China invites the world to Olympics(注意黑体字!)

来源:百度文库 编辑:神马文学网 时间:2024/05/01 22:09:30
Chinadaily.com.cn sharing the Olympic spirit
OLYMPICS/News
China invites the world to Olympics
(Agencies)
Updated: 2007-08-08 20:31
Let the party begin. The Beijing Olympics are just a year away.
Sprawling Tiananmen Square was the center of celebrations for thousands of ordinary Chinese and hundreds of Olympic officials as countdown clocks across Beijing reach the one-year mark.
Performers hold banners during the one-year countdown celebrations for the 29th Olympic Games in Tiananmen Square in Beijing August 8, 2007.[Reuters]
The magic moment was to come at 8:08 p.m.and 8 seconds,marking one year until next year‘s opening ceremony on August 8, 2008.
China invited the world to the 2008 Beijing Olympics with a dazzling song-and-dance and fireworks display.
Eight is a lucky number in China, and everything seems on schedule for Beijing to host the most awaited and most expensive Olympics in history. Beijing‘s new anthem, the just-released pop song "We‘re Ready", was to be part of a two-hour ceremony played out on a stage built under banks of searchlights.
"From what we have seen so far, the preparations for Beijing 2008 are truly impressive in every regard," said International Olympic Committee President Jacques Rogge, who is in Beijing this week meeting students, planting trees and greeting Olympic sponsors.
"I don‘t think we have ever seen preparations on this scale."
China has been efficient in building venues. Except for the "Bird‘s Nest" National Stadium, all of the 37 venues are to be finished by the end of this year. Venue construction has eaten up only a part of the US$40 billion (euro30 billion) being spent on new subway lines and skyscrapers to remake the capital.
There have been few delays, and the US$2.1 billion (euro1.5 billion) operating budget has been offset by the vast revenue expected from TV and sponsorship.
To guarantee clean air during the 17-day Olympics, about 1 million of the city‘s 3.3 million vehicles are expected to be kept off the roads. Officials are also hoping to control the weather. Meteorologists began tests last month, firing rockets to disperse rain clouds,a move to guarantee sunshine. They‘ve also fired rockets to induce rain to clean the air.
"They‘ve told us the factories will be closed for three months in 2008 and that they will have a directive to encourage residents to stay off the roads with their cars," said Steven Roush, chief of sport performance for the US Olympic Committee.
Image is important with 550,000 foreign visitors and about 22,000 accredited media set to attend. In addition, up to 10,000 non-accredited journalists are expected.
Old habits like spitting, jumping ahead in line and littering are under siege in campaigns to improve behavior. From taxi drivers to 560,000 volunteers, everyone is to learn some English.
Chinese officials are also reminding citizens of being good sports.
"It is natural for the Chinese people to hope and wish for good performances since China is the host country," said Wang Wei, an executive vice president of the Beijing organizing committee. "I also want to tell the Chinese spectators that while we can be a winner, we should also be a polite loser."
The hubbub is driving up hotel prices, which could increase 10 times.
Revenue from local sponsorship is expected to be at least double that of Sydney or Athens with billions more spent on advertising and promotion.
Although many athletes will eat specialized diets provided by their own teams, Olympic organizers have also promised to track food electronically from the field to the consumer.
  More than a million Beijingers gathered at the city‘s Millennium Monument to celebrate the one-year countdown to Beijing 2008 Olympic Games.[Xinhua]
More than a million Beijingers made their way to the city‘s parks as sunshine broke through the smog for the first time this week. Security was tight around Tiananmen Square, where troops crushed pro-democracy demonstrations in 1989 with huge loss of life, as crowds gathered for the celebrations.
"We‘re very excited, very happy to have the Olympic Games in China," said one women pensioner, wiping make-up from her face after taking part in a display of traditional folk dancing in a Beijing park.
"Thirty years ago, we would never have thought that we could host such an event. China was not strong enough to host the Olympics, but now we are."
Another women, catching her breath after a display of aerobics, said: "This is a dream that has lasted for a century.
"We want foreigners to discover Chinese culture and to know that China is a strong country now."