Columbia (AP) - They came slowly down the start ramp that nobody wanted to use, the world's best women's luge racers wobbling like rookies through the initial curve.  Germany's Tatjana Huefner handled it all like a champ.

Putting Germany halfway to a sweep of Olympic singles luge gold, Huefner is the midpoint women's leader at the tragedy-stricken Vancouver Games, her two-run time of 1 minute, 23.241 seconds providing a cushion of a mere 0.050 seconds ahead of Austria's Nina Reithmayer .

Another German, Natalie Geisenberger (1:23.400) is third.

"I need to concentrate on me," said Huefner, this season's overall World Cup champion who's primed to become German's ninth women's gold medalist in 13 Olympic luge competitions. "Hopefully, I can have two good runs. We'll see if it's gold."

As for American hope Erin Hamlin , her medal hopes all but vanished into frosty Canadian night air.

Hamlin needs two great - really great - runs just to have a medal shot.

And even that probably won't be anywhere close to good enough.

The reigning world champion from Remsen, N.Y. bobbed up and down the track at the start of her second run, costing her an eternity of time in a sport typically decided by hundredths of seconds. As such, she's 15th through two runs, not even in the top half of the field, 0.813 seconds off the lead and more than a half-second away from third.

Still, she's conceding nothing.

"It's still a race," Hamlin said.

True. It's just not the race anyone expected.

Following the high-speed death of a men's slider in training last week, Olympic women's lugers are starting from the junior ramp, a move that made their course 800 feet shorter than planned.

They're safer for the switch, because there's simply less time for them to pick up speed. And just about every woman in the field is frustrated by moving farther down the track, since the junior ramp is a very short distance away from Curve 6, which is the first one the women need to navigate.

"Everyone tries to make the best of it," Geisenberger said.

And no one, not even the homestanding Canadians, felt like they had enough time to master that new start position.

"I worked for two years at what was the women's start," said Canada's Meaghan Simister . "And now to go into what basically is an ice wall, it's tough."

Not for the Germans.

Nothing about luge ever seems tough for them.

Felix Loch and David Moeller took gold and silver when the men's title was decided Sunday. And their countrywomen - the sport's absolute queens - surely have to be thinking about what would be a third straight Olympic women's luge podium sweep for their homeland.

After Huefner, Reithmayer, Geisenberger and Russian surprise Tatiana Ivanova, the No. 3 German in the field, Anke Wischnewski , is fifth entering Tuesday.

Hamlin's beaten them all before.

But facing this sort of deficit, well, suffice to say she's on a really slippery slope now.

"Could have been better," said Hamlin, who snapped Germany's 99-race winning streak by taking the world title in 2009 on her home track in Lake Placid, N.Y. "We're halfway done and we'll see what happens."

Julia Clukey of Augusta, Maine is 16th and Megan Sweeney of Suffield, Conn. is 27th through two runs. Japan's Aya Yasuda was disqualified after the first run because she carried too much weight on her sled, and Romania's Mihaela Chiras crashed out of the competition in her second run. She walked away, appearing unhurt.

The Americans were hurting too, for different reasons.

"I'm angry, and I want to use words," Sweeney said. "But I want to control myself."

How dicey is that start? Put it this way: Hamlin, who finished the year fourth in the World Cup standings and is a medal threat on just about any track in the world, was 16th in the final training run from the switched start position, all because she didn't hit that first curve precisely along the proper line.

Not the best way to go into the Olympics.

And some sliders said the lower start means anything can happen - and anyone can still be in the medal hunt.

"I wouldn't be surprised if a Latvian got on the podium or a Ukrainian got on the podium or a Russian got on the podium," Simister said, talking about three nations that typically aren't exactly gold contenders in women's luge. "It's a whole new ball game. It's anybody's game now because the regular start is obsolete. Now it's up to that one corner and who can do it without making a hockey stop."

The medal formula now is simple. Good start, you'll have a chance. Bad start, you're off the podium - a lesson Hamlin learned the hard way, after her time to the first checkpoint in Run 2 was about four-tenths of a second slower than her first try, a colossal amount of time in luge.

"Better start ... very important here," Huefner said.

And it's important to note, while many grumbled about the lower start, no one questioned the logic behind the move.

"Safety first," Reithmayer said. "We can't change it."

View AP Article on NBC Olympics

RUSSIA AT THE OLYMPICS: Returning hero: Plushenko wins short program

American Evan Lysacek is second after the short program.

