Archive for January 28th, 2009

Beijing Olympic – China’s largest regional airline set up in Tianjin

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

China’s largest regional airline by fleet size and the number of routes, Grand China Express, was set up in the northern port city of Tianjin on Friday.

The new carrier, owned by Hainan Airlines Group and its subsidiary Hainan Airlines Co. Ltd., operates a 29-strong fleet of 32-seat Dornier 328-300 jets on 78 routes linking 54 cities, said Chen Feng, board chairman of the Hainan Airlines Co. Ltd., at an inauguration ceremony.

The company, with a registered capital of 100 million yuan (12.5 million U.S. dollars), will buy 100 regional jets from Embraer in Brazil from now on till 2012, including 50 ERJ145s and 50 EMB190s, Chen said.

By then, the airline will operate on more than 450 routes, linking at least 90 cities, taking more than 90 percent of the domestic regional aviation market, he said.

Regional aviation, also known as feeder-line services, operates between small cities, with routes typically from 500 to 1,000 km. The services usually use aircraft which seat less than 100 passengers.

(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

Chinese Pinyin – bi (嬖)

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009
嬖   [bì]
国标码:E6D4 部首:女 笔画:16 笔顺:5132514143112531
(treat as a) favorite
(Source: dict.cn)

China Travel – Fanmin Statue and Stone Tablet

Wednesday, January 28th, 2009

The Fanmin Statue and Stone Tablet are located in Modong Village, two kilometers south of Lushan County in Sichuan Province.

Fan Min, born in Fanjiasi of Lushan County, lived between 120 and 203 in the Eastern Han Dynasty (25-220) and served as deputy governor of Yongchang County. The statue of Fan Min, which was built in 205, later collapsed, but the left side of the statue was restored in 1958. There are two well-preserved stone beasts standing in front of the statue, Tianlu and Bixie. The top of the statue is lined with five ridges and a carving of Hercules with both hands held up high. Under the eaves are embossments of the dragon and his nine sons; the dragon, with raised head and tail, is carrying nine sons on his back.

Standing next to the statue is the 2.5-by-1.7-meter Fanmin Tablet. A line of seal characters is engraved at the center that reads: the Tablet of Sir Fan, Late Prefect of the Han Dynasty. An epigraph is inscribed beneath it.

(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)