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I'm not a big summer olympic fan.
I usually stick to watching the aquatic sports. I love the opening and closing ceremonies. |
The Olympic Theme
The familiar trumpet fanfare that is so associated with the Olympics (though it is NOT the official Olympic anthem) was first introduced by ABC Sports for the 1968 Winter Olympics in Grenoble, France. The title of the piece: "Bugler's Dream" by Leo Arnaud.
In 1984, John Williams created a theme for the 1984 Olympics in Los Angeles called the "Olympic Fanfare and Theme" that is now considered a powerful piece of music associated with the Olympics and almost always played complementary to Arnaud's "Bugler's Dream". When NBC took over the US television broadcasting rights to the summer Olympics in 1988, they commisioned John Williams to compose a unique theme for their Olympic Coverage, he composed "The Olympic Spirit" for them. In 1996, Williams composed a theme for the opening ceremony of the Atlanta games called "Summon the Heroes", followed in 2002 with "American Journey" for the 2002 Winter Olympics. http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0...1.LZZZZZZZ.jpg 1988 Summer Olympics album http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0...1.LZZZZZZZ.jpg Summon The Heroes (1996 Olympics) http://images.amazon.com/images/P/B0...1.LZZZZZZZ.jpg American Journey (2002 Winter Olympics) All of 'em are available at Amazon.com . |
I'm usually more into the winter olypmics, but everyone in my family watches rowing. My brother is heavily into rowing (we have our fingers crossed that he will make the 2008 team - he was too young this time round, but had a good Olympic trial). He was telling us that this year's Canadian team is insane and that they look like absolute menaces in their unis.
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Rowing is an awsome sport.
Good luck to your brother for 2008! |
I love everything about the Olympics and will be glued to the TV. Thank heavens for Digital HD channels, I'll be able to literally overdose on Olympic coverage :D
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Anyways, I hope that Alan Webb medals in the mile, On another semi-related note, have you all seen those Lifeguard things with that dopey guy getting beat up by the athletes? Quite an odd advertisement, but it is funny... |
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And while I cannot speak for everyone on the Greek baseball and softball teams, I can assure you that my cousin is not a "temporary" Greek. She is one-half Greek, and speaks, reads and writes the language. She knows the customs and the culture very well, and I know that she is very proud to be representing Greece. Having it in Athens just makes it even more special. If there are "temporary" Greeks, as you put it, perhaps this experience will encourage them to learn more about the rich heritage they can call their own. |
By Jim Caple
Page 2 columnist A.J. Brack is a 26-year-old New Jersey soil engineer who spent four seasons pitching in the independent minor leagues -- a very, very long bus ride from the majors. He once pitched for a team that played every game on the road. He once found out he had been released by walking into the clubhouse and seeing another player wearing his number. He once played for a team that arranged for him to spend the season living in a trailer park with someone nicknamed "Cat Woman," because she kept so many pets. (Annie Savoy, she wasn't.) Brack was a Bluesman, a Pioneer, a Jackal, a Canary and a Road Warrior during his minor-league career. Now, he'll be a Greek. This Sunday he will board a plane for Athens to play in a pre-Olympic test tournament. And this summer the New Jersey resident will pitch for the Greek Olympic baseball team. That's right. The Greek Olympic baseball team. The U.S. won't have a baseball team in Athens, but by God, the Greeks will. And they just might be good enough to win a medal. The Greeks may not know hard cheese from feta but as host country for the Olympics, they get an automatic berth in every sport they choose. Taking advantage of a little-known codicil in the Olympic constitution, they are stocking their baseball roster with the American and Canadian children, grandchildren and great-grandchildren of Greek emigrants. Among those on the current roster are former big leaguers Eric Pappas and Clint Zavaras, plus World Series vet Clay Bellinger and top prospects Pete Sikaris and Aaron Miles (who is good enough that he may have to pass up the Olympics if he's in the majors with the Rockies). The uniforms may read "Hellas" (the Greek word for Greece) but the labels ought to read "Made in America." You can compete in the Olympics for a country other than your own as long as you can trace a recent ancestry (generally a grandparent but in some cases a great-grandparent) to it, which is easier said than done. Particularly when you're talking about a great-grandparent who emigrated to the U.S. more than a century ago from a town in Greece that no longer exists. Pascual Perez thought it was difficult getting his Visa in order each spring? Brack has spent the past year compiling documentation tracing his ancestry back to his great-grandfather and he still doesn't have all the documentation he needs. "Every time you think you finally have everything you need, there are two more things they want," Brack says. "I was almost like, 'Do you want my great-grandfather's finger as proof?' The first couple times I wanted to strangle someone." This baptismal certificate is completely inadequate. The village priest forgot to sign his middle name. You'll have to come back next week. And bring your great-grandfather's umbilical cord with you. "I had to do a lot of research," Brack said. "Everywhere you go, they say, 'No, you need to go there instead.' 