柽 [chēng]
Archive for November, 2009
Chinese Pinyin – cheng (柽)
Friday, November 27th, 2009Beijing Olympic – Wariner reclaims lead in men’s 400m in Paris
Friday, November 27th, 2009
Wariner and Merritt at the Golden League in Paris(Photo credit: Michael Steele/Getty Images)
(BEIJING, July 21) — Jeremy Wariner, Athens 2004 Olympic gold medallist, reasserted his dominance with a 43.86-second finish in the men’s 400m at the AF Golden League in Paris on July 18.
LaShawn Merritt, the US Olympic trials champion, who has defeated Wariner twice this season, finished a distant second with 44.35 seconds.
Looking back, Wariner insisted that his confidence had not been affected by his loss to Merrit at the US trials.
“My confidence was never shot since I lost those races,” Wariner was quoted by the International Association of Athletics Federations as saying. “Today I felt great running. When I saw my time I was excited, it was my second 43 of the season, and it’s a pretty good way of going into the Olympics now.”
(Source: en.beijing2008.cn)
China Travel – Leshan
Friday, November 27th, 2009Leshan, called Jiazhou in ancient times, lies at the confluence of three rivers — the Dadu, the Qingyi and the Minjiang. As one of the most culturally developed areas in Sichuan, Leshan is now a national level historical and cultural city. From the objects unearthed from the 10,000 cliff tombs of the Han Dynasty (206BC-220AD), one can look into the social and cultural development levels in the Leshan area at that time. Of these excavated articles, relic of Han Dynasty litterateur Guo Sheren annotating Er Ya , an early dictionary, in Wuyou Mountain is the most representative. In the Tang Dynasty (618-907), the Giant Buddha was constructed in Leshan. In the Song Dynasty (960-1279), Leshan fostered three most outstanding celebrities: Su Dongpo, his father and his younger brother. In the modern and contemporary histories, Guo Moruo, the great litterateur, came from here. The Jiazhou School of Painting developed its own characteristics and enjoyed a high reputation in the circle of traditional Chinese painting in Sichuan.
The particular natural scenery and human cultures form the tourist resources of Leshan. In the city, tourists can see with their own eyes the uncanny workmanship of the nature, which shaped the dignity of Leshan Sleeping Buddha; and the power of Buddhism, which created the artistic atmosphere like the Leshan Grand Buddha with efforts of several generations.
It is no wonder that Song Dynasty litterateurs Shao Bo and Su Dongpo wrote down famous poems to extol the fantastic scenery in Leshan.
(Source: chinaculture.org)


