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         Paralympics Olympic History:     more detail
  1. Special Olympics and Paralympics: A First Book by Lorraine Henriod, 1979-04
  2. U.S. Olympic and Paralympic training site.(Lakeshore Foundation): An article from: Palaestra by Jeff Underwood, 2003-09-22
  3. Paralympic Competitors for Mexico: Olympic Wheelchair Racers of Mexico, Paralympic Athletes of Mexico, Saúl Mendoza, Salvador Hernandez
  4. Paralympic Gold Medalists for Portugal: Paulo de Almeida Coelho, Carlos Amaral Ferreira, João Paulo Fernandes, Carlos Lopes, Gabriel Potra
  5. Paralympic Athletes of Portugal: Paulo de Almeida Coelho, Carlos Amaral Ferreira, Carlos Lopes, Gabriel Potra, Jose Alves, Jose Monteiro
  6. Athlete First: A History of the Paralympic Movement by Steve Bailey, 2008-02-25
  7. Olympics - From Athens To Athens - Illustrated History Of The Summer Games by Robert, Editor Sullivan, 2004
  8. 2008 Summer Olympics Torch Relay: 2008 Summer Olympics, 2008 Summer Olympics torch relay route, 2008 Summer Olympics summit of Mt. Everest, 2008 Summer Paralympics Torch Relay
  9. Carving a trail: A history of skiing in Utah by Sally Graves Jackson, 2001

1. 369 Olympic Game Sydney 2000
HOME BASIC_P - paralympics olympic history. search find the most popular books, videos and DVDs on PARALYMPICS
http://www.missforsyth.com/acatalog/Online_Catalogue_Jane_Woolrich_14.html

2. 369 Olympic Game Sydney 2000
HOME BASIC_P - paralympics olympic history. search find the most popular books,videos and DVDs on paralympics olympic history. images newsgroups.
http://www.artistictype.com/verner-ch-boiler.htm

3. Buffalo And Western New York Olympic History
olympic history from Buffalo and Western New York An overtime period had failed to break a 33 tie. The paralympics are the olympics for physically disabled athletes.
http://members.tripod.com/~laxman36/olympics.html
Olympic History from Buffalo and Western New York
News... History
This page is maintained by a member of the International Society of Olympic Historians. The 2002 Salt Lake City Olympics. last updated 3-25-3 NEW! ...Schlopy wins GS National championship...Hasan continues comeback... LAKE PLACID - Buffalo's Erik Schlopy won the giant slalom at the U.S. Alpine Championships on 3-24-3. He finished in 2 minutes, 24.64 seconds under less than ideal snow conditions at Whiteface Mountain. Schlopy continues his comeback from illness,taking third place in the giant slalom at the Alpine World Championships in february. The Buffalo native finished in 14th place in the recent Olympic men's slalom. Schlopy's win prevented Bode Miller's from win four national titles. (JOHN WAWROW Associated Press 3/25/2003 in Buffalo News) NEW YORK - 17 year old Ronnetta Alexander of Buffalo won the 60-meter hurdles Sunday 3/16/3 at the National Scholastic Track and Field Championships in New York City. Another Buffalo track star, Alyissa Hasan continued her comeback from a serious foot injury, taking third in the pentathlon with 3,469 points. Hasan is a former Junior Olympic petnathlon champion. Buffalo News, 3-17-3

4. Error Page
Features daily reports, stories about athletes and events, history of the olympic games, and information on the paralympics. Also offers research resources, maps and online activities.
http://teacher.scholastic.com/newszone/specialreports/olympics/
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5. Olympic History
Sailing Team Youth World Team USST Info Sailing Medallist 2004 olympic Trials PanAm Games paralympics. Learn More About the history of olympic Sailing (click
http://www.ussailing.org/Olympics/history.htm
Learn More About the History of Olympic Sailing (click on a title)
Fast Facts About Olympic Sailing
U.S. Olympic Yachting Medal Record Olympic Yachting Teams 2000-1976 By the Numbers - Medal Count by Nation Gold - Silver - Bronze Olympic Sailing Committee (OSC) History OSC Chairman '97-'00 Quadrennium 2000 USA Olympic Team 2000 Olympic Team Leader 2000 Olympic Trials TEAMS:
2002 US Sailing Team