'Go there,' 'Go there,' 'Go there.' I went to Ellis Island a lot. I started looking through old yellow pages to find old addresses. It wasn't easy. They would change names like they were sneezing. When my mother's grandparents got here, their name was Venechianokus, then Venechianos, then Venech." At least the Greek consulates generally know about the team now. "Our names are in a matrix," Brack says, "so when we call up they don't say, 'The Greek Olympic baseball team? Don't blow smoke up my ass.'" The Greek tryouts were held last November, though manager Rob Derksen is still looking for players to add to the roster. The players will play with their regular organizations this season and those who aren't on a 25-man major-league roster in August will play a couple exhibition games in Toronto and Baltimore. Then they'll fly to Athens and try to win a medal for Greece. With the U.S. and Korea out, they just might. If it seems a little strange that players who may never even have stepped foot in Greece will represent that country in the Olympics, well, you don't understand how important Greek-Americans take their heritage. "My Big Fat Greek Wedding" isn't that much of an exaggeration. Over the past century or so, many thousands of Greeks emigrated from their home to seek their fortune in a foreign land where they couldn't even speak the language. One of those was John Angelos, who came to America with $5 in his pocket. He labored in the mills of western Pennsylvania, opened a Greek diner in Baltimore and saved enough money to send his son, Peter, to law school. And now Peter not only is one of the most powerful lawyers in the country and the owner of the Baltimore Orioles, he is the man who has almost single-handedly funded the Greek baseball venture. Angelos says this team is his way of giving a little something back to the country of his ancestry and he is so proud of the Greek-American connection that he wants the team to wear the U.S. flag on their shoulder patches. So while the U.S. officially won't have a baseball team in the Olympics, we will have one to cheer anyway. As Brack says, "I feel like I'll be representing the country I was born in, as well as Greece." Please note the above article was found at espn.com. CASIGKAP your malicious comments were not only insulting to those of ethnic Greek descent such as myself and greeklawgirl. But you maligned the journalistic integrity of major sports magazines with your racist comments. "Temporary Greek"and "knowledge of their culture only came from movies such as 'Zorba the Greek' and 'My Big Fat Greek Wedding'." are the your words. Why are you so xenophobic? Unless your ancestors are Native Americans, you are also the descendant of immigrants. The result of assimilation to America sometimes means that traditions and knowledge of the mother tongue are sometimes lost. And not all athletes of Greek-American descent chose to tryout and earn a spot on the Greek Olympic team of their specialty. For example Tom Pappas is a member of U.S. Track & Field Team. The following weblink will educate you to his accomplishments. http://www.usatf.org/athletes/bios/Pappas_Tom.asp Regardless of the country being represented these athletes have trained and earned their positions. For me it's a win-win situation to be able to root for both American and Greece during the Olympic games. In honor of my ancestors who founded the games, I'd like to return the thread to its true purpose. To provide some background of certain traditions as had been done by AlphaSigOU(sp?) as well as comment about America's teams and athletes, and observations during the Games themselves. |
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I would be in the same boat... if Venezuela ever hosts an Olympics (that's a snowball's chance in hell of that ever happening) I could qualify under the same rules as the Greeks have done, as my mother's Venezuelan and I qualify for an olympic team. (Not that it will ever happen, as I'm pushing 40 and beer-chugging is not (yet) an Olympic sport! :D ) |
The Olympic Anthem
APXAIO PNEYM' AQANATON - ANCIENT IMMORTAL SPIRIT (The Olympic Anthem)
Lyrics by Kostis Palamas, music by Spiros Samaras (source: http://users.otenet.gr/~bm-celusy/olympic.html) Immortal spirit of antiquity, Father of the true, beautiful and good, Descend, appear, shed over us thy light Upon this ground and under this sky Which has first witnessed thy unperishable fame. Give life and animation to those noble games! Throw wreaths of fadeless flowers to the victors In the race and in strife! Create in our breasts, hearts of steel! Shine in a roseate hue and form a vast temple To which all nations throng to adore thee, Oh immortal spirit of antiquity. (NOTE: Because not everyone may have Greek fonts installed (not just Symbol, which is commonly used in GC), I didn't post the original Greek text - the site above shows the Greek and English text as well as the phonetic pronunciation.) |
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Clearly Greeklawgirl responded with a calm, interesting, and informative post. Too bad you couldn't respond without being so nasty and accusatory! :rolleyes: |
At the time I wrote my response I was upset and I edited my response quite a few times before I settled with that one . I did a basic search and epspn article was the only thing that had come up using her references using movie titles.