American Evan Lysacek is second after the short program.

Posted: Feb 16, 11:57p ET | Updated: Feb 17, 1:12a ET

Game on, guys.

Reigning Olympic champion Yevgeny Plushenko posted a monster 90.85 points early in the men's short program Tuesday night, daring the competition to beat it. World champion Evan Lysacek and Japan's Daisuke Takahashi came pretty darn close, setting up the most riveting men's final since the "Battle of the Brians" in 1988 -- the last time the Olympics were in Canada.

Lysacek is just .55 points behind Plushenko with Takahashi another .05 back going into Thursday night's free skate. Those margins are so small, the three may as well be tied.

"Easy? That's competition and it is never going to be easy," Plushenko said. "If somebody says today, `I am not nervous' or `I skate easy,' or `I am not tired,' I don't believe him."

This men's competition has been widely anticipated, its field stocked with enough talent to carry two Olympics -- four world champions, including Plushenko, who came out of retirement to try to become the first man to win back-to-back gold medals since Dick Button in 1952.

Plushenko set the tone with a majestic program almost worthy of beating his world record from last month's European championships. While Turin runner-up Stephane Lambiel , former world champ Brian Joubert and Canada's great hope Patrick Chan weren't up to the challenge, Lysacek and Takahashi made it clear they're not about to hand over that second gold to Plushenko.

Lysacek was pumping his fists before he even began his final spin. When his music finished, he threw back his head and then dropped to his knees, sliding across the ice as he buried his head in his hands. He got up pumping his fists, looking a bit dazed by what he had done as he saluted the crowd.

"That's kind of out of character for me. I couldn't help it," Lysacek said. "But I had a really good time."

Lambiel is fifth, followed by three-time U.S. champion Johnny Weir and Chan. U.S. champion Jeremy Abbott had another big collapse and is 15th. Joubert's fall was even more shocking and he's 18th.

"I actually had fun tonight, and that's something I haven't been able to say for a long time," said Weir, who quit for a few weeks last spring after bombing so badly at the U.S. championships he failed to make the world team. "I felt like I really showed my heart."

Plushenko capped one of the most dominant stretches in the sport with the gold medal at the Torino Olympics. With bum knees and nothing more to win, the Russian retired. But his new wife urged him to return and, at 27, he might just be better than ever.

As he took the ice, longtime coach Alexei Mishin pumped his fist, as if to tell his star pupil, "Knock 'em dead!"

Not that Plushenko needed any reminders.

Plushenko's jumps were impressive, as always. His quadruple toe loop-triple toe combination was performed with more ease than some skaters can manage on a single jump. His triple axel was executed with perfect control, so much so he showed off a little, changing his edge back and forth to produce a sassy swerve -- right in time to the music, no less.

While his spins still aren't in the same category as Lambiel's, they were much improved from four years ago. His combination spin was perfectly centered and done so fast he's lucky the gold charms on his necklace didn't go flying into the crowd.

But the best part of his program is still his showmanship. Nobody loves the limelight quite like Plushenko, and he reveled in it Tuesday night, looking deep into every camera he passed. His seductive body language and bedroom eyes matched his passionate "Concierto de Aranjuez" perfectly, and he even flirted with the judges a bit.

Those transition marks that caused such a firestorm last week? They were appropriately lower than the rest of his component marks. Plushenko does a bunch of big tricks in a row early in his program, and he needs to generate a lot of speed to pull them off. There's no room for intricate steps, and his scores reflected that.

"I don't care today about transitions and the scoring system. I did a clean program and that's important to me," Plushenko said. "This is my third Olympic Games and I skated not bad. I'll take any result in the Olympic Games."

When Plushenko finished, he drew an imaginary sword, kissed it and then put it back in its sheath. In case the crowd -- and maybe his competitors, too -- didn't get the message, he did it two more times before leaving the ice.

But this fight isn't over yet -- not by a long shot.

As the reigning world champion, Lysacek is the United States' best hope for a gold medal since Brian Boitano won that famous battle at the Calgary Games. That's a lot of pressure to put on his slim shoulders, but Lysacek responded superbly. His "Firebird" program was powerful and spellbinding, a perfect mix of athleticism and artistry.