2001 US Sailing Team

2000 US Sailing Team

1999 US Sailing Team

, United States Sailing Association,
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6. Paralympic Information: Sydney Games
However, the International olympic Committee (IOC), based in Lausanne, Switzerland,and the International Paralympic Committee (IPC history provided by SPOC.
http://www.olympics.smh.com.au/paralympics/specials/history.html
Produced by: smh.com.au theage.com.au What's on today Sport ... Home
History of the Paralympic Games
The forerunner to the modern Paralympic Games was a sports competition held at Stoke Mandeville in England more than 50 years ago - July 1948 - for mainly ex-Servicemen in wheelchairs. It was organised by neurosurgeon at the Stoke Mandeville hospital, Dr Ludwig Guttmann, to coincide with the 1948 London Olympic Games. Dr Guttmann is often labelled the 'Father of Disabled Sport' or the Paralympic version of the Olympic movement's Pierre de Coubertin, who founded the modern Olympic Games in 1896. From the 1948 Stoke Mandeville competition grew the need to organise proper sporting events for athletes with a disability. The first Paralympic Games was held in Rome in 1960 - the Games of the I (first) Paralympiad. The Sydney 2000 Paralympic Games will be the Games of the XI Paralympiad - celebrating its 40th anniversary while the Olympic Games celebrates its 104th year. Although the Paralympic Games is a much younger movement than the Olympic Games, it is growing dramatically. The word 'Paralympic' comes from the word 'parallel' and not 'paraplegic'. It means the Games 'parallel' to the Olympic Games in terms of being the key international competition for athletes with a disability - as the Olympics is for able-bodied athletes. The 1960 Rome Paralympic Games had 400 athletes from 23 countries but only one disability category - wheelchair - was represented. Six sports were played.

7. Sydney Games - Paralympics
order When olympics Minister Michael Knight went to the Atlanta paralympics, he was Sauvagewith the flag Here's your chance to own a piece of olympic history.
http://www.olympics.smh.com.au/paralympics/
var javascript_version = 1.0; Produced by: smh.com.au theage.com.au Sydney weather - 3-day forecasts
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- birdseye view of Sydney
What's on today
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Paralympic Edition
The ticker parade Sydney won't forget
It ended with one last flurry of flags, one last scatter of tickertape across George Street, and one last hurrah for the Olympics. And with memories we'll keep for "a long, long, long forever", as the paralympic basketballer Liesl Tesch said. more
Passionate farewell to 'real Games'

Neil Fuller was being feted like a rock star. Women were clamouring for autographs from the winner of four gold medals and one bronze as he neared the end of yesterday's Paralympic ticker tape parade from the Museum of Contemporary Art down George Street to Town Hall. more
A heavy blow to the cultural cringe

The Games - Olympic and Paralympic - offered us a fresh view of ourselves, writes Matthew Moore, and we liked what we saw. more
Airport faces next big challenge

While the host city holds one more celebration, around 3,000 people will leaving Australia as the International Airport faces another logistics challenge. more Paralympic parade Scenes from the ticker tape parade in Sydney and interviews with Australia's champion athletes more Roos and a roar bring down final curtain Sydney's prodigal roos were welcomed back to the fold last night, playing a key role in the Paralympics closing ceremony.

8. IDG News Service Story
As the Sydney Olympics drew to a close, one of the more ambitious claims made about the event was that the 2000 Games wrote a new chapter in Internet history. is expected to be the most comprehensive coverage ever of the paralympics.
http://www.idg.net/idgns/2000/10/16/WORLDBEATHowOlympicHistoryWill.shtml

9. Indigenous Olympic History
olympic Moments. Indigenous olympic history. According to Black Gold, a recently released an olympic Games was Kevin Coombes a wheelchair basketballer at the paralympics in 1960.
http://www.atsic.gov.au/events/previous_events/Olympic_Moments/Indigenous_Olympi
Text Only Events Previous Events Olympic Moments -> Indigenous Olympic History Events Previous Events Olympic Moments Indigenous Olympic History According to Black Gold , a recently released publication by Colin Tatz, there have been 21 Aboriginal and Islander Olympians to date (prior to Sydney). Nine have been boxers: Adrian Blair (Tokyo 1964), Francis (Frank) Roberts (Tokyo 1964), Robert Carney (Mexico 1968), Darrell Hiles (Seoul 1988) , Joe Donovan (Mexico 1968), Norman Stevens (Moscow 1980), Robert Peden (Barcelona 1992 and Atlanta 1996), Justann Crawford (Barcelona 1992 and Atlanta 1996) and James Swan (Atlanta 1996). Michael Ahmatt (Tokyo 1964 and Mexico 1968 ) and Danny Morseu (Moscow 1980 and Los Angeles 1984). Morseu has the honour of being the first Torres Strait Islander to represent Australia at the Olympic level. John Kinsella , a wrestler from NSW competed at Mexico in 1968 and Munich in 1972. Warren Lawton from Queensland represented Australia in disabled athletics at Los Angeles in 1984 and again in Seoul in 1988. Changing to goalball, he went to the Barcelona and Atlanta Olympics. Also at the Barcelona Games in 1992

