DCI Magazine Winter, 2010 Excerpt

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The 27th Lancers (foreground) played an important role in the Opening Ceremonies of the 1980 Winter Olympics.

In 1980, the 27th Lancers Drum and Bugle Corps braved the elements to march at the Lake Placid Winter Games. They saw a miracle along the way.

The United States was a nation in transition when the Winter Olympics began in Lake Placid, New York, on February 13, 1980: Fifty-three Americans were being held hostage in Iran; the nation’s economy was struggling, in part due to an oil crisis that sent prices skyrocketing; political winds of change were blowing, with California Gov. Ronald Reagan just months away from securing the Republican presidential nomination and a subsequent November general-election victory over incumbent President Jimmy Carter. It was against this backdrop that the 1980 Winter Olympics gave America one of its greatest sporting thrills of all time: A ragtag group of U.S. hockey players, in a stunning upset, defeated the formidable Soviet Union en route to winning the gold medal. In the process, the upstart Americans—at least for a time—helped lift the national malaise.

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