Every single one of his jumps was done with silky smoothness, his landings so secure the tracings could have been made by master etcher. His intensity was almost intimidating, and his interpretation would put any virtuoso to shame. His leg kicks, dramatic arm movements -- everything was done on a note, making his music as much a part of his program as any technical skill.

"I had some pressure coming in as a reigning world champion and I felt it. I also had a monkey on my back thinking of my short program four years ago in Torino," said Lysacek, who was 10th in the short in 2006 after botching two jumps. "To be able to go out and silence all of that really felt good."

Takahashi's program was completely different than Plushenko's and Lysacek's, but no less compelling. It was high-octane from the second he stepped on the ice, so jam-packed there was barely time to breathe, let alone rest. His footwork and spins were innovative, proving there IS room for creativity in the current judging system.

Had he included a quad in the program -- he's more than capable of doing them, and likely will have one in the free skate -- he could have been ahead of Plushenko and Lysacek. His component mark -- the old artistic score -- was more than a point and a half better than Plushenko's.

Lambiel, runner-up to Plushenko in Turin, is in fifth after only doing a double axel and botching his quad. But even with this tough field, don't count the two-time world champion out of the medals hunt. He won the silver at the European championships after being fifth in the short program.

"Yes, a gold medal is possible. Nothing is impossible," Lambiel said. "I know my skating and I know myself."

Just 19, Chan is Canada's latest hope to -- finally -- win a gold medal in men's figure skating. But he cost himself big, stepping out of the landing of his triple axel, slipping during one section of footwork -- though he covered it up nicely -- and then taking a deduction for finishing after his music.

"This is the Olympics, you can't afford any mistakes and that's a perfect example," Chan said.

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  • Vancouver: Men's Short
    Vancouver: Men's Short

    The men's event gets underway in Vancouver with the short program. Yevgeny Plushenko leads after the short program but American Evan Lysacek and Japan's Daisuke Takahashi are hot on his heels in second and third.

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SHANGHAI, CHINA: Shanghai Municipal History Museum

 

  • Address:  Lujiazui Lu 2, Shanghai
  • Location:  Oriental Pearl TV Tower basement, Pudong
  • Phone:  021/5879-3003
  • Price:  Admission ¥35 ($5/£2.50)

NEW YORK TIMES:

You can judge how much or little the neighborhood might have changed over the ages at this museum in Pudong’s Oriental Pearl TV Tower. Dioramas of a 19th-century cotton-making shop, a pharmacy and other establishments have life-size wax models, and videos show Shanghai’s former racetrack and a Chinese neighborhood in the 1930s. Editorializing is light — aside from the hallway entitled “The Metropolis Infested With Foreign Adventurers,” a reference to almost 100 years of British, American and French control.

FROMMER’S

This excellent museum in the basement of the Oriental Pearl TV Tower in Pudong tells the history of Shanghai with an emphasis on the colonial period between 1860 and 1949. Fascinating exhibits include dioramas of the Huangpu River, the Bund, Nanjing Lu, and foreign concessions, evoking the colorful street life and lost trades of the 19th and early 20th centuries; dozens of models of Shanghai's classic avenues and famous buildings; and a vehicle collection with trolley cars (the city line opened in 1908), 1920s sedans, and a U.S. jeep (popular after World War II) among others. Other intriguing bits include a gorgeously ornate wedding palanquin, boulders marking the concessions' boundaries, and visiting chits used in brothels. The museum takes about an hour to tour. Tickets are purchased at the Oriental Pearl TV Tower gate. Audio headsets (¥30/$4.30/£2.15) can enhance your visit but are not crucial, as displays are well annotated in English and Chinese.

OLYMPICS: Five Takeaways from Day 4

Posted: Feb 16, 1:32a ET | Updated: Feb 16, 1:42a ET

By Jay Weiner

VANCOUVER -- Bode Miller was himself, skiing with a controlled abandon, winning, then ending the day with a memorable quote. Still it's good to have him back. This and other takeaways from Day 4 of the Games.

1. Comebacks and bodacious quotes are cool

Bode Miller talks about the emotions of winning the bronze medal in the men's downhill on Feb. 15, and analyzes his run.

In 2006, Bode Miller was the centerpiece of Torino buzz. He turned in a fifth, a sixth, two DNFs and a DQ, which translated into a major floperino in Italy. Away from the glare and minus the hype in Whistler, Miller whisked to U.S. ski history Monday, finishing third in the downhill, winning a bronze. To remind us he's still good ol' Bode, he spoke of his achievement of becoming the first U.S. male Alpine skier to win three Olympic medals.