10. Indigenous Olympic History
Indigenous olympic history However the first Aboriginal person in an olympic Gameswas Kevin Coombes – a wheelchair basketballer at the paralympics in 1960.
http://www.atsic.gov.au/events/previous_events/Olympic_Moments/Indigenous_Olympi
Text Only Events Previous Events Olympic Moments -> Indigenous Olympic History Events Previous Events Olympic Moments Indigenous Olympic History According to Black Gold , a recently released publication by Colin Tatz, there have been 21 Aboriginal and Islander Olympians to date (prior to Sydney). Nine have been boxers: Adrian Blair (Tokyo 1964), Francis (Frank) Roberts (Tokyo 1964), Robert Carney (Mexico 1968), Darrell Hiles (Seoul 1988) , Joe Donovan (Mexico 1968), Norman Stevens (Moscow 1980), Robert Peden (Barcelona 1992 and Atlanta 1996), Justann Crawford (Barcelona 1992 and Atlanta 1996) and James Swan (Atlanta 1996). Michael Ahmatt (Tokyo 1964 and Mexico 1968 ) and Danny Morseu (Moscow 1980 and Los Angeles 1984). Morseu has the honour of being the first Torres Strait Islander to represent Australia at the Olympic level. John Kinsella , a wrestler from NSW competed at Mexico in 1968 and Munich in 1972. Warren Lawton from Queensland represented Australia in disabled athletics at Los Angeles in 1984 and again in Seoul in 1988. Changing to goalball, he went to the Barcelona and Atlanta Olympics. Also at the Barcelona Games in 1992

11. How Olympic History Will Be Made
As the Sydney Olympics drew to a close, one of the more ambitious claims made about the event was that the 2000 Games wrote a new chapter in Internet history. is expected to be the most comprehensive coverage ever of the paralympics.
http://www.techinformer.com/english/crd_games_271552.html

12. Olympic Moments
Back to Events Chairman's Introduction paralympics Black Gold Cathy's Experiencingthe olympics Athlete Profiles Indigenous olympic history Media The World
http://www.atsic.gov.au/events/previous_events/Olympic_Moments/default.asp
Text Only Events Previous Events -> Olympic Moments Events Previous Events Olympic Moments Chairman's Introduction Welcome to the ATSIC Olympic web site which aims to capture the sights and sounds of the Sydney Olympic Games through a range of photo galleries, streaming audio and words... Paralympics Black Gold...Cathy's Triumph Opening Ceremony Latest News ...
Media: The World is Watching

13. Kostas Z Foundation : : : Paralympics : : : History Of The Paralympics
history OF THE paralympics. Since their humble beginnings, the paralympics have blossomedand grown in size Games are part and parcel of The olympic Games and
http://www.kostasz.org/paralympics/phistory1.html
HISTORY OF THE PARALYMPICS

14. Paralympics Games Salt Lake 2002
As the Salt Lake 2002 Winter olympic games come to a Competition in the Paralympicsis separated by Music Guide Dawn Marie looks back at the history and trends
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The Paralympics Begin! Part 1: Athletes that Can Do! More of this Feature Part 1: Athletes Can Do!
Part 2: Paralympic Events

Join the Discussion "Should the Winter Paralympics be held simultaneously with the regular Winter Olympics"
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Related Resources DisAbled Sports Resources What is Adaptive Skiing? Disability Demographics Olympic Goodies ... Winter Sports Gear From Other Guides DisAbled Snowboarding Heather Mills Story Olympic Trading Pins Olympic Memorabilia ... Adaptive PE Elsewhere on the Web Paralympics.org Paralympics 2002 U.S. Disabled Ski Team Olympic Museum ... International Olympic Sporting Federations As the Salt Lake 2002 Winter Olympic games come to a close, most of us don't realize that the Paralympics are about to begin!

