Showing posts with label City. Show all posts
Showing posts with label City. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

Modern dance blends tradition, hip-hop

HCM CITY — A dance performance featuring traditional music and hip-hop dance will be staged in Ha Noi and HCM City this week.

Faces is a work of German and French choreographers, Raphael Hillebrand and France Sebastien Ramirez, in collaboration with two musicians from Ha Noi, Hoang Thi Thanh Hoa and Ha Dinh Huy.

Nine Vietnamese dancers from well-known hip-hop groups, including Big Toe, Milky Way and Scared Crew, will wear faces that signify modern problems of youth.

The performance was created in 2008 as a collaboration between the Goethe Institute Viet Nam and L'Espace – the French Cultural Centre Ha Noi – supported by the Elysee Fund.

Performances will take place on Friday at the Tuoi Tre (Youth) Theatre in Ha Noi, and on Sunday at the Ben Thanh Theatre in HCM City.

Free tickets are available at the Goethe Institute in both cities from today. Faces will also travel to Paris and Berlin.

Japanese kimonos set to go on show

HCM CITY—A collection of kimonos, the traditional Japanese costume, will be showcased at a fashion show to be held in HCM City tonight by the HCM City Union of Friendship Organisations and its partners.

Kimono for Four Seasons: Spring, Summer, Autumn, and Winter, directed by Katsuko Wakabayashi, will show off garments for children and women for each season.

Traditional Japanese and western wedding clothes will also be on display.

Models from Nagoya in Japan will wear the clothes and be assisted by Japanese make-up artists and hair stylists. HUFO will be joined by the Viet Nam-Japan Business Club, the Nagoya city Labour Union, and Japan-based arts organisations in organising the event.

It will be held at HUFO's premises at 31 Le Duaûn Street, District 1. — VNS

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Monday, February 21, 2011

Cai luong artist marks 30 years

Old school: Cai luong artist Kim Tu Long (left) poses with actress Thoai My. Long will celebrate his 30-year career by a live performance in HCM City this week. — VNS File Photo

Old school: Cai luong artist Kim Tu Long (left) poses with actress Thoai My. Long will celebrate his 30-year career by a live performance in HCM City this week. — VNS File Photo

HCM CITY — Cai luong (reformed theatre) artist Kim Tu Long will mark the 30th anniversary of his career with a live performance in HCM City this week.

Thien Duong Cua Toi (My Paradise) will feature extracts from cai luong plays that helped him achieve fame – including Day Song Bach Dang Giang (Waves in the Bach Dang River), and Nang Tien Mau Don (Peony Fairy).

Long, also the show's director, said it offered him a chance to achieve his dream of "paradise" – or, as he described it, an ideal theatre show where several performances were staged in the best possible conditions and actors work hard.

Long, real name Hoang Kim Long, will be joined by Thoai My, Phuong Hang, Trong Nghia, and Que Tran for the show.

Comedians Hoai Linh and Bao Quoc, and singers Cam Ly and Phi Nhung will be special guests.

Day Song Bach Dang Giang will not be a solo effort. Instead, Long will collaborate with young director Vu Minh, and the play will feature nearly 150 dancers.

Long, born in Sai Gon (now HCM City) in 1966, developed an interest in cai luong at 14. He learned to sing vong co (nostalgic tunes), a traditional southern art form, and perform cai luong from Vuong Quang and the late People's Artist Phung Ha.

In 1985, he was a member of Tran Huu Trang Troupe 3, one of the region's leading cai luong performers. His strong voice and dance skills quickly made an impression on audiences.

In 1992, he won the prestigious Tran Huu Trang Award given to promising cai luong artists.

He also won the Nguoi Lao Dong (The Labourer) newspaper's Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Award for Favourite Cai Luong Actor in 2002, 2003, and 2009.

Thien Duong Cua Toi will be staged at the Hoa Binh Theatre in HCM City on Friday and Saturday. — VNS

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HCM City bicycle race gets facelift

HCM CITY — Ten years after it was first held, the Sai Gon Cyclo Challenge has been rejigged and will be organised in its new format at the Phu My Hung Urban Area in HCM City on March 12.

Cycle Challenge Version 2.0 aims to raise US$30,000 to help provide education to poor children.

The race at the Crescent will be open only to platinum and gold sponsors under the new format.