"You don't want to go the Tonya Harding route of winning medals," Miller said. "If you wanted just strictly to win medals, you could go through a whole long start list of racers and just go to their house in the offseason -- break a leg here, pull out a shoulder socket there -- and you'd probably have a whole bunch of medals." Bode's back!

2. Near perfection is a beautiful thing

The People's Republic of China has been pretty good at revolutions the past 60 years or so, but the twirls and tosses of Shen Xue and Zhao Hongbo in pairs figure skating were darn near perfection. Oh, they made a couple of mistakes that insiders noticed, but they skated with such authority and synchronicity, giving their nation its first Olympic gold in figure skating. A lovely puncuation mark to Day 4.

3. How embarrassing

Olympic Games are about sports, but they are also about precise logistics and finger-snapping organization. Lack of snow is no one's fault except Mother Nature's. But manicuring indoor ice to perfection is a necessary art at a Winter Games. If you can't make or resurface ice, the legitimacy of the world's most prestigious athletic event melts away. An hour's delay at the men's speed skating venue was the biggest embarrassment of the early days of these Games.

4. Snowboarding rules

How can't you smile when you see those guys, weaving down the mountain, leaping and flying and getting air, making oohs, creating aahs, crashing and, then, sliding into the finish line inches apart. It's just giggly fun. That American Seth Wescott won the snowboard cross two Olympics in a row is a testament to - what? His balance? His luck?

5. Flag bearing is their victory

On the one hand, it's important to strive for increased diversity in these Games dominated by the Northern Hemisphere West and Asia. Unlike the Summer Olympics, the Winter Games don't show the full face of the world. So, we have a gaggle of athletes from non-snow nations who become "Olympic tourists." They add to the palette of the Games, and to the pathos. In today's 15-kilometer cross-country ski race, the Opening Ceremony flag bearers from Ethiopia, Nepal, Peru and Portugal were among the 95 competitors. Predictably, they finished 92nd, 93rd, 94th and 95th.

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CHINA & THE US: Speaking too softly

Feb 15th 2010 | NEW YORK | From The Economist online

AP

Relations between America and China may chill over a meeting with the Dalai Lama

IT IS bound to be a controversial meeting. The Dalai Lama, Tibet’s spiritual leader, goes to Washington, DC, this week and will sit down with President Barack Obama for the first time on Thursday February 18th. American presidents have long been happy to meet the Tibetan leader and to tolerate subsequent angry huffing from China, not least as a means of responding to public concern over human rights without doing anything serious to jeopardise trade or other ties with Beijing.

But in Mr Obama’s case, with China increasingly assertive internationally and the American president perceived in many quarters as cautious, even timid, in foreign policy, the encounter with the Dalai Lama has assumed extra significance. Mr Obama will be studied closely. Human-rights activists will listen with care to the language that the American president uses, straining to hear whether he goes further than merely suggesting more dialogue between Tibetans and the Chinese leadership. Might the president dare to deliver real criticism of repression and human-rights abuses in Tibet?

Kenneth Roth, the head of Human Rights Watch, an activist group in New York, offers a mixed assessment of Mr Obama’s foreign policy so far in its treatment of human rights. He suggests that no other recent American leader has taken such care with his rhetoric, judging how it is received by the rest of the world. But substantial steps too rarely follow Mr Obama's fine words. The president’s speeches—as in Cairo last year—have helped to set a conciliatory tone for American foreign policy, and to reassure Muslims and others that America is not determined to seek confrontation for the sake of it. Thoughtful comments to African leaders, urging the continent to develop strong and democratic institutions, have also been well received. But Mr Roth sees little evidence of a leader who is prepared then to press reluctant regimes, as for example did Ronald Reagan (and before him, Jimmy Carter) in pushing the Soviet Union to sign up to an international commitment, the Helsinki Final Act, which promoted individual rights.

Mr Obama’s foreign-policy approach of seeking engagement with opponents such as Iran, in an effort to establish dialogue and more effective diplomatic channels, has made it harder for him to beat the human-rights drum loudly. But by failing to speak up about repression, the American leader risks being perceived as weak. His muted reaction to the rigged presidential elections in Iran and the violent repression that followed (and continues) has seemed deferential. His eagerness to “reset” relations with Russia, for example by scrapping a planned anti-missile defence shield in eastern Europe, has coincided with near total silence over the murders of journalists and the clamping down on democracy in that country. It is unclear, in either case, that biting his tongue has brought any gains from the respective regimes.

