|
Corporate Social Responsibility
News
5.05.2008 - 07:43am ET
|
CSR News from:
|
|
|
News Category:
|
|
Special Delivery: UPS Moving Ancient Terra Cotta Army
UPS 747-400 Air Freighter, Trucks Deliver Terra Cotta Warriors from Shanghai to Four U.S. Museums
(CSRwire) LOS ANGELES,CA - May 5, 2008 -- In the second century BC, the mighty armies
of Chinese Emperor Qin Shi Huang stormed neighboring states on horseback
and on foot. Today, a detachment of life-size terra cotta warriors
unearthed near Qin's tomb invaded the United States in a decidedly more
21st century fashion: aboard a brown-tailed UPS 747-400 air freighter.
UPS (NYSE:UPS) today unloaded an exhibit of the 2,200-year-old Chinese
terra cotta warriors, horses and other artifacts at its West coast air hub
in Ontario, Calif., after a long flight from Shanghai. Over the next two
years, they'll tour museums in Los Angeles, Houston, Atlanta and
Washington, D.C.
"We're proud that UPS has been selected to ship these fascinating and
priceless artifacts from China to the United States," said Bob Lekites,
president of UPS Airlines. "{This move requires an incredible amount of
planning and logistics and UPS definitely is up to the task."
Few know that better than UPS Airlines loadmaster Bland Matthews, who is
leading the UPS team coordinating the shipment. Matthews has coordinated
some of UPS's most unusual and challenging shipments, including deliveries
to the Georgia Aquarium of four whale sharks from Taipei, Taiwan, and a
pair of beluga whales from a Mexico City amusement park.
Matthews is most proud of UPS’s shipment of an entire Army field
hospital from Reno, Nev., to New Orleans just a few days after the levees
broke in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina in 2005.
More than 8,000 of the terra cotta warriors and horses were buried with
Emperor Qin in 210-209 BC. Chinese farmers digging a well in 1974 near
Xi'an in China's Shaanxi province discovered the Terra Cotta Army still
guarding the emperor's tomb.
The U.S.-bound exhibit was packed in 42 specially-constructed crates for
movement in the 747-400. The nose of the massive air freighter, the
newest in the UPS fleet, rises to allow the loading of the large cargo
through the front.
UPS flew the warriors from Shanghai to Anchorage, Alaska, then on to its
Ontario air hub where workers loaded them on three UPS Freight trucks
equipped with air-ride trailers for the trip to the Bowers Museum in Santa
Ana, Calif. The exhibit premieres at the museum on May 18.
"The long-awaited and highly anticipated arrival of the first emperor's
Terra Cotta Army in the United States for the first time is truly an
historic event," said Bowers Museum President Peter Keller. "Our UPS
driver is a familiar face here at the museum, but I have to admit we're a
lot more excited than usual about this particular delivery."
From the Bowers Museum (www.bowers.org), UPS will move the
exhibit by truck to other U.S. museums before flying it back to Shanghai.
The moves include:
1.October 2008: Bowers Museum in Santa Ana, Calif. to the
High Museum of Art in Atlanta (www.high.org).
2.May 2009: High Museum of Art in Atlanta to the Houston
Museum of Natural Science (www.hmns.org).
3.October 2009: Houston Museum of Natural Science to the
National Geographic Museum at Explorers Hall in Washington, D.C. (www.nationalgeographic.com/museum).
4.April 2010: National Geographic Museum at Explorers Hall
in Washington, D.C., to Beijing.
UPS Airlines (NYSE:UPS) is the ninth-largest airline in the world,
operating 268 aircraft that feature some of the industry's most advanced
in-flight technology. By offering customers a global portfolio for
shipping air freight, UPS's express and international air solutions help
business expand globally. UPS air operations are headquartered in
Louisville, Ky., and encompass more than 1,900 flight segments each day
serving more than 800 airports around the world. For more information,
visit ups.com. To get UPS news direct, visit pressroom.ups.com/RSS.
|
|