5:54
Torvill & Dean perform Bolero at 1984 Winter Olympics
their long program to ravel's bolero during the 1984 winter olympics...
published: 20 Feb 2006
Author: perplemaggie
Torvill & Dean perform Bolero at 1984 Winter Olympics
their long program to ravel's bolero during the 1984 winter olympics
9:44
1984 Winter Olympics - Men's Luge 4th Run - Part 1
Frank Masley USA Michael Walter GDR Dave Gilman USA Valeri Doudin URS...
published: 13 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Men's Luge 4th Run - Part 1
Frank Masley USA Michael Walter GDR Dave Gilman USA Valeri Doudin URS
2:57
1984 Winter Olympics ABC Opening 2-13-84
Host Jim McKay...
published: 12 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics ABC Opening 2-13-84
Host Jim McKay
9:10
Sarajevo Olympics 1984 opening ceremony.
The 1984 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XIV Olympic Winter Games, were a winter ...
published: 15 Nov 2009
Author: MultiDaani
Sarajevo Olympics 1984 opening ceremony.
The 1984 Winter Olympics, officially known as the XIV Olympic Winter Games, were a winter multi-sport event which was celebrated in Sarajevo in Bosnia and Herzegovina, which was at the time part of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia. Other candidate cities were Sapporo, Japan; and Gothenburg, Sweden. It was the first Winter Games and the second Olympics held in a socialist country (the first was the 1980 Summer Olympics in Moscow). The torch relay for the 1984 Sarajevo Olympic games started in Olympia-Athens and then by Airplane to Dubrovnik (Route One) Split- Ljubljana Zagreb - Sarajevo(Route Two) Skopje Novi Sad Belgrade Sarajevo The total distance of the Torch relay was 5289 km (plus 2879 km of local routes). Two Routes main routes and one in the west (2602 km), the other in the east (2687 km). The final torchbearer, from a total of 1600, was Sanda Dubravcic.
9:04
1984 Winter Olympics - Men's Figure Skating Compulsory Figures - Part 1
Scott Hamilton USA...
published: 12 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Men's Figure Skating Compulsory Figures - Part 1
Scott Hamilton USA
6:47
1984 Winter Olympics - Women's Giant Slalom - Part 1
Michela Figini SUI Perrine Pelen FRA...
published: 12 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Women's Giant Slalom - Part 1
Michela Figini SUI Perrine Pelen FRA
8:20
1984 Winter Olympics - Ladies Figure Skating Free Skate Preview
1984 Winter Olympics - Ladies Figure Skating Free Skate Preview...
published: 26 Dec 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Ladies Figure Skating Free Skate Preview
1984 Winter Olympics - Ladies Figure Skating Free Skate Preview
9:45
1984 Winter Olympics - Pairs Figure Skating Free Skate - Part 1 - Miller & Fauver USA
Lea Ann Miller & Bill Fauver USA...
published: 11 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Pairs Figure Skating Free Skate - Part 1 - Miller & Fauver USA
Lea Ann Miller & Bill Fauver USA
5:55
1984 Winter Olympics - Ice Dancing Original Set Pattern - Part 11 - Blumberg & Siebert USA
Judy Blumberg & Michael Seibert USA...
published: 09 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Ice Dancing Original Set Pattern - Part 11 - Blumberg & Siebert USA
Judy Blumberg & Michael Seibert USA
8:43
1984 Winter Olympics - Two-man Bobsled 3rd Run - Part 1
Thomas Delahanty & Peter Lund GBR I Wolfgang Hoppe & Dietmar Schauerhammer GDR II ...
published: 05 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Two-man Bobsled 3rd Run - Part 1
Thomas Delahanty & Peter Lund GBR I Wolfgang Hoppe & Dietmar Schauerhammer GDR II Bernhard Lehmann & Bodgan Musiol GDR I
3:10
Just A Dream Away: John Denver 1984 Winter Olympics Sarajevo
Michael Miller's song, "Just A Dream Away" performed by John Denver to open ...
