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		 Australia 
		hopes lost Freeman Olympic body suit recovered 
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		[December 23, 2014] 
		SYDNEY (Reuters) - The lycra body 
		suit that Cathy Freeman wore to light the cauldron at the Sydney 
		Olympics may have been returned 14 years after it went missing from her 
		dressing room, the Australian Olympic Committee said on Tuesday. | 
		
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			 Freeman, an Aboriginal athlete who went on to win gold in the 400 
			meters at the Games, wore the suit at the climax of the opening 
			ceremony in 2000, a moment seen by many as a statement of 
			reconciliation with indigenous Australians. 
 The item of clothing is in the possession of police after being 
			handed in anonymously at the Melbourne Cricket Ground (MCC), which 
			houses the National Sports Museum.
 
 "On that night, Cathy was soaked while standing under a waterfall 
			after a mechanical fault delayed the lighting of the cauldron," said 
			an AOC statement released on Tuesday.
 
			
			 "She removed the suit after the ceremony and it has not been seen 
			since.
 "What happened to the suit has been the subject of much debate over 
			the years as it is a major part of Australia's Olympic history.
 
 "We are hoping the item of clothing handed to the MCC Museum is 
			authentic and the mystery is finally solved."
 
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			Local media reports in 2010 quoted a Games volunteer as saying the 
			suit, which was white with blue detail, had been destroyed to save 
			the embarrassment of organizers as the Olympic rings had been 
			printed upside down on it.
 (Reporting by Nick Mulvenney, editing by patrick Johnston)
 
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