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			"I'm just so happy I couldn't sleep last night," said Liu Yuzhen, a 
			54-year-old retiree who was one of the dancers. "It's our torch and 
			it's in Beijing. It's a chance of a hundred years and it's finally 
			here." From the Forbidden City, the torch was to pass landmarks such as 
			the futuristic egg-shaped National Center for the Performing Arts 
			and Tiananmen Square. The expansive square is iconic for its 
			symbolism as the seat of the communist government, but also was the 
			focus of pro-democracy demonstrations in 1989 that were violently 
			crushed by security forces. The crowd in Tiananmen square was small and strictly controlled 
			in ordered lines as the torch wound its way around Mao's mausoleum. 
			The only people allowed in were media and organized groups of 
			supporters, mostly from major Olympic sponsors Lenovo and Coca-Cola, 
			who shouted "Go China! Go Olympics!" and waved corporate flags. "I feel the Olympics will help China develop, because China used 
			to be so closed, and it gives an opportunity for the whole world to 
			see China," said Weng Jianming, a 21-year old student at the Beijing 
			University of Forestry. He got up at 3 a.m. to be bused to the square but it was worth it 
			to catch a glimpse of Yao Ming, he said. The torch will end the day's relay at the Temple of Heaven in 
			south Beijing, where the emperor went to perform sacrifices for a 
			good harvest. The Beijing leg will involve 841 torchbearers over 
			three days and will also visit the Great Wall at Badaling, a site 
			where prehistoric fossils of Peking Man were discovered. Security was tight along the torch run and Tiananmen Square was 
			secured by armed police officers. The only people allowed onto the 
			square were media and special guests. Organizers have been on heightened alert since an attack in the 
			country's restive Muslim region in the west killed 16 policemen on 
			Monday. On Tuesday, International Olympic Committee President Jacques 
			Rogge said the committee was discussing whether to eliminate 
			international relays. He said the IOC would retain its tradition of 
			lighting the Olympic flame in Ancient Olympia and starting the torch 
			relay in Greece, but may limit flame processions to domestic routes 
			within Olympic host countries.
[Associated 
			Press; 
			
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
			
			
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