fire mcchrystal? a new test for obamatexas cities are emerging as the growth leaders, according to...

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WASHINGTON — Gen. Stanley McChrys- tal’s forced return from Afghanistan today to explain embarrassing comments about Presi- dent Obama and his top advisers could hard- ly come at a worse time. A spring offensive against the Taliban in southern Af- ghanistan is moving slower than expected. The prom- ised effort to retake Kandahar, the country’s second- largest city, will take longer than initially forecast. At- tacks on U.S. and coalition troops are setting records each month, and June is on track to be one of the bloodiest months for Ameri- cans in the 9-year-old war. Obama said Tuesday the gen- eral he picked in May 2009 to run the war showed “poor judg- ment” in the comments McChrystal and top aides made in interviews with Rolling Stone magazine. During the series of interviews, McChrystal and aides ridiculed several administration officials, includ- ing Vice President Biden. One unidentified staffer described national security adviser Jim Jones, a former Marine Corps com- mandant, as a “clown” who was “stuck in 1985,” according to the magazine. And McChrystal accused U.S. Ambassador to Af- ghanistan Karl Eikenberry, a former top U.S. commander there, of leaking a memo that was skeptical of McChrystal’s troop plan in order to cover “his flank for history books.” Most of the article featured quotes from anony- mous aides, including some who were getting drunk in a Paris bar. Aside from his comments about Eikenberry, McChrystal says nothing about policy differences with the president. Obama said any decisions about McChrystal’s future By Pete Souza, White House, via AP “Poor judgment”: President Obama meets Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top commander in Afghanistan, in Copenha- gen in October. McChrystal will meet Obama today to explain comments he made about Obama and his colleagues. Fire McChrystal? A new test for Obama Remarks by general, staff complicate Afghanistan effort By Tom Vanden Brook, Jim Michaels and Mimi Hall USA TODAY See COVER STORY next page u Rolling Stone via AP Magazine: Copy of Rolling Stone story. Cover story F www.usatoday.com $1.00 THE NATION’S NEWSPAPER SCORES FINAL Newsline n News n Money n Sports n Life World stage set for USA mAmericans face Algeria today in bid to advance to next round. World Cup report, 1, 3, 6C By Martin Meissner, AP Landon Donovan: USA has two draws. Wednesday, June 23, 2010 c NO. 1 IN THE USA ‘Knight and Day’ is witty and wild mCruise, Diaz add to charm. eee movie review, 1D mCentury’s new classics, 1-2D By Frank Masi, 20th Century Fox Action team: Cameron Diaz, Tom Cruise. The recession and housing slump have ended booming growth for many cities in the Sun Belt, while some older urban centers and places with diversi- fied economies are enjoying healthy gains, Census estimates released Tues- day show. Texas cities are emerging as the growth leaders, according to the July 1, 2009, estimates. Four of the 10 fastest- growing — including No. 1 Frisco — and 11 of the top 25 cities that have pop- ulations above 100,000 are in Texas. Florida cities, which saw dizzying growth during the housing boom, are seeing a dramatic reversal of fortune: Two of the state’s 19 large cities lost people from 2008 to 2009. Cape Coral, for example, grew by al- most 50% since 2000, which put it among the 10 fastest-growing. From 2008 to 2009, however, it was the USA’s sixth-fastest decliner, losing about 600 people to 154,202. “The economy is changing the econ- omy of growth, putting Texas in the lead and reducing Florida to a profile similar to a Northeastern state,” says Robert Lang, urban sociologist at the University of Nevada-Las Vegas. Growth is shrinking in many Sun Belt cities hit hard by the foreclosure crisis. Phoenix gained 24,000 people from 2008 to 2009, compared with al- most 41,000 from 2005 to 2006. Big Texas gainers include Dallas sub- urbs such as McKinney, Carrollton and Lewisville; oil centers Odessa and Mid- land; and high-tech hub and state cap- ital Austin. Texas has escaped the worst of the downturn because of a di- versified economy that includes oil and high-tech. It is “the star of the Sun Belt,” says demographer William Frey of the Brookings Institution. “People are moving there for high-skilled and low-skilled kinds of jobs.” The estimates — the last before offi- cial 2010 Census numbers are released later this year and in 2011 — capture the fallout of the recession at its peak. The recession has benefited large cities such as New York and Chicago, as people stay put rather than move out. Other findings: uOld industrial cities in the North- east and Midwest continue to lose peo- ple: Flint, Mich., Cleveland, Buffalo. De- troit, the 11th-most-populous city at 910,920, lost every year this decade. uNew Orleans (354,850) has the largest decline since 2000 but the fourth-largest gain from 2008 to 2009 — evidence of a gradual bounce back from Hurricane Katrina in 2005. Slump stunts Sun Belt growth Texas cities gain despite economy By Haya