published: 15 Feb 2008
Author: bigeyezzzzzzz
Just A Dream Away: John Denver 1984 Winter Olympics Sarajevo
Michael Miller's song, "Just A Dream Away" performed by John Denver to open the 1984 Winter Olympics from Sarajevo. Music by Michael Miller, lyrics by Monica Riordan. JUST A DREAM AWAY Music by Michael Miller Words by Monica Riordan When a dream is born, A dreamer has to live for more, Believing what he's never known, He stands alone... Where a chance begins, Wherever secret hopes pretend, Like daybreak on the darkest night, He'll see the light... It's Just A Dream Away, You'll know it when you're there one day, Keep reaching for the world somehow, There's nothing that can stop you now, Dream your way . . . dream it all. Years of hope within, Then feeling what it's like to win, This dreamer's gonna find a way, To see that day... It's Just A Dream Away, You'll know it when you're there one day, Keep reaching for the world somehow, There's nothing that can stop you now, Dream your way . . . dream it all. ©1977 -- Hook, Line & Singer Music, Inc. (ASCAP) & Cherry Lane Music (ASCAP)
8:43
1984 Winter Olympics - Pairs Figure Skating Free Skate - Part 6 - Watson & Lancon
Jill Watson & Burt Lancon USA...
published: 12 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Pairs Figure Skating Free Skate - Part 6 - Watson & Lancon
Jill Watson & Burt Lancon USA
5:58
1984 Winter Olympics - Pairs Figure Skating Free Skate - Part 11
Awards Ceremony GOLD: Elena Valova & Oleg Vasiliev, URS SILVER: Kitty & Peter Carr...
published: 12 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Pairs Figure Skating Free Skate - Part 11
Awards Ceremony GOLD: Elena Valova & Oleg Vasiliev, URS SILVER: Kitty & Peter Carruthers, USA BRONZE: Larissa Selezneva & Oleg Makarov, URS
5:00
1984 Winter Olympics USSR vs. Czechoslovakia
The final 2:30 of the third period between the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. The Soviet...
published: 19 Jul 2007
Author: Disengage
1984 Winter Olympics USSR vs. Czechoslovakia
The final 2:30 of the third period between the Soviet Union and Czechoslovakia. The Soviets won the game 2-0 and the gold medal. The game was Vladislav Tretiak's final Olympic appearance.
Vimeo results:
59:46
Road Back to the Frozen Four (69 minutes)
History
[edit]Partridge and his academy
The university was founded in 1819 at Norwich by ...
published: 06 May 2011
Author: Norwich Television
Road Back to the Frozen Four (69 minutes)
History
[edit]Partridge and his academy
The university was founded in 1819 at Norwich by military educator and former superintendent of West Point, Captain Alden B. Partridge. Captain Partridge believed in the "American System of Education," a traditional liberal arts curriculum with instruction in civil engineering and military science. After leaving West Point because of congressional disapproval of his system, he returned to his native state of Vermont to create the American Literary, Scientific and Military Academy. Captain Partridge, in founding his academy, rebelled against the reforms of Sylvanus Thayer to prevent the rise of what he saw as the greatest threat to the security of the young republic: a professional officer class. He believed that a well-trained militia was an urgent necessity and developed the American system around that idea. His academy became the inspiration for a number of military colleges throughout the nation, including both the Virginia Military Institute and The Citadel, and later the land grant colleges created through the Morrill Act of 1862.[4]
Partridge's educational beliefs were considered radical at the time, and this led to his conflicting views with the federal government while he was the superintendent of West Point. Upon creation of his own school, he immediately incorporated classes of agriculture and modern languages in addition to the sciences, liberal arts, and various military subjects. Field exercises, for which Partridge borrowed cannon and muskets from the federal and state governments, supplemented classroom instruction and added an element of realism to the college’s program of well-rounded military education.
