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Organizers have long said that because the city is not as well known around the world, a key to the bid would be to dispel any notion that Chicago remains a gritty enclave of belching smokestacks and stockyards. To underline that point Saturday, they showed a film to the IOC depicting Chicago as a city of green parks and gleaming high rises on the shores of sparkling Lake Michigan. The president's words about how near his own home is to the games also served as another reminder of a key theme to the bid: That Chicago's plan is to host a compact games. Organizers have made that point repeatedly. They have talked about how many venues
-- the proposed Olympic Village and cultural attractions such as the Field Museum
-- are along the city's lakefront or within blocks of it. They stressed that the Olympic Village would put 90 percent of the athletes within 15 minutes of where they will both train and compete. Obama's video appearance marked the second time he has lobbied for the games in that format. He made a similar pitch in a video shown last year in Istanbul, Turkey, to the general assembly of European Olympic Committees, the largest regional group in the Olympic movement. On Sunday, the IOC will be given a tour of the various venue sites. Chicago is the first stop for the inspection team, which will also visit Rio de Janeiro, Madrid, and Tokyo before making a final decision in October on which city is awarded the games. ___ On the Net: International Olympic Committee: Chicago 2016: http://www.chicago2016.org/
http://www.olympic.org.
[Associated
Press;
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