El Nasser and Paul Overberg USA TODAY Source: USA TODAY analysis of Census data by Paul Overberg By Julie Snider, USA TODAY Growth fades The recession has stunted the growth of once-booming Sun Belt cities such as Cape Coral, Fla.: Rate of growth per year 2000-08 2008-09 5.3% -0.4% Room cleaned, sir? Want to sleep on your bedsheets a few more days, madam? More hotels are cutting back on housekeeping services. With their business sharply reduced, hotels are looking to save money by urging customers to forgo daily changing of linens, towels and toiletries. The trend isn’t new, but the urgency is spreading to more chains as the industry battles a historic downturn in travel. Hotels market their new housekeeping approach as a “green” effort, and some analysts and travelers say the spin has merit. “I have no issues with hotels cutting back,” says fre- quent traveler Mark Hanna, a technology industry exec- utive. “Replacing my linen on a daily basis is the height of absurdity. I don’t do it at home, so why do it in my hotel room?” Best Western asks guests to specify their choice of housekeeping: no service, replace towels/empty trash/ quick vacuum, or full clean. Guests can check their choice and specify the cleaning hour on a card hung on the door knob. Since the program began late last year, about 40% of guests chose no or limited cleaning, says Ron Pohl of Best Western. Some chains operated by Wyndham — Super 8, How- ard Johnson, Travelodge, Days Inn and Ramada — are adopting Wyndham Hotels’ practice of leaving linens un- changed whenever possible, says Wyndham spokes- woman Evy Apostolatos. Starting next year, all Days Inn hotels will reduce bed linen and towel changes from daily to every third day in occupied rooms. Omni Hotels began asking customers last year whether they want limited housekeeping, in which bed and bath linens are changed on request or on the third day. Some hotels give financial incentives. The Marmara Manhattan Hotel in New York offers a $20-a-night dis- count to customers who go without housekeeping for three days. “The green rate” applies only to those who book at least three nights on its reservation system. Bjorn Hanson, of New York University, says customers aren’t buying the industry’s “green” argument but are generally accepting modest cutbacks in housekeeping. “The long-term trend (for companies) is to look for ways to make hotels more affordable and accessible,” he says. Not every traveler likes the trend. Says business trav- eler James Lawrence Wilson: “If I’m paying for a hotel, then I want clean sheets, clean towels and a clean room every day.” Hotels give deals to do less cleaning Money-saving housekeeping cuts marketed as ‘green’ By Roger Yu USA TODAY In Gulf of Mexico; AP Judge blocks 6-month ban on drilling mDeep-water moratorium called punitive in federal court ruling, 1B Haley wins GOP nod for S.C. governor mVictor in tough vote; Rep. Inglis is 5th incumbent to fall in primary, 5A White House eyeing budget candidates Administration says it’s weighing “a number of very talented” people to replace exiting Orszag. 2A. Headway made in Arizona wildfires Firefighters in Flagstaff area manage to secure part of 22-square-mile blaze closest to homes. 3A. mMoney: Radar up for Gulf fraudsters Government has suspended trading in two com- panies claiming roles in oil spill cleanup. 1B. uDow dips 149 points on shaky home sales. 4B. mSports: Stars shine at Wimbledon Top seed Serena Williams, 2004 champ Sharapo- va, French Open winner Nadal log victories. 1, 10C. uTop center prospects in NBA draft. 7C. mLife: Superman goes grass-roots DC Comics is asking readers to campaign for their towns to appear in story line launching in July. 1D. USA TODAY Snapshots ® 1 – For past century 76% 51% 50% 52% 31% 30% Above-average Atlantic hurricane season predicted Crossword, Sudoku 5D Editorial/Forum 10-11A Marketplace Today 5D Market scoreboard 4B State-by-state 8A TV listings 6D ©COPYRIGHT 2010 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co., Inc. Subscriptions, customer service 1-800-USA-0001 www.usatodayservice.com QIJFAF-03005x(c)k Nation’s gas gauge Regular Mid Premium Current average $2.7322 $2.9012 $3.0062 Previous day $2.737 $2.906 $3.010 Year ago $2.690 $2.857 $2.959 Source: AAA.com; arrows show direction of prices from previous day The president vs. the general Population in 75 large cities m2000-09 rankings, shifts, 8A mNHL: 2010-11 team schedules, 9C Apple Apple makes the right call on iPhone 4 mBuyers will like smartphone upgrade. eee ¾ review, 1-2B AP ©2010 Doctor’s Associates Inc. SUBWAY® is a registered trademark of Doctor’s Associates Inc. Limited time only at participating restaurants. Fat content refers to regular 6-inch subs on white or 9-grain wheat bread prepared to standard formula. See store for additional nutritional information. Plus applicable tax. Prices and participation may vary. Not valid in Alaska or Hawaii. Take a bite out of summer with our NEWEST $5 FOOTLONG.™Tender chicken, apples, cranberries and more. Also try it as a 6-inch sub, with 8 grams of fat. For a limited time only, hurry in! subwayfreshbuzz.com