There will be eight of them – VinaCapital Group's VinaLiving, Adidas, HSBC, Hoang Long Hoan Vu, Jardines, Megastar, Halliburton, and VNG, the sole platinum sponsor.

It will be a relay race featuring four riders in each team, with the top three teams qualifying for the finals.

"It is like Formula 1 for cyclos," director of Sai Gon Children Charity (SCC), Paul Finnis, told a press conference on Thursday.

"We hope the HCM City community will join us for an exciting morning of racing and, in the process, help provide education for children," Finnis added.

An online campaign was launched on Thursday, with SCC partnering Zing Me, Viet Nam's largest social network, to launch a new version of Parking Challenge, one of the most popular games on Zing Me.

SCC will use the money raised through the race to support disadvantaged children in HCM City and the southern provinces of Dong Nai, Tay Ninh, Tien Giang, Tra Vinh, and Binh Phuoc.

Since 2001 it has raised $500,000 for building schools and providing scholarships and vocational training, enabling more than 3,500 children to equip themselves with the skills necessary to work their way out of poverty. — VNS

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Sunday, February 20, 2011

Sea Festival to spotlight Spratly Archipelago

NHA TRANG — The fifth biennial Sea Festival will be held in the central coastal city of Nha Trang on June 11-15 with the Truong Sa (Spratly) Archipelago as a key topic.

Khanh Hoa People's Committee deputy chairman of Le Xuan Than said the festival would introduce the archipelago in a photo exhibition, a music show and a conference on the Truong Sa District.

Various activities will be held at Nha Trang and Doc Let beaches in Ninh Hoa District and Bai Dai Beach in Cam Lam District of Khanh Hoa. Such events like the Salagane Festival, Miss Khanh Hoa contest and Made-in-Viet Nam Goods Fair will be held for the first time.

The festival will open with a fireworks display. The provincial authorities expect foreign partners from France, South Korea, Cuba and Japan to join in the event.

The festival will also host many environment protection activities including rubbish clean-up in the city and a scientific conference on preserving Nha Trang Bay.

Nha Trang ranks second as best pageant host city

HA NOI — Beauty pageant website Globalbeauties.com has announced the winners of the Global Beauties Awards 2011 in categories including Best in an Evening Gown, Face of the Year, Best Host City and Sexiest Woman Alive.

The website ranks Nha Trang city, in the central coastal province of Khanh Hoa which hosted Miss Earth 2010 as the second best host city after Sanya, China.

Miss Earth Viet Nam Luu Thi Diem Huong stands in third place in the Best in Asia category after Miss Earth India Nicole Faria and Miss Universe Philippines Venus Raj. — VNS

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Saturday, February 19, 2011

Nha Trang named 2nd best city for beauty contests

Global Beauties, an online magazine covering international beauty contests, has rated Nha Trang as the world’s second best host city for beauty pageants.

According to a list released last Tuesday for the Global Beauties Awards aimed at honoring best host cities for beauty contests last year, Chinese city Sanya is on top.

Another Chinese city, Chengdu, is in third place.

The Global Beauties Awards honors contestants, presenters and directors in categories such as Sexiest Woman Alive, Supermodel Look, Men’s Pageant of the Year, Best Pageant Presenter and Best National Director.

Miss Vietnam World 2010 Luu Thi Diem Huong, who won the Best in Swimwear contest at the Miss Earth pageant, was third in the Best in Asia category behind Indian Nicole Faria and Filipino Venus Raj.

>> Diem Huong enters top 3 Asian beauties

Nha Trang hosted the 2010 Miss Earth and 2008 Miss Universe pageants. Thanks to its beautiful beaches and mild weather all year round, it is one Vietnam’s most popular tourist destinations.

nha trang 2

 nha trang 3

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Saturday, February 12, 2011

Valentine's Day offers bouquet of options

A rose by any other name: People shop for flowers, which are expected to go up in price for Valentine's Day. — VNA/VNS Photo Anh Tuan

A rose by any other name: People shop for flowers, which are expected to go up in price for Valentine's Day. — VNA/VNS Photo Anh Tuan

Love songs: To celebrate this year's Valentine's Day, pop star Duc Tuan will bring his romance-themed Chuyen Tinh Yeu tour to HCM City, Can Tho, Nha Trang and Hue. — File Photo

Love songs: To celebrate this year's Valentine's Day, pop star Duc Tuan will bring his romance-themed Chuyen Tinh Yeu tour to HCM City, Can Tho, Nha Trang and Hue. — File Photo

HCM CITY — Businesses are gearing up for Valentine's Day which falls on Monday.

