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Listed 4 sub titles with search on: Olympic games for destination: "AMSTERDAM Town NETHERLANDS".


Olympic games (4)

Modern Olympic Games

Amsterdam 1928

   After three consecutive failures to secure the Games, in 1916, 1920 and 1924, the Dutch Olympic Committee announced to their government that the Games, finally, were to be hosted in Amsterdam, in August. In return, the government expressed their great joy for the success but when it came to money the state said that they never accepted such a burden anyway... The only way for the committee was then to appeal to the public and, within six months, they managed to collect more than 30% of the money needed. It was little but it proved to be enough of a motive to activate the powerful Dutch commercial corporations throughout the world. Their generous sponsorings covered the rest of the sum budgeted for the 1928 Amsterdam Olympics. These are the first Olympics to include officially, that is with de Coubertin's approval, the women's track and field. Despite de Coubertin's okaying, the baron himself, presenting reasons of health, resigned and left the Games. From Lausanne, where he resided, he sent his message: "The Games are a man's affair and any deviation from the ancient Greek rules is a capital mistake".
   The appearance of women in the track brought many a comment with a tendency to ridiculing by some sportswriters. In some of the events, women did not even finish the race and the ones who did, collapsed!
   To show his admiration and to support the feminist spirit, Prince Hendrick sang a Dutch cantata and was widely applauded!
   Amsterdam's Olympics proved to be a nightmare for all the world's big newspapers who had sent sports reporters and photographers. The nightmare visited the newsmen in uniform when Amsterdam policemen invaded the reporter's section, during the events, and confiscated every camera on sight. There were many violent incidents that occurred and in one of them an Irish newsphotographer punched a policeman and broke his nose. All this brought protests from all over the world and there were even State Secretaries that had to intervene. The explanation: The Dutch Olympic Committee had "sold" the photography rights to a Dutch photo agency. It was at this agency that the newsmen had to go to, the next after the events day, and buy the photographic material they wanted for their papers and magazines. This is why the Amsterdam Olympics are considered to be the poorest Olympics when photography is concerned...

Text by Dimitri N. Marcopoulos

Amsterdam 1928

Links with various Organizations' WebPages:
The Olympic Movement
American Sport Art Museum and Archives , a division of the United States Sports Academy
International Sailing Federation

Amsterdam 1928

Links with various Media's WebPages:
Australian Broadcasting Corporation
British Broadcasting Corporation

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