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Page 1: Fire McChrystal? A new test for ObamaTexas cities are emerging as the growth leaders, according to the July 1, 2009, estimates. ... once-booming Sun Belt cities such as Cape Coral,

WASHINGTON — Gen. Stanley McChrys-tal’s forced return from Afghanistan today toexplain embarrassing comments about Presi-dent Obama and his top advisers could hard-ly come at a worse time.

A spring offensive against the Taliban in southern Af-ghanistan is moving slower than expected. The prom-ised effort to retake Kandahar, the country’s second-largest city, will take longer than initially forecast. At-tacks on U.S. and coalition troopsare setting records each month,and June is on track to be one ofthe bloodiest months for Ameri-cans in the 9-year-old war.

Obama said Tuesday the gen-eral he picked in May 2009 torun the war showed “poor judg-ment” in the comments

McChrystal and top aides made in interviews withRolling Stone magazine.

During the series of interviews, McChrystal andaides ridiculed several administration officials, includ-ing Vice President Biden.

One unidentified staffer described national securityadviser Jim Jones, a former Marine Corps com-mandant, as a “clown” who was “stuck in1985,” according to the magazine. AndMcChrystal accused U.S. Ambassador to Af-ghanistan Karl Eikenberry, a former top U.S.commander there, of leaking a memo that was

skeptical of McChrystal’s troop plan in order to cover“his flank for history books.”

Most of the article featured quotes from anony-mous aides, including some who were getting drunk

in a Paris bar. Aside from hiscomments about Eikenberry,McChrystal says nothing aboutpolicy differences with thepresident.

Obama said any decisionsabout McChrystal’s future

By Pete Souza, White House, via AP

“Poor judgment”: President Obama meets Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the top commander in Afghanistan, in Copenha-gen in October. McChrystal will meet Obama today to explain comments he made about Obama and his colleagues.

Fire McChrystal? Anew test for Obama

Remarks by general, staffcomplicate Afghanistan effortBy Tom Vanden Brook, Jim Michaels and Mimi HallUSA TODAY

See COVER STORY next page u

Rolling Stone via AP Magazine: Copy of Rolling Stone story.

Coverstory

F

www.usatoday.com $1.00THE NATION’S NEWSPAPERSCORES.FINAL

Newslinen News n Money n Sports n Life

World stageset for USAmAmericans faceAlgeria today in bidto advance to nextround. World Cupreport, 1, 3, 6C

By Martin Meissner, AP

Landon Donovan: USA has two draws.