The demand for flowers and gifts to express love will be higher than usual, says the managing director of The Gioi Hoa Tuoi (Flower World), Nguyen Thi Thuy Vu.

"We don't have enough roses to meet demand," Vu said.

The prices of flowers at gardens in Da Lat remain high, with a rose in HCM City selling for VND4,000-6,000, double the usual price. Prices are expected to rise to as high as VND10,000 (US$0.5) for a single rose this weekend.

Meanwhile, shopping centres in HCM City are offering discounts and promotions to take advantage of the holiday buying. Co.op Mart's Qua tang Tinh yeu (Gift of Love) promotion features discounts of up to 40 per cent on chocolates, clothing, stuffed toys and decorative items

Duong Thi Quynh Trang, director of public relations for the French-owned supermarket chain Big C, said its Nhan Doi Hanh phuc (Double Happiness) promotion ran all last week.

Jewellery is a favourite gift during the Valentine's Day holiday, and Phu Nhuan Jewellery Joint Stock Co has launched a collection of gold and silver jewellery featuring new designs for rings and pendants meant for couples. Prices range from VND400,000-500,000 ($20-25).

Romantic books have become increasingly popular with young people every year, and publisher Thoi Dai has issued such titles as Khong Co Gi Ngoai Rac Roi (Nothing but Trouble) by Rachel Gibson, Mong Phu Du (Trading up) by Candace Bushnell, and Cau Hoi Tinh Yeu (A Question of Love) by Isabel Wolff to take advantage of the holidays.

Kim Dong Publishing House has published collections of short stories by young Vietnamese writers like Ho Viet Khue and Minh Nhat, while the Nha Nam Communication and Culture Co has published translations of works by foreign writers such as Guillaume Musso, Yumoto Kazumi and Jane Green.

For those tired of the usual chocolates, flowers and jewellery, the Chuyen Tinh Yeu (Love Story), a pop and dance music tour performed by young star Duc Tuan, will tour HCM City, Can Tho, Da Lat, Nha Trang and Hue.

He will perform dozens of love songs, including Huy Du's Chuyen Tinh Yeu (Love Story), Tran Le Quynh's Tre Mai (Young Forever) and Chan Tinh (Passion) and Pham Dinh Chuong's Don Xuan (Welcome Spring).

A series of musical productions staged and composed by veteran musician Pham Duy will also be part of the show.

An extravaganza show for young couples will be staged in Da Lat on Monday night.

In celebration of Valentine's Day, the HCM City Television's monthly music and song programme, Thay Loi Muon Noi (Speak for Silent Hearts), will be broadcast tomorrow night and feature romantic works.

Young singers, dancers and pop bands such as My Tam, Ha Anh Tuan, Phuong Linh and the band FM will woo the audience with popular love songs in Vietnamese, English and French.

For theatre lovers, actors from the HCM City Small Theatre will stage a comedy written by Nguyen Quoc at 5B Vo Van Tan Street this weekend.

Ly Khac Lynh's Cuc Yeu (Too Much Love) centres on the theme: Is love more important than money?

The play features young performers Hoang Anh and Diem Chau, who will accompany veterans My Uyen and Thanh Hoang.

For Valentine's Day, Cafe Central A Dong Restaurant in HCM City's Windsor Plaza Hotel will serve a Western and Asian buffet dinner, with couples to receive a gift from cupid, according to the hotel's assistant public relations manager Nguyen Ngoc Han.

Dinner and kisses

Couples could also enjoy a multi-course set menu at TOTT Bar and Restaurant on the 25th floor while overlooking the city skyline, Han said.

The Sheraton Sai Gon Hotel, Sofitel Sai Gon Plaza, New World Sai Gon Hotel, Caravelle Hotel and the Park Hyatt all have also announced special dinners. Meanwhile, Espressamente Illy is offering a free tiramisu to customers who spend at least VND200,000 ($10) during February 7-19.

Romantic getaways are also becoming popular with couples.

