moritz and the country clubs of winter olympics in europe in the '30s and '40s. >> so with this games in south korea, is there a particular political concern or at least a political outcome because of the location that you described? >> yeah, of course. as you know, north and south korea are basically in a cease-fire. they're at war. there's a demilitarized zone. it's similar to thinking about the cold war, if east and west germany in the '60s, east germany trying to field an olympic team and was only allowed to do it later in the '60s, then competed as a country. of course, north korea has sports. and the first political item on the agenda was, would they actually show up to an olympics staged in their neighbor? they will, they're sending a delegation of athletes. first they're going to have an integrated women's ice hockey team called korea. and members of the south korean, the north korean ice hockey members, will play on the same team. so i do feel that even though all the olympics are political -- mind you, there's issues going on within the olympics. cheating, gender issues, the