Wednesday, June 23, 2010

cNO. 1 IN THE USA

‘Knightand Day’is wittyand wildmCruise, Diaz addto charm.eeemovie review, 1DmCentury’s newclassics, 1-2D

By Frank Masi, 20th Century Fox

Action team: Cameron Diaz, Tom Cruise.

The recession and housing slumphave ended booming growth for manycities in the Sun Belt, while some olderurban centers and places with diversi-fied economies are enjoying healthygains, Census estimates released Tues-day show.

Texas cities are emerging as thegrowth leaders, according to the July 1,2009, estimates. Four of the 10 fastest-growing — including No. 1 Frisco — and11 of the top 25 cities that have pop-ulations above 100,000 are in Texas.

Florida cities, which saw dizzyinggrowth during the housing boom, areseeing a dramatic reversal of fortune:Two of the state’s 19 large cities lostpeople from 2008 to 2009.

Cape Coral, for example, grew by al-most 50% since 2000, which put itamong the 10 fastest-growing. From2008 to 2009, however, it was theUSA’s sixth-fastest decliner, losingabout 600 people to 154,202.

“The economy is changing the econ-omy of growth, putting Texas in thelead and reducing Florida to a profilesimilar to a Northeastern state,” saysRobert Lang, urban sociologist at theUniversity of Nevada-Las Vegas.

Growth is shrinking in many SunBelt cities hit hard by the foreclosure

crisis. Phoenix gained 24,000 peoplefrom 2008 to 2009, compared with al-most 41,000 from 2005 to 2006.

Big Texas gainers include Dallas sub-urbs such as McKinney, Carrollton andLewisville; oil centers Odessa and Mid-land; and high-tech hub and state cap-ital Austin. Texas has escaped theworst of the downturn because of a di-versified economy that includes oil andhigh-tech. It is “the star of the SunBelt,” says demographer William Freyof the Brookings Institution. “Peopleare moving there for high-skilled andlow-skilled kinds of jobs.”

The estimates — the last before offi-cial 2010 Census numbers are releasedlater this year and in 2011 — capturethe fallout of the recession at its peak.

The recession has benefited largecities such as New York and Chicago, aspeople stay put rather than move out.

Other findings:uOld industrial cities in the North-

east and Midwest continue to lose peo-ple: Flint, Mich., Cleveland, Buffalo. De-troit, the 11th-most-populous city at910,920, lost every year this decade.uNew Orleans (354,850) has the

largest decline since 2000 but thefourth-largest gain from 2008 to 2009— evidence of a gradual bounce backfrom Hurricane Katrina in 2005.

SlumpstuntsSun BeltgrowthTexas cities gaindespite economyBy Haya El Nasser and Paul OverbergUSA TODAY

Source: USA TODAYanalysis of Censusdata by PaulOverberg

By Julie Snider, USA TODAY

GrowthfadesThe recessionhas stuntedthe growth ofonce-boomingSun Belt citiessuch as CapeCoral, Fla.:

Rate ofgrowthper year

2000-08

2008-09

5.3%

-0.4%

Room cleaned, sir? Want to sleep on your bedsheets afew more days, madam?

More hotels are cutting back on housekeeping services.With their business sharply reduced, hotels are looking tosave money by urging customers to forgo daily changingof linens, towels and toiletries.

The trend isn’t new, but the urgency is spreading tomore chains as the industry battles a historic downturn intravel. Hotels market their new housekeeping approachas a “green” effort, and some analysts and travelers saythe spin has merit.

“I have no issues with hotels cutting back,” says fre-quent traveler Mark Hanna, a technology industry exec-utive. “Replacing my linen on a daily basis is the height ofabsurdity. I don’t do it at home, so why do it in my hotelroom?”

Best Western asks guests to specify their choice ofhousekeeping: no service, replace towels/empty trash/quick vacuum, or full clean. Guests can check their choiceand specify the cleaning hour on a card hung on the door

knob. Since the program began late last year, about 40% ofguests chose no or limited cleaning, says Ron Pohl of BestWestern.