Partridge founded six other military institutions during his quest to reform the fledgling United States military. They were the Virginia Literary, Scientific and Military Academy at Portsmouth, Virginia (1839–1846), Pennsylvania Literary, Scientific, and Military Academy at Bristol, Pennsylvania (1842–1845), Pennsylvania Military Institute at Harrisburg, Pennsylvania (1845–1848), Wilmington Literary, Scientific and Military Academy at Wilmington, Delaware (1846–1848), the Scientific and Military Collegiate Institute at Reading, Pennsylvania (1850–1854), Gymnasium and Military Institute at Pembroke, New Hampshire (1850–1853) and the National Scientific and Military Academy at Brandywine Springs, Delaware (1853).[5]
[edit]Fire and hardship: Norwich in the 19th century
In 1825 the academy moved to Middletown, Connecticut, to provide better naval training to the school's growing corps of cadets. In 1829, the state of Connecticut declined to grant Captain Partridge a charter and he moved the school back to Norwich (the Middletown campus became Wesleyan University in 1831). Beginning in 1826, the college offered the first program of courses in civil engineering in the US. In 1834 Vermont granted a charter and recognized the institution as Norwich University. During the 1856 academic year, the first chapter of the Theta Chi Fraternity was founded by cadets Frederick Norton Freeman and Arthur Chase. With the beginning of the Civil War in 1861, Norwich cadets served as instructors of the state militias throughout the Northeast and the entire class of 1862 enlisted upon its graduation. Norwich turned out hundreds of officers and soldiers who served with the federal armies in the American Civil War, including four recipients of the Medal of Honor. One graduate led a corps, seven more headed divisions, 21 commanded brigades, 38 led regiments, and various alumni served in 131 different regimental organizations. In addition, these men were eyewitnesses to some of the war's most dramatic events, including the bloodiest day of the conflict at Antietam, the attack up Marye's Heights at Fredericksburg, and the repulse of Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg. Seven hundred and fifty Norwich men served in the Civil War, of whom sixty fought for the Confederacy.[6] Because of the university's participation in the struggle, the number of students dwindled to seven in the class of 1864 alone.
The Confederate raid on St. Albans, Vermont precipitated fear that Newport, Vermont was an imminent target. The corps quickly boarded an express train for Newport, the same day, October 19, 1864, to the great relief of the inhabitants.
After a catastrophic fire in 1866 which devastated the entire campus, the town of Northfield welcomed the struggling school. The Civil War, the fire, and the uncertainty regarding the continuation of the University seriously lowered the attendance, and the school opened in the fall of 1866 with only 19 students. The 1870s and 1880s saw many financially turbulent times for the institution and the renaming of the school to Lewis College in 1880. In 1881 the student body was reduced to only a dozen men. Later, by 1884, the Vermont Legislature had the name of the school changed back to Norwich. In 1898 the university was designated as the Military
2:40
SARAJEVO ROSES-A Film by Roger M. Richards
SARAJEVO ROSES
Currently in production-see it in fall 2010
http://www.sarajevoroses.com
D...
published: 09 May 2009
Author: Roger M. Richards
SARAJEVO ROSES-A Film by Roger M. Richards
SARAJEVO ROSES
Currently in production-see it in fall 2010
http://www.sarajevoroses.com
During the four-year siege of the Bosnian capital city of Sarajevo, hundreds of thousands of bombs rained upon the city from the surrounding hills. Every shell exploding on a road or paved area left an imprint resembling that of a flower. Today, some of these craters remain, their 'petals' painted red and referred to as 'Sarajevo roses' by its citizens, like scars on the heart, a reminder of the innocent blood that was spilled on these streets.
SARAJEVO ROSES is the true story of Asim Haracic, a Bosnian-American doctor and musician. In this cinematic essay, he relates his life story and philosophy forged from a life of change and upheaval, growing up during the Tito-era communist Yugoslavia, starting a family and then having life shattered by war, surviving the siege of Sarajevo and then fleeing into exile to start a new life.
SYNOPSIS
As the longest siege of the 20th Century rages, the doctor, trained as a plastic surgeon, alternates daily shifts as an army medic on the frontlines of the besieged city and as an emergency room doctor at Kosevo hospital, using his skills to help wounded citizens of Sarajevo survive the daily shelling and sniper fire from the Bosnian Serbs. He finds himself in an existentialist nightmare of no hope for the future, where the meaning of life is defined simply as a struggle for day-to-day survival.
In 1995, after surviving three-and-a-half years under siege, the doctor sends his wife and their four-month-old son through the only escape route from Sarajevo. They crawl through an underground tunnel under the tarmac of the airport, ringed by the Bosnian Serb army. They then trudge on foot, at night, over heavily mined Mount Igman, the site of the 1984 Winter Olympics biathlon event. Finding sanctuary in the USA, they begin rebuilding their lives and eventually become US citizens.
Moving to near Washington, DC, the doctor begins composing songs and also putting to music some of the poems in a friend’s war journal, as part of his healing process from the emotional toll of war. Ironically, Dr. Asim Haracic, who retrained as a psychiatrist when he came to America, now counsels citizens of the Washington, DC area suffering from mental trauma resulting from violence and personal loss.