xo_kathy I'd like to thank you for challenging my response to CASIGKAP.It caused me to go that extra step and go to my alma maters website. And from gaining access to their library research section I found it. The alleged article was actually an opinion piece written by a columnist at Sports Illustrated. I will post the offensive article and those that don't agree can email the author as I have. I will NEVER spend my money on Sports Illustrated ever again. I private messaged CASIGKAP an apology and will apologize in the thread as well. She sounded like she agreed with the columnist. If that's the case that's her opinion. I'll agree to disagree. If not I'm sorry and I was wrong. |
Sports Illustrated, June 7, 2004 v100 i23 p92
It's Greek to Me. (The Life of Reilly) Rick Reilly. Full Text: COPYRIGHT 2004 Time, Inc. Byline: Rick Reilly Ever munched on a gyro? Sipped ouzo? Smashed a plate on the floor while dancing? If so, you, too, might be able to compete in the Athens Olympics. No, no, not for the U.S. For Greece. Thanks to a very stupid rule, all kinds of Americans will be donning the ol' blue and white of Greece in the Summer Games, and most of them have never set a sandal in the place. Once upon a time, somebody at the IOC with moussaka for brains decided that the host country of an Olympics should field a team in every sport, even for a sport that the natives don't know from a Macy's purse sale. If you brought a baseball mitt into most restaurants in Athens, they'd start trying to slice it up as overcooked leg of lamb. Until recently there were only two baseball diamonds in the entire nation, and both of those are on abandoned American military bases. Yet Greece has a team in the Olympics! Of course, the Greeks don't particularly want to take the world's stage looking like nine drunk guys chasing a bee. Answer? Yank in some Yanks! The Greek government says that if you, your parents, your grandparents or even your great-grandparents were born in Greece, you can compete for the Greek Olympic team--even if all you know about the Odyssey is that it has 11 cup holders. You may have watched only half of My Big Fat Greek Wedding. The only Greek you ever heard of may be Jimmy The. The closest you may have come to Greece is working the fry vat at White Castle. The IOC doesn't give a fig! Find an old baptismal certificate, get dual citizenship and you, too, can walk into the Olympic Stadium last during the Opening Ceremonies as a proud, fake Greek. Opa! Eighteen of the 24 players on the Greek Olympic baseball team are Americans, which is 18 more Americans than will play for America in the Olympics because America didn't even qualify. Maybe if the IOC didn't fritter away a wild-card spot in the eight-team tournament on the host nation, the U.S. would've gotten in. True, some Homeland Security officials are nervous about Americans showing the red, white and blue in Athens and becoming instant terrorist targets, but disguising them in another country's uniform seems a bit drastic, don't you think? Plus, you can't imagine the research--some of it paid for by Baltimore Orioles owner Peter Angelos--that went into proving these American athletes have Greek blood. During one search, an athlete discovered a family secret: Her grandparents were not married when they started a family. Oopsa! Clay Bellinger, who won two World Series rings as a utilityman with the New York Yankees, is loaded with Greek connections. "Well, my wife went backpacking there once," he says. Bellinger will be in the Olympics because his mother's grandma was born in Greece ... or once ate feta cheese, one of the two. Jared Theodorakos, a pitcher for Baylor, says glowingly, "It's a dream come true!" Wait a minute--the dude dreamed of playing for Greece? Whose poster was on his bedroom wall, Zorba's? Chris Demetral, a former Triple A player who is an infielder on the Greek roster, says, "Actually, I'm still waiting for somebody to tell me they're kidding." No kidding. Sixteen of the 18 women on the Greek softball team will be Americans, too. You talk about unorthodox. It's not really Greece's fault. Nobody knows softball in that country. Linda Wells, the Greek Olympic coach who happens to also coach at Arizona State, has been to Greece eight times in the past year trying to teach the locals how to play. But the outfielders still stand and look up at fly balls sailing over their heads like it's the Fourth of July. Stacey Farnworth, a former college player who will be on the Greek team along with her two cousins, says the Americans are trying to bridge the language gap. "We try to use as much Greek as we can on the field," she says. "Like, How are you? is Ti kaneis? and Hello is Yassas." O.K., what's Greek for, The ball just rolled by us and two runs scored while we were chatting? More than a third of the players on the Greek women's soccer team are Americans. That must make the folks in Sparta swell with pride. None of these teams has a meatball's chance of winning a gold medal, nor do they have a right to. This is just the IOC wanting to be richer than King Croesus. It wants the host nation to have a team in each sport purely for ticket sales. After all, how else are you going to get Nick and Nia to go see a game that is so boring it requires a seventh-inning stretch just to stay awake? If all the IOC cares about are tickets, let's get Jennifer Aniston on the softball team. Her name is shortened from Anastassakis and her godfather was Telly Savalas. Who doesn't love ya, baby? In the Greek tradition, I'd like to spit in the hair of everybody involved. And not to ward off evil spirits, either. If you have a comment for Rick Reilly, send it to reilly@siletters.com. |
I did not agree with the comments made by Rick Reilly & I very likely paraphrased his article wrong BUT I simply mentioned that I had read somewhere (I could not remember the magazine) about a controversy regarding the Greeks having a baseball/softball team b/c they are the host country.
If Mexico hosted an Olympics, I too would qualify seeing that my father still lives there & my mother was born there along with 4 of my eldest sisters. I have read Sports Illustrated many times & have found that I usually enjoyed reading the opinion pieces by Rick Reilly. This one struck me b/c I had not heard of this being done nor had I ever really considered it that big of a deal. We have NBA players with multi-million dollar contracts playing for teams of their home countries. I don't think it's that different than what the Greeks are trying to do now. EDIT: This piece by Rick Reilly is the one I was referring to not the one in ESPN magazine. |
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