Some chains operated by Wyndham — Super 8, How-ard Johnson, Travelodge, Days Inn and Ramada — areadopting Wyndham Hotels’ practice of leaving linens un-changed whenever possible, says Wyndham spokes-woman Evy Apostolatos. Starting next year, all Days Innhotels will reduce bed linen and towel changes from dailyto every third day in occupied rooms.

Omni Hotels began asking customers last year whetherthey want limited housekeeping, in which bed and bathlinens are changed on request or on the third day.

Some hotels give financial incentives. The MarmaraManhattan Hotel in New York offers a $20-a-night dis-count to customers who go without housekeeping forthree days. “The green rate” applies only to those whobook at least three nights on its reservation system.

Bjorn Hanson, of New York University, says customersaren’t buying the industry’s “green” argument but aregenerally accepting modest cutbacks in housekeeping.“The long-term trend (for companies) is to look for waysto make hotels more affordable and accessible,” he says.

Not every traveler likes the trend. Says business trav-eler James Lawrence Wilson: “If I’m paying for a hotel,then I want clean sheets, clean towels and a clean roomevery day.”

Hotels give deals to do less cleaningMoney-saving housekeepingcuts marketed as ‘green’By Roger YuUSA TODAY

In Gulf of Mexico; AP

Judge blocks6-month banon drillingmDeep-watermoratorium calledpunitive in federalcourt ruling, 1B

Haley winsGOP nod forS.C. governormVictor in toughvote; Rep. Inglis is5th incumbent tofall in primary, 5A

White House eyeing budget candidatesAdministration says it’s weighing “a number of

very talented” people to replace exiting Orszag. 2A.

Headway made in Arizona wildfiresFirefighters in Flagstaff area manage to secure

part of 22-square-mile blaze closest to homes. 3A.

mMoney: Radar up for Gulf fraudstersGovernment has suspended trading in two com-

panies claiming roles in oil spill cleanup. 1B.uDow dips 149 points on shaky home sales. 4B.

mSports: Stars shine at WimbledonTop seed Serena Williams, 2004 champ Sharapo-

va, French Open winner Nadal log victories. 1, 10C.uTop center prospects in NBA draft. 7C.

mLife: Superman goes grass-rootsDC Comics is asking readers to campaign for their

towns to appear in story line launching in July. 1D.

USATODAYSnapshots®

1 – For past century

76%

51%

50%

52%

31%

30%

Above-averageAtlantic hurricaneseason predicted

Crossword, Sudoku 5DEditorial/Forum 10-11AMarketplace Today 5DMarket scoreboard 4BState-by-state 8ATV listings 6D

©COPYRIGHT 2010 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co., Inc.Subscriptions, customer service

1-800-USA-0001www.usatodayservice.com

QIJFAF-03005x(c)k

Nation’s gas gaugeRegular Mid Premium

Current average $2.7322 $2.9012 $3.0062Previous day $2.737 $2.906 $3.010

Year ago $2.690 $2.857 $2.959Source: AAA.com; arrows show direction of prices from previous day

The president vs. the general

Population in 75 large citiesm2000-09 rankings, shifts, 8A

mNHL: 2010-11 team schedules, 9C

Apple

Apple makesthe right callon iPhone 4mBuyers willlike smartphoneupgrade.eee¾review, 1-2B

AP

©2010 Doctor’s Associates Inc. SUBWAY® is a registered trademark of Doctor’s Associates Inc. Limited time only at participating restaurants. Fat content refers to regular 6-inch subs on whiteor 9-grain wheat bread prepared to standard formula. See store for additional nutritional information. Plus applicable tax. Prices and participation may vary. Not valid in Alaska or Hawaii.

Take a bite out of summer with our NEWEST $5 FOOTLONG.™Tender chicken, apples,cranberries and more. Also try it as a 6-inch sub, with 8 grams of fat. For a limited timeonly, hurry in! subwayfreshbuzz.com