15. Montgomery Ready To Make Canadian Olympic History
Montgomery ready to make Canadian olympic history By DONNA SPENCER ran well underthe Canadian olympic Association qualifying paralympics Purdy's golden moment.
http://www.canoe.ca/2000GamesTriathlon/aug31_mon.html
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Thursday, August 31, 2000 Montgomery ready to make Canadian Olympic history
By DONNA SPENCER
Canadian Press
Sport by Sport PARALYMPICS Purdy's golden moment WRESTLING IOC strips gold medal TENNIS Nestor's golden win hits home BOXING Harrison starts in Britain WEIGHTLIFTING Bulgarian coach resigns Student suspended for e-mail threats CANOE/KAYAK Bridesmaid Brunet PENTATHLON Brit wins women's modern pentathlon TRIATHLON Simon's our man BASKETBALL Dream Team hangs on for another gold WATER POLO Hungary destroys Russia in title game GYMNASTICS Barsukova wins rhythmic gold in an upset EQUESTRIAN Wind dashes Millar's medal hopes VOLLEYBALL Yugoslavia beats Russia for gold DIVING Despatie arrives early FIELD HOCKEY Netherlands retains Olympic title TAEKWONDO Bosshart wins bronze in taekwondo SYNCHRO

16. Paralympics - Disabled Sport History Article
Athletes are making history in the world of sports olympic venues and are conductedby olympic officials. To complete in the paralympics is the realization of
http://www.sandfordgroup.com/editoriallibrary/therapeutic_library/disabled_sport
HOME E-MAIL MAIN LIBRARY INDUSTRY LINKS ... ON-LINE BUYERS GUIDE by William Bishop Athletes are making history in the world of sports for persons with a disability and Canada is among the top nations involved. In 1973, Eugene Reimer, (a paraplegic wheelchair athlete who won a number of world records) became Sport Canada's Male Athlete of the Year for 1972, an honour no other nation has ever bestowed on a disabled athlete. Three years later, in 1975, the first tri-disability competitions were held in Edmonton, Alberta. They included the annual Wheelchair, Blind and Amputee Games. In 1983, athlete Rick Hansen was honoured with the first Lou Marsh Special Award of Merit, (given to Canada's most outstanding athlete) for winning nine gold medals at the Pan American Wheelchair Games in Halifax, Nova Scotia. The Ontario Ministry of Tourism and Recreation established the Dr. Robert Jackson Award for Ontario's Disabled Athlete of the Year in 1986. St. Catharines's Joanne Bouw, a cerebral palsy athlete was the first recipient, recognized for her accomplishments as a field event World Champion. Sports for disabled athletes did not always have a high profile. Over the years they have gone through many changes, survived many obstacles. The earliest record of Sport for the Physically Disabled dates back to World War I when it was initiated as a form of treatment, especially among the blind and amputees servicemen. But the interest and enthusiasm among the disabled was not long lasting. Prior to 1940, medicine was able to do little for disabled persons, especially those who suffered spinal injuries. The majority of the spinal injured died a short time after their accidents from ensuing complications and sometimes from the loss of the will to live.

17. CNNSI.com - 2000 Paralympics - A Brief History Of The Paralympics - Wednesday Oc
paralympics history Games were named for their mission to parallel the olympic Games(literally to sharing venues this year in Sydney, the paralympicsnow more
http://www.cnnsi.com/paralympics/news/2000/10/18/paralympic_history/

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Click here for more on this story Posted: Wednesday October 18, 2000 11:42 AM Courtesy of WeMedia.com, Official Webcaster of the 2000 Paralympic Games By David Rosner The Paralympic Games parallel the story of disability sports not just in terms of evolution (from rehabilitation to competition), but of revolution (to high-performance sport). It's the story of a movement that knows no limits, no confines, no boundaries, only ever-expanding possibilities. Of course, the Paralympic Games weren't always the peak of elite competition, weren't always the world's largest sports event after the Olympics, weren't always the fastest-growing movement in international sports. But they were always, even before the first Olympic-style competition for athletes with disabilities debuted in 1960, infused with the Paralympic spirit. That Paralympic spirit can be traced to 1948 when Sir Ludwig Guttmann, a German-born neurosurgeon who emigrated to England in 1939 as a refugee from Nazi occupation, organized an athletic competition in Stoke Mandeville for World War II veterans with spinal cord injuries. Four years earlier, at the British government's request to open Stoke Mandeville Hospital's National Spinal Injury Centre, mainly to treat wounded servicemen, Dr. Guttmann had introduced a new medical approach embracing sport as a paramount therapy in the total rehabilitation of paralyzed patients. What began as rehabilitative recreation evolved into athletic competition-with Guttmann emerging as "The Father of Disabled Sport."

