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・ 2002 Whitbread Awards
・ 2002 white supremacist terror plot
・ 2002 Wilkes-Barre/Scranton Pioneers season
・ 2002 Wimbledon Championships
・ 2002 Wimbledon Championships – Men's Doubles
・ 2002 Wimbledon Championships – Men's Singles
・ 2002 Wimbledon Championships – Mixed Doubles
・ 2002 Wimbledon Championships – Women's Doubles
・ 2002 Wimbledon Championships – Women's Singles
・ 2002 Winnipeg Blue Bombers season
・ 2002 Winter Olympic bid scandal
・ 2002 Winter Olympics
・ 2002 Winter Olympics figure skating scandal
・ 2002 Winter Olympics medal table
・ 2002 Winter Olympics national flag bearers
2002 Winter Olympics opening ceremony
・ 2002 Winter Olympics torch relay
・ 2002 Winter Paralympics
・ 2002 Winter Paralympics medal table
・ 2002 Wisconsin Badgers football team
・ 2002 Wizard Home Loans Cup
・ 2002 WNBA All-Star Game
・ 2002 WNBA draft
・ 2002 WNBA Finals
・ 2002 WNBA Playoffs
・ 2002 WNBA season
・ 2002 Women's British Open
・ 2002 Women's British Open Squash Championship
・ 2002 Women's College World Series
・ 2002 Women's Hockey Champions Challenge


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2002 Winter Olympics opening ceremony : ウィキペディア英語版
2002 Winter Olympics opening ceremony

The opening ceremony of the 2002 Winter Olympics took place at the Rice-Eccles Olympic Stadium in Salt Lake City, Utah, on 8 February 2002. U.S. President George W. Bush opened the 2002 Winter Olympics, which took place five months after the September 11 attacks, with: ''On behalf of a proud, determined and grateful nation...,'' then the standard opening formula followed.
==The ceremony==

Prior to the ceremony, the turf inside the stadium was removed and a giant, abstract shaped ice rink, designed by Seven Nielsen, was installed, covering a large part of the stadium floor. Performers would later perform on ice skates, rather than shoes.
An American flag rescued from the World Trade Center Site on September 11 was carried into the stadium by an honor guard of American athletes and was carried in by firefighters and police officers. The Mormon Tabernacle Choir, clad in white sweaters, performed The Star Spangled Banner, the US national anthem, as the flag was raised. The parade of the 2,300 athletes was led by the Child of Light and began traditionally with Greece and ending with the host nation, the United States of America. As the artistic section kicked off, the five native Utah Native American tribes arrived together on horseback and performed several traditional "Welcome" stomp dances. The Dixie Chicks also performed.
The beauty of the Utah landscape was showcased as huge puppets of native Utah animals, including a 15-foot-long bison and the American bald eagle (the national bird and animal of the U.S.), entered the stadium, as well as dancing pioneer settlers as two trains came together on, symbolizing the US railroad industry which was beneficial to Utah's economy beginning in the 1860s, as well as economically linking the Western U.S. and the Eastern U.S. At the end of their performance, the performers unfurled a giant quilt that covered the entire stadium floor with the 2002 Winter Olympics logo in the center.〔 Two figure skaters, Olympians Kristi Yamaguchi and Scott Hamilton performed on the over-sized ice rink as "Light the Fire Within," the 2002 Winter Olympic's theme song was sung by LeAnn Rimes.
After speeches by Jacques Rogge, President over the IOC and Mitt Romney, the CEO of the Salt Lake Organizing Committee, the Olympic flame, which had traveled was carried into the stadium by gold medalists Dorothy Hamill and Dick Button. They passed the flame to other pairs U.S. Olympic heroes, who either ran or skated their short relay. Gold medalists in Nagano 1998 Picabo Street and Cammi Granato carried the flame up the steps to the towering cauldron where they were met by Mike Eruzione, captain of the miracle on ice hockey team that won the Olympic gold medal in 1980. Eruzione summoned the other members of the team, who together lit the Olympic cauldron.〔(Salt Lake City Flame Lighting ). YouTube (February 19, 2011). Retrieved on August 16, 2013.〕 The Opening Ceremony would win seven Emmy Awards.〔
While there was a lot of international sympathy for the US in the wake of the 9/11 attacks, there were complaints that the Games were being conducted in an overtly patriotic manner. President Bush received some criticism for departing from the Olympic charter by extending the declaration to open the Games, saying “On behalf of a proud, determined and grateful nation” before the traditional formula, “I declare open the Games of Salt Lake City”. In addition, the President opened the Games standing among the US athletes, while previous heads of state opened the Games from an official box. NBC's Bob Costas applauded the move during the network's coverage of the Opening Ceremony.
The official box was occupied by the President's Olympic delegation:
* Dorothy Koch, the President's sister
* Colin Powell, U.S. Department of State
* Mel Martinez, U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
* Gale Ann Norton, U.S. Department of the Interior
* Tommy Thompson, Department of Health and Human Services
* Ann Veneman, U.S. Department of Agriculture
* Christine Todd Whitman, Administrator of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
* Lance Armstrong, champion cyclist
* Hayden Fry, 2003 College Football Hall of Fame (University of Iowa head football coach)
* John Morris, Bass Pro Shops founder
* Cal Ripken, Jr., 2007 Baseball Hall of Fame (Baltimore Orioles shortstop)
* Sheryl Swoopes-Jackson, WNBA star
* Darrell Waltrip, 2012 NASCAR Hall of Fame (3-time NASCAR Sprint Cup Series Champion)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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