BEIJING (AP):
ON THE eve of their national coming out party, almost everyone in Beijing seemed to be practising something.
At the National Indoor Stadium, Chinese gymnasts tumbled and did flips, much to the delight of the 200 or so volunteers who sat together in the stands and cheered every move they made.
In the square outside the iconic Bird's Nest stadium, hundreds of white-gloved Chinese soldiers practised their own kind of sport, never missing a stride while marching stiffly in suffocating heat as their officers barked orders.
And almost everywhere around the Olympic Green, it seemed, Chinese eager to show off their skills and their country were practising their English.
For most, the phrases didn't come easy.
"Please, hello," one woman said, handing a visitor a camera to take her picture outside the Bird's Nest. "Thank you, sorry."
Service with a smile
Luckily, no Olympic medals will be at stake in the foreign language competition, though golds could be given out for effort. And, truthfully, the English was often better than the few snippets of Mandarin that a few Western visitors dared to practise themselves.
More important to the Chinese, perhaps, it almost always came with a smile, even when the message wasn't anything to smile about.
"Sorry, is forbidden," an Army sentry said, a smile fixed on his face as he refused entry to the Bird's Nest, where still more practice was taking place for an opening ceremony that many Chinese thought would never come but was now only hours away.
Seven years and untold billions of dollars in the making, the most grandiose of all Olympics opens tomorrow with what, by all accounts, figures to be the most grandiose of all opening ceremonies. And China has seemingly left nothing to chance in preparing an Olympics for the ages.
From the huge new glass-and-steel airport that seems to have everything but passengers to the instant forest that sprouted around the Olympic green, everything about these Games screams overkill. That includes the massive contingent of mostly young Olympic volunteers, who scurry around in such numbers that any question usually draws five or six of them eager to volunteer an answer.
Showing pride
Most will never see an event themselves, unless they draw a coveted assignment inside a venue. But it's a chance to try out their English, get a colourful blue and white shirt, and show pride in what their country has done.
"It's like a promotion," said Eric Yang, a 19-year-old marketing student. "A grand promotion is what it is."
Yang and fellow volunteer Zeng Hao stood on a busy street corner down the street from the main Olympic area yesterday talking about what the Games means to their country. Ninety per cent of Chinese, they estimated, supported the Games and they themselves thought it would lead to more openness in the country.
Their only concern was the blanket of smog that seemed to settle even deeper into the city as the day went on.
"We hope not but the weather is always bad in Beijing in the summer," Yang said. "It's beyond our control."