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| A promotional billboard in China promotes the 2008 Summer Games in Beijing, using the official motto, "One World, One Dream." |
Wu Moutian, head of China's Doping Control Center, is already losing sleep over next summer's Olympics, not to mention his government's vow to host the cleanest Games ever. "I never had experience organizing such a big lab," he says.
Don't worry, he'll have help. Lab directors from around the world will fly in to supervise the estimated 4,500 tests Wu expects to conduct. His 5,000-square-meter facility, which is still under construction, will house 150 drug testers and the largest collection of detection machinery ever assembled for a sporting event. "We will be operating -- how do you say in English? -- 24/7," says Wu. Olympic organizers are counting on him to burnish China's rogue image. Doping rumors have dogged its national teams for years. In 1993, the country's previously unheralded female distance runners set three world records in one week. Their coach, Ma Junren, credited turtle blood and caterpillar fungus, but no one was surprised when, in 2000, he and 27 athletes were banned before the Sydney Games for "suspicious blood test results." More recently, in August 2006, officers raided a sports camp in the northeastern province of Liaoning, where they found trainers openly injecting students. The refrigerator in the headmaster's office held 300 doses of EPO and 141 bottles of steroids. Zhao Jian, head of the Anti-Doping Commission of the Chinese Olympic Committee, says the bust proves China's seriousness. "If we hear of someone using drugs," he says, "we will show up to their house." Wu should benefit from a more-sensitive blood test to detect growth hormone, which the World Anti-Doping Agency hopes to debut before Beijing; the test used in Athens in 2004 didn't catch a single user. "Each Olympics has problems," Wu says, "and we will have ours. You can't solve everything in two years. But we will have a lot of help." -- Shaun Assael![]() | |
| Wu Moutian (left) and Zhao Jian promise brighter skies for Beijing. |
How do you score 72 points in the first quarter of a football game? Here's how. It's the first-quarter scoring summary from Smith Center High's 83-0 victory against Plainville in the Kansas high school playoffs Tuesday night.
First Quarter 10:59 -- Smith Center, Braden Wilson, 50-yard run (Braden Wilson run)![]() | |
| In order to photograph samples of GenSci's popular HGH formulation, Jintropin . . . |
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| ... a Magazine photographer first asked to purchase the drug at a local Beijing pharmacy, but was refused because he did not have a prescription ... |
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| ... the situation was quickly remedied when the photographer went to a nearby hospital and requested a prescription for HGH, which he was given immediately, no questions asked. |