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Ethics Sustainable Design ? Economics ? Entrepreneurship ? Ethics the end 。 Antique Markets ? Business amp。 Thesis 1 ? Senior Seminar amp。 and Millie, an Echidna, are three native animals chosen as mascots for the Sydney 2022 Games. These Australian animals represent the earth, air and water. ? Ollie: epitomises the Olympic spirit of generosity and universal generosity (from Olympic). ? Syd: represents the environment and captures the vigour and energy of Australia and its people (from Sydney). ? Millie: is a technowhiz and information guru, with all the facts and figures at her fingertips (from Millennium). ? The Organising Committee received hundreds of submissions from artists, children and others from around the world. Matthew Hatton’s design was chosen to represent the Olympic mascots for the forthing millennium. Artist M Lafargue Details Schuss, a little man on skis, is actually the very first unofficial Olympic mascot. Schuss appeared at the 1968 Olympic Winter Games in Grenoble. He was featured on a pin and on small toys but not as a plush mascot. 冬季奧運(yùn)會(huì)吉祥物 ? Details A snowman was chosen as the official mascot for the Games in Innsbruck in 1976. Schneemann appeared on pins and on many other souvenirs. For collectors, he is greatly sought after as a plush toy. ? Artist Don Moss ? Designer Capital Sports ? Details The mascot Roni replaced the live raccoon mascot Rocky of Lake Placid who died before the Winter Games in 1980. ? The raccoon took many different forms, and Roni was the first mascot to appear in sporting poses on various products. ? Designer Joze Trebec Details Vucko was designed by Joze Trebec of Kranja and was chosen by the readers of major Yugoslav newspapers to be the 1984 Sarajevo Games Mascot. Vucko was elected from a list of six finalists which included a snowball (grudva), a mountain goat (divozoka), a chipmonk (lasica), a lamb (jagjne) and a porcupine (jez). The words in brackets are SerboCroat words for the animals, and not their names. ? Designer Sheila Scott, Great Scott Productions ? Details The bear siblings Hidy and Howdy from the 1988 Winter Games in Calgary were the first dual mascots in the Olympic Games. They took the form of inseparable brother and sister polar bears. ? The Calgary Zoo sponsored a contest to name the bears. Among the nearly 7,000 entries submitted, the names Hidy and Howdy were eventually chosen. ? ? Designer Philippe Mairesse ? Details The paunch blue Snow Imp named Magique became the mascot of the Albertville Winter Games. The first mascot, Chamois, a mountain goat mon to the Savoie region of France, was unceremoniously dropped about two years before the 1992 Winter Games. ? Details Lillehammer had the first peoplelike mascots of the Olympic Games. Haakon and Kristin were two children from Norwegian folklore, and they appeared on pins, posters and stickers as well as in threedimensional plush toys, wooden carved objects, plastic piggybanks, pewter, and plastic miniature figurines. There were also several pairs of reallife blond, blue eyed Norwegian children who, in keeping with the loveable mascots’ human form, portrayed them intheflesh and travelled the world promoting the Games. Details “Sukki”, “Nokki”, “Lekki”, and “Tsukki ” were the names of the four snow owls (貓頭鷹) that became the mascots of Nagano. Originally, the Nagano mascot was a weasel named Snowple, bu