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I've flown Dublin-London routes for 25 years. I've just experienced these firsts:
The first-ever announcement on a British train that didn't sound like it was being piped in live from Atlantis. Clear, crisp, friendly voice. A bizarre moment.
An unprecedented display of signs at airport and train stations, all in that London Olympic hot pink. It's going be impossible to get lost in central London.
My first clean London escalator. They usually look and sound like they haven't been cleaned or oiled since the Blitz. But coming up to the surface at Victoria, I'm dazzled by the gleaming, obviously scoured stainless steel on the steps and walls. Not a blemish of gum or graffiti in sight.
London is looking cleaner and better than ever, dating to my first time living here in 1988.
--Shawn Pogatchnik
http://twitter.com/ShawnPogatchnik
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QUICK CHANGE
There's plenty of activity going on in Green Park near Buckingham Palace, where the Olympic torch is scheduled to pass later Thursday. But it was still a surprise to see a gorgeous model attempting an outfit change in the middle of the park.
Cloaked in a blanket held by a stylist, the 6-foot stunner slipped into a green dress, then followed directions from a photographer to run barefoot through the park. Get a glimpse here: http://bit.ly/Q9WUBU
--Jenna Fryer
http://twitter.com/jennafryer
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TORCH TALK
Big day for the Olympic torch.
It visits multiple tourist attractions, meets Princes William and Harry, goes to Buckingham Palace and on and on.
It's like Tour de Britain.
--Danica Kirka
http://twitter.com/danicakirka
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SARAJEVO SYMBOLISM
The secretary general of the United Nations took a symbolic run through he former Olympic city of Sarajevo before he comes to London to carry the Olympic torch toward the 2012 games.
Ban Ki-moon carried a torch Thursday morning in the Olympic Stadium in Sarajevo, home to the 1984 Winter Olympics -- and years of war and hard times afterward. Ban ran alongside Sarajevo's marathon runner Islam Djugum, who even during Bosnia's 1992-95 war trained daily -- but only after dark, to avoid snipers.
Ban said he saw in Sarajevo a city that has risen from ashes and ruins and is now pulsing with "real life."
--Aida Cerkez in Sarajevo
http://twitter.com/aidacerkez
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WRONG FLAG
It didn't seem to get in the way of the soccer -- for the North Koreans, at least.
North Korea's women's soccer team defeated Colombia 2-0 after the match was delayed for more than an hour over the diciest of diplomatic miscues: the mistaken display, by London Olympic organizers, of the South Korean flag instead of the North Korean one on a jumbo screen overlooking the field.
"If this matter couldn't have been resolved, then I thought going on is nonsense," coach Sin Ui Gun said through an interpreter after the game is Glasgow, Scotland. "We were angry because our players were introduced as if they were from South Korea, which may affect us very greatly as you might know."
Mea culpa, said the London Olympic operation, saying "steps will be taken to ensure this does not happen again."
North Korea and South Korea are bitter rivals who remain technically at war six decades after the 1950-53 Korean war, which ended in a truce.
--Frank Griffiths
http://twitter.com/fgriffithsap
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LATE-NIGHT FIREWORKS
It was a midnight Olympic light show -- unexpected and free -- for residents of London's Stratford section.
A technical rehearsal for the opening ceremony wrapped up past midnight with two full minutes of fireworks early Thursday over Olympic Stadium, a spectacular (if loud) treat for the neighborhood that adjoins Olympic Park. On Stratford's High Street, people making their way home stopped, looked up and oohed and ahhed.
Will it offset the expected gridlock they're girding for in their community? Maybe not. But it was a nice late-night gift for those out and about at the late hour.
--Ted Anthony
http://twitter.com/anthonyted
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FIRE AND EMOTION
The most striking thing about the Olympic torch relay is just how touching it is.
Hundreds of people, many families with young children, got up early Thursday to see the torch as it left the north London district of Camden at 6:50 a.m. The good-natured crowd defied security guards' efforts to corral them behind barriers, mobbing the former English rugby star who was the first torchbearer of the day.
Forget the celebrities and the sports stars and the local heroes carrying the torch. The crowd itself was the star.
It was Day 69 of a 70-day journey across the country that culminates in Friday's opening ceremony. It made me wish I still had a 4-year-old I could pop on my shoulders and say, "Look, Kelly -- there's the torch!" Hundreds of family memories were made today.
--Sheila Norman-Culp
http://twitter.com/snormanculp
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RISE, SHINE
Up and at it early, and it's easy for an American to be fresh at this hour. Why? Because most pubs in London close between 11 p.m. and midnight -- far earlier than we're used to back in the U.S.
That's old news to the locals, but a bit of a bummer to visitors who are just getting warmed up at that hour.
But maybe it's a blessing. With the Olympic torch hitting central London on Thursday and due to pass many landmarks, navigating is going to be tricky and probably best done without a pounding headache.
--Jenna Fryer
http://twitter.com/jennafryer
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NOTE -- "Eyes on London" shows you the Olympics through the eyes of Associated Press journalists across the 2012 Olympic city and around the world. Follow them on Twitter where available with the handles listed after each item, and get even more AP updates from the Games here: http://twitter.com/AP_Sports.
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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