The most important aspect of SARAJEVO ROSES is that it offers an insight into how a beautiful, modern 20th century city that hosted the 1984 Winter Olympic Games, an event celebrating and showcasing the pinnacle of humanity’s athletic achievement and brotherhood, could only eight years later become a symbol of the lowest of forms of man’s depravity and brutality toward his neighbor. For generations to come these questions will be asked by scholars and historians. This film is a meditation on how the near dismantling of civilization as we know it can happen in a brief span of time when the right, or wrong, conditions are created. It also explores the concept of memory, both personal and collective, and how distorted history and memory can be passed down through generations and used to justify extremism and destroying ‘the other’.
SARAJEVO ROSES is the story one man’s search for inner peace after the trauma of war, and a personal testimony to his descendants in the hope that they will come to understand that love and living fully in the present is the best thing we can hope for as human beings.
Filmmaker/photographer Roger M. Richards in 1992 began documenting the siege of Sarajevo during the bloody disintegration of Yugoslavia. His work chronicled the entire war and the city’s transition to peace over the span of 17 years. During the war his path crossed with Dr. Asim Haracic several times, but they never formally met until peacetime.
TECHNICAL NOTES: Sarajevo Roses is being filmed with an Aaton XTRPlus Super 16mm camera and a Beaulieu 4008 ZMII Super 8mm; older footage was shot with a Canon XL-1 MiniDV camera. The transfer of the Super 16mm Kodak Vision 3 500T 7219 footage to 1920x1080 Apple ProRes 422 (HQ) HD format for this teaser was done at Cinelicious http://cinelicious.tv in Los Angeles, California.
4:50
Oval Ride - March 19, 2011
The Oval Ride is a 80 mile fast paced group ride based out of Fort Collins, CO during the ...
published: 19 Mar 2011
Author: ergon
Oval Ride - March 19, 2011
The Oval Ride is a 80 mile fast paced group ride based out of Fort Collins, CO during the winter months. The local cyclists use this as a hard race effort. Jeff Kerkove of Team Topeak-Ergon is in the mix and has the Epic Cam HD mounted to his stem. Notable rider in the pack is Alexi Grewal who won the gold medal at the 1984 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles. Alexi is making his comeback to pro-level racing in 2011.
Filmed with Epic Cam HD: http://www.epicstealthcam.com
2:06
Trailer for "Downhill: The Bill Johnson Story"
The full-length documentary on skiing's greatest rebel and cult-hero, Bill Johnson, is arg...
published: 13 Sep 2010
Author: The Ski Channel
Trailer for "Downhill: The Bill Johnson Story"
The full-length documentary on skiing's greatest rebel and cult-hero, Bill Johnson, is arguably the definitive Greek Tragedy of mountain sports. Johnson's story starts with his Ali-like claim that “everyone else was racing for second.” The "Nose Picker" as Austrian downhill ski legend, Franz Klammer called him, made good on his bet when he struck Downhill Gold in Sarajevo at the 1984 Winter Olympics. Add two more World Cup victories shortly after and Johnson was alpine skiing’s greatest downhiller, sitting on top of the world . . . "And then it was gone," said Olympic Gold Medalist Phil Mahre of Johnson’s triumphant rise and subsequent fall from grace. The documentary depicts this journey and tells a personal tale of a fallen hero, seeking to win back his family, and his life.
Youtube results:
7:06
1984 Winter Olympics - Pairs Figure Skating Free Skate - Part 9 - Carruthers & Carruthers
Kitty & Peter Carruthers USA...
published: 12 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Pairs Figure Skating Free Skate - Part 9 - Carruthers & Carruthers
Kitty & Peter Carruthers USA
7:22
1984 Winter Olympics - 90 Meter Ski Jump Part 1
Armin Kogler AUT Ladislav Dluhous TCH Reed Zuehlke USA Dennis McGrane USA...
published: 28 Dec 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - 90 Meter Ski Jump Part 1
Armin Kogler AUT Ladislav Dluhous TCH Reed Zuehlke USA Dennis McGrane USA
8:03
1984 Winter Olympics - Ladies Figure Skating Compulsory Figures Part 1
1984 Winter Olympics - Ladies Figure Skating Compulsory Figures Part 1...
published: 15 Oct 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Ladies Figure Skating Compulsory Figures Part 1
1984 Winter Olympics - Ladies Figure Skating Compulsory Figures Part 1
6:40
1984 Winter Olympics - Men's Luge 4th Run - Part 2
Paul Hildgartner ITA Sergei Danilin URS...
published: 13 Aug 2011
Author: westnyacktwins
1984 Winter Olympics - Men's Luge 4th Run - Part 2
Paul Hildgartner ITA Sergei Danilin URS