Archive for May 26th, 2009

Beijing Olympic – Archers scoop valued experiences at Olympic run-up

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

As the 2008 Beijing Olympic Games looms down, athletes worldwide have great concern over anything pertinent to the Olympics. Pre-Olympic archery trial opened up here on Monday to render archers much-valued experiences.

For U.S. top archer Jennifer Nichols, the experiences in the Olympic venue are much valued than results before the Olympic Games officially show up.

“Actually, I don’t have any expectation. I just came here to experience the weather and the venue. It’s my first time in China. I’m here for experience,” said Nichols after the women’s preliminaries, who finished fourth in this year’s World Championships in Leipzig of Germany.

For Nichols, the weather in Beijing is not in her favor, but the venue impresses her.

“The weather does take some time to get used to, because I come from a very dry place and here is much more humid. But the venue is so beautiful, I like it very much. There is a little wind today, but it’s an excellent location,” said Nichols.

Nichols revealed her knack of easing up during competition. ” Sometimes we (archers) just talked about the weather or how we shot one end or another. Sometimes about family at home. Just all kinds of stuff. It helped me to be more concentrated and relaxed,” added Nichols.

Nichols’ concern is echoed by Chinese Taipei’s coach Li Zheng Lan.

“We do not have a set goal. We just came here to experience the field and adapt to the conditions here,” said Li after the women’s preliminaries.

Chinese Taipei is ranked in the fifth place in women’s team in 1,923 points. They captured the silver at the Leipzig World Championship last month.

Japan’s Hayakawa Nami, who is originally from South Korea but now competing for Japan, also put her priority on test like the tournament does.

“Well, my priorities are to test the field and my form as well. They are equally important for me here. Medals? No, I don’t think that’s what I came here for,” Hayakawa said.

Hayakawa took gold at the Indoor World Championships in Turkey this year.

In terms of results in the preliminaries, it’s a awful day for British archer Naomi Folkard, but she was not depressed for she met her main objectives here.

Folkard shot to the clicker in the seventh end, and then got a one in the eighth end.

“The outcome does not matter. I am just learning for next year, like becoming familiar with the surroundings, the weather and the wind,” said Folkard, adding that could help her to be mentally stronger next year.

Folkard is worried with the hot weather here, so to experience more is a must for her to acclimatize herself to the Beijing Olympics better.

“It’s very hot, and maybe it will affect my performance and concentration, so the experience here beforehand is extraordinarily significant,” said Folkard.

International Archery Tournament is one of a series of pre-Olympic test events in the run-up to the Beijing Olympics.

There are 113 archers from 27 nations and regions taking part in the “Good Luck Beijing” Olympic archery test slated for Aug. 20-26.

(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)

China Travel – Beiting Ancient City Site

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

The Beiting Ancient City is located in Hubaozi, about 12 kilometers north of Jimusaer County in the Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region.

The city, developed from Tingzhou City of the Tang Dynasty (618-907), was a town of military importance in North China until its desolation in the early Ming (1368-1644).

In 1820 during the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911), Chinese scholar Xu Song carried out the first site study and discovered some precious cultural relics, such as stone tablets from the Tang Dynasty. Between 1979 and 1980, the Archaeological Research Institute of the Chinese Social Science Academy discovered a large number of clay statues and exquisite frescos at a Buddhist temple site from the Gaochang Huihu period , about 700 meters north of the city.

The ancient city was built on a large scale, assuming an irregular oblong shape. The inner city is located in the northeast part of the central outer city. The outer city has a perimeter of 4,596 meters, while the inner one measures 3,003 meters. The 10-meter-high city walls were built with tampered earth about eight to 12 meters thick. The city is surrounded by military defense works, such as the city moat. Original constructions from within the city no longer exist, with the exception of three damaged city-wall bases and nine other dilapidated sites, two of which are temples.

According to analyses, the outer city was built during the Zhenguan reign of the Tang Dynasty (627-649), while the inner city was built during the Gaochang Huihu period, A large number of cultural relics from the Tang period were unearthed at the site, including flat and round tiles, square bricks with lotus-flower patterns, bronze official seals, bronze lions, stone lions, bronze mirrors, stone balls, pipes and porcelain wares.

(Source: chinaculture.org)

Chinese Culture – Literary Mind and the Carving of Dragons

Tuesday, May 26th, 2009

This literature critic was compiled by Liu Xie (466?-539?), and it is the first literary critical work, dealing comprehensively with the genres, subject matters, forms and styles of all Chinese literature of the author’s own period. According to Liu Xie, literary creation has to be an organic whole under the control of mind, thought and imagination, or with his own words, “the literary mind is that mind which strives after literary forms… Since from time immemorial literary writings have always adopted an ornate style, and yet I am not implicating myself in the type of dragon carving style”.

Accordingly, the first part of his book consists of descriptions and critics of 34 different literary styles: Sao (elegic poetry of the South), Shi (lyric poetry), Yuefu (songs of the Han Music Bureau), Fu (rhapsody), Song (odes), Zan (pronouncements), Zhu (sacrificial praying), Meng (oaths of agreement), Ming (inscriptions), Zhen (exhortations), lei (elegies), Bei (epitaphs), Ai (laments), Diao (condolences), Zawen (miscellaneous writings), Xie (humorous writings), Yin (enigmas), Shizhuan (historical writings), Zhuzi (speculative writings of the Masters), Lun (treatises), Shuo (discussions), Zhao (edicts), Ce (scripts), Xi (war proclamations), Yi (dispatches), Fengshan (sacrifices to Heaven and Earth), Zhang (memoranda), Biao (memorials), Zou (presentations), Qi (opening communications), Yi (discussions), Dui (responses), Shu (letters) and Ji (notes).

In the second half of The Literary Mind and the Carving of Dragons, Liu Xie developed his own proposals for a good writing composition, expounding flexibility, choice of style, emotion and expression, musicalness, parallelism, metaphor and allegory, hyperbole, choice of words, literary flaws, organization, and so on.

Source: chinaculture.org