Ted Stevens

Olympian Remembers U.S. Senate Colleague

(ATR) The last Olympian to serve in the U.S. Senate remembers John McCain, who will be buried Sept. 2.
Olympian Remembers U.S. Senate Colleague

U.S. Senator John McCain Olympic Critic, Booster, 81

(ATR) The Senate maverick spoke out on Olympics, drove reforms for USOC. Ed Hula reports.
U.S. Senator John McCain Olympic

USOC 'Could Have Done More' With Nassar Scandal

(ATR) USOC leadership says it could have done more with the Nassar scandal, but bristled at a need for wholesale changes.
USOC 'Could Have Done More'

Exclusive USOC Training Center Tour -- Photodesk

(ATR) ATR received an exclusive tour of the USOC Ted Stevens Sport Science Center in Colorado Springs, Colorado.
Exclusive USOC Training Center Tour

U.S. Olympic Committee announces honoring campaign for Ted Stevens Sports Services Center during special reception on Capitol Hill

Infobae

IIHF Confident in NHL Players; USOC Honors Sen. Stevens; Tokyo Adds 5 Sponsors

(ATR) Rene Fasel tells Around the Rings "I will go wherever I need to go" to make Olympics deal ... USOC celebrates late legislator ... Tokyo 2020 rounds out roster of bid partners ... More inside ...
IIHF Confident in NHL Players;

Ted Stevens Memorial; China's Medal Mastermind

(ATR) USOC CEO pays tribute to late senator ... Man behind Beijing preparation retires ... Pan Pacs swim meet ... Sochi progress report ... Olympians in court ... Munich 2018 gets new partner ...
Ted Stevens Memorial; China's Medal

Olympic Briefs -- Charges Dropped Against Stevens; Women's Boxing Decision Pending

(ATR) Senator who authored U.S. Olympic law will not face corruption charges...A decision on Olympic women's boxing will come in the next few months
Olympic Briefs -- Charges Dropped

U.S. Olympic Law Author Loses Senate Seat

(ATR) The U.S. senator who authored the United States' Olympic law lost his Senate seat on Tuesday. Ted Stevens, who also turned 85 on Tuesday, had to campaign for re-election while on trial in Washington, D.C. over corruption charges.
U.S. Olympic Law Author Loses