Particularly troubling has been America's attitude to China and human rights. After Hillary Clinton’s first visit to China as secretary of state, in February 2009, she announced that concern over human rights should not “interfere” with getting co-operation on other issues such as climate change and the global economy. Human-rights defenders were deflated. Mr Obama then avoided meeting the Dalai Lama when he visited America in September and postponed a scheduled meeting in October, to avoid upsetting the government in China ahead of a presidential visit. During Mr Obama’s subsequent visit to China, he made few and limited comments on human rights. The Chinese government responded by becoming more assertive. It helped to scupper a deal at the Copenhagen summit on climate change in December and snubbed the American president by sending a deputy minister to a crucial meeting. China has generally proven to be increasingly unwilling to co-operate with America, for example over United Nations sanctions against Iran.

The administration, however, may now be toughening up. American rhetoric over Iran has become firmer. On Monday Mrs Clinton warned that a military dictatorship was emerging in Tehran. Relations with China, too, have become frostier, for example over a long-planned (and routine) decision by the American government to sell weapons to Taiwan. Mrs Clinton has also spoken up more forcefully about the need for internet freedom in China, in the wake of sophisticated cyber-attacks on Google that many believe had Chinese government fingerprints on them. This week’s meeting with the Dalai Lama is thus a moment to demonstrate that Mr Obama is ready both to signal his concern for human rights and that his foreign-policy is becoming more assertive.

View Article in The Economist

S. KOREA AT THE OLYMPICS: Koreans slam Ohno in wake of 1500m final

Posted: Feb 16, 9:54p ET | Updated: Feb 16, 10:31p ET

Lee says Ohno 'did not deserve to stand on the podium'

VANCOUVER (AFP) -- U.S. short track skater Apolo Ohno has been portrayed as unworthy of a medal in a worrying echo of the bitter resentment which erupted between America and South Korea at the controversial 2002 Olympics.

Ted Robinson and Andy Gabel marvel at the chaos that has followed Apolo Ohno in his skating career and recap the exciting finish to the men's 1,500m race.

Ohno finished runner-up to Lee Jung-Su after two other leading Koreans, Sung Si-Bak and Lee Ho-Suk , collided and crashed into the boards around the final turn in the men's 1500m final on Saturday at the Vancouver Olympics.

The silver was the sixth Olympic medal for Ohno who surpassed several retired competitors who have five each. He also tied long-track speed skater Bonnie Blair's all-time U.S. record of Winter Olympic medals.

But Korean media slammed Ohno's post-race comments that Korean skaters deserved to be disqualified in a fresh flare-up of the antipathy which surrounded him after he won the same event at the 2002 Salt Lake City Games.

In the U.S. city, South Korean star Kim Dong-Sung finished first in the 1500m final but was disqualified for blocking Ohno around the final turn.

"I was hoping there was going to be another disqualification like in Salt Lake City," Ohno told reporters.

"The whole race there was a lot of contact, bumping, grabbing. It was a crazy race," added 27-year-old Ohno, who also won the 500m gold in Torino four years ago. "Typically in short track, there's not supposed to have any contact, or very little contact."

But Lee Jung-Su told Korean media it was Ohno that was "swinging his arms violently" in the semifinals and final without showing it to the referees.

"He did not deserve to stand on the podium," Lee said.

Ohno was seen pushing Lee in the semifinal in a video clip which was repeatedly played on Korean television, according to a member of the South Korean delegation in Vancouver.

"Now the bad feeling toward him seems to be coming back," the official said.

Ohno was seen throwing up his arms behind Kim in the Salt Lake City final as if he was blocked, a gesture widely mocked by Korean media as "Hollywood action" at that time.

Afterwards, Kim's fans sent 16,000 angry e-mails, which crashed the International Olympic Committee's website.

Ohno skipped a 2003 World Cup event in South Korea for security fears. In 2005, he finally went there and won races before an unexpectedly friendly crowd.

Lee Jung-Su has now set his sights on a medal sweep with the 1000m heats starting on Wednesday.

The 1000m and 500m finals are to be held on Feb. 20 and 26.

"We are trying to go for all the medals again this time," Lee told reporters on Tuesday. "Because of the mistake we made during the last race we are being careful."

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