WINTER OLYMPICS
MAY 21 2009 08:11h
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`I think people are poking a little bit of fun at us,` VANOC Chief Executive John Furlong said.
"We're not worried about it at all," Dave Cobb, the executive vice-president of the Vancouver Organizing Committee (VANOC) told reporters on Wednesday, in response to a newspaper article that dubbed the torch "The Olympic Toke."
Vancouver is a major production area for illegal marijuana, and there has been quiet snickering about the comparison since the high-tech metal torch was unveiled in February to mark the one-year countdown to the Winter Games.
The torch's design is intended to "represent Canada through the contours of winter landscapes and lines of winter sports," according to VANOC's website.
But the design is slightly crimped at each end, with a twist in the body, giving it at least a passing resemblance to a hand-rolled marijuana joint.
"I think people are poking a little bit of fun at us," VANOC Chief Executive John Furlong said.
The torch will travel the length and breadth of Canada in a 106-day, 45,000-km (27,275-mile) relay that starts in October and ends with the lighting of the Olympic Flame in Vancouver in February 2010.
VANOC says it has had more requests from Canadian communities wanting to participate in the torch relay than the schedule can handle. The route will stay within Canada.



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