18. History Of The Parallel Olympics (Paralympics)
history of the Paralympic Games The forerunner to the modern Paralympic Games wasa hospital, Dr Ludwig Guttmann, to coincide with the 1948 London olympic Games
http://da-usa.org/Docs/History.htm
This history courtesy of the Sydney Paralympic Organizing Committee History of the Paralympic Games
The forerunner to the modern Paralympic Games was a sports competition held at Stoke Mandeville in England more than 50 years ago - July 1948 - for mainly ex-Servicemen in wheelchairs. It was organized by a neurosurgeon at the Stoke Mandeville hospital, Dr Ludwig Guttmann, to coincide with the 1948 London Olympic Games. Dr Guttmann is often labeled the 'Father of Disabled Sport' or the Paralympic version of the Olympic movement's Pierre de Coubertin, who founded the modern Olympic Games in 1896. From the 1948 Stoke Mandeville competition grew the need to organize proper sporting events for athletes with a disability. The first Paralympic Games was held in Rome in 1960 - the Games of the I (first) Paralympiad. The Sydney 2000 Paralympic Games will be the Games of the XI Paralympiad - celebrating its 40th anniversary while the Olympic Games celebrates its 104th year. Although the Paralympic Games is a much younger movement than the Olympic Games, it is growing dramatically. The word 'Paralympic' comes from the word 'parallel' and not 'paraplegic'. It means the Games 'parallel' to the Olympic Games in terms of being the key international competition for athletes with a disability - as the Olympics is for able-bodied athletes. The 1960 Rome Paralympic Games had 400 athletes from 23 countries but only one disability category - wheelchair - was represented. Six sports were played.

19. Gunston Middle School Library - Olympic Research Web Site
olympic history. Kodak has created a photographic history of the modernolympics. Journalist's Toolbox 2002 Winter olympic Games. paralympics.
http://www.arlington.k12.va.us/schools/gunston/library/students/links/olympics/
Olympic Research Sites General History Salt Lake City 2002 Paralympics ... Sydney 2000
General Sites
"Welcome to the Gateway to the Winter Games" - information for students and teachers. USA TODAY offers lessons, daily activities and will have a reporter at the Games with special coverage of individual sports. This section of the Easton English Online site targets the Olympics and sports vocabulary. The site also contains links to Olympic lesson plans and foreign language sites for sports vocabulary.
  • United States Olympic Committee
The official site of the US Olympic committee - who are your favorite US athletes? The official site of the IOC - find out about future Olympics.
Olympic History
  • Ancient Olympics
    A cultural and historical overview of the ancient games including detailed information of the diverse sports played. Stories of some famous ancient athletes are available.

20. Cool Attractions - Salt Lake City Winter Games 2002
Information, event schedule, venues, maps, ticket information, and a city guide.Category Sports Events olympics Winter Games 2002 - Salt Lake City...... The paralympics will take place in Salt Lake City from March 7th to Of special interest,an event from the annals of Winter olympic history the Skeleton will
http://www.saltlakecity.coolattractions.com/
This site is
sponsored by
days until the 2002 Winter Olympic Games The Salt Lake City 2002 Winter Olympics will take place from February 8th to February 24th 2002. The Paralympics will take place in Salt Lake City from March 7th to March 16th 2002. The International Olympic Committee awarded the 2002 Olympics to Salt Lake City on June 16th 1995 at Budapest, Hungary. With 15 sports being competed the 2002 Olympics will have more events than any previous winter games. Of special interest, an event from the annals of Winter Olympic History - the Skeleton will be reintroduced after several generations' absence. For the first time Women's Bobsleigh will be a medal event. The Salt Lake City Olympic Committee is planning for the participation of approximately 2,345 athletes and 1,800 officials from 80 countries - plus the opening and closing ceremonies. A world television audience of over two billion people is anticipated. Of particular impact will be the contribution of over 26,000 volunteers involved in pre-game organization and the games themselves. It would be hard to find a place more suited to hosting the Winter Olympics than Salt Lake City. The city's stunning setting - surrounded by the Rocky Mountain peaks of the Wasatch Front, that seem close enough to touch - would be reason enough to hold the Olympics here. But there is much more to Salt Lake than magnificent scenery. Obviously the proximity of mountains with outstanding conditions makes it perfect for a variety of winter sports

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