Saigontourist is offering a three-day stay at Hon Ngoc Viet for VND16.3 million ($810), a three-day Da Lat tour for VND10.15 million ($507) and a four-day Da Lat tour VND6.36 million ($318) per couple.

HCM City-based tour operator Viettravel will also hold its annual underwater wedding for nine couples at the Viet Nam Dive Centre in the coastal resort city of Nha Trang on Valentine's Day.

About 100 couples are expected to compete in a marathon kissing festival in the Kisses' Party at the Viet Tiep Friendship Cultural Palace in the northern city of Hai Phong on Sunday. The 10 longest kisses will receive prizes, including a pair of laptops worth VND15 million.

Contestants must be at least 18 years old, and over 50 couples had already registered, said Do Minh Phuong, director of event organiser Golden Trademark Communication Joint Stock Co.

"The festival is expected to be an unforgettable moment in the lives of the participants," Phuong said. "This is the place where love will be spread and people will express love and a civil lifestyle."

For those who prefer to stay at home for Valentine's Day, television broadcasters have featured love stories throughout the week in the countdown to the holiday.

HCM City Television's HTV 7 has begun airing the 30-episode Goi Nang (Calling for Sunlight) series in time for the holiday. Directed by Tran Canh Don, the series focuses on two foster sisters and two men who battle betrayal, deception and envy before they find true love. It stars singer Maya, actress Trang Nhung and actors Quang Tuan and Gia Huy.

Vinh Long TV, meanwhile, has begun broadcasting the 35-episode series Tinh Nhu Tia Nang (Love Like Sunlight), directed by Truong Dung. The film tells the story of the love between a young woman from a rich family and a young composer who helps her retrieve her inheritance from the clutches of her cruel stepfather. Le Phuong and actor-singer Nguyen Vu play the lead roles.

Trinh Le Phong's 30-episode Dem Nguoc Cho Den Ba Muoi (Countdown to 30) tracks the search for love by three unmarried 30-year-old women who face growing pressures from their families to marry. The series, to begin on VTV1 on Valentine's Day, stars Kieu Oanh, Vi Cam and Chi Trung. — VNS

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City honours participants in HCM City's Tet festival

HCM CITY — The Saigontourist Holding Company yesterday organised a closing ceremony for Nguyen Hue Flower Street which opened during the Tet (Lunar New Year) Festival.

The city People's Committee commended the active participation of 48 organisations and 78 individuals in the 2011 Tet Festival.

An estimated of 1 million people visited Nguyen Hue Flower Street during Tet.

The main sponsor for this section, Kinh Do Company, contributed VND500 million (US$25,000) to the Sponsoring Association for Poor Patients.

The organiser also collected VND68 million ($3,400) of coins from the Wishing Pond that were sent to the association.

Hue kicks off eight-day New Year festival

HCM CITY — Thua Thien-Hue Province authorities on Thursday kicked off an eight-day annual festival celebrating the New Year at Huyen Tran Temple in Hue City.

The temple worships both Princess Huyen Tran, who is considered the founder of Thua Thien-Hue, Quang Tri and Quang Nam provinces, and her father, King Tran Nhan Tong (1258-1308).

The first event of the festival was a prayer and ritual ceremony conducted by Buddhist monks to pray for peace and prosperity in the new year. Leaders and residents of Thua Thien-Hue and Quang Tri lit incense sticks during the ceremony.

The festivities include lanterns, traditional prayers for good luck, folklore performances, handicraft exhibitions and a vegetarian food festival.

The festival ends on February 17.

Hoi An students to learn Japanese in pilot plan

QUANG NAM — The central province of Quang Nam on Thursday started a pilot programme to teach Japanese language at the primary and junior-high school levels.

The lessons are being taught in one third-grade class at Luong The Vinh primary school and two sixth-grade classes at Kim Dong junior high school in Hoi An.

The programme's organisers are Hoi An City People's Committee and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO) and the Human Resources Institute (HRI) Viet Nam.

Japanese teachers from HRI Viet Nam are in charge of helping the students get acquainted with Japanese language and culture through interactive activities.

Nakamura Kouji, a teacher at Kim Dong School, said: "I started to discover a big world outside Japan when I first made contact with foreigners."

"I hope that Vietnamese students like the subject and realise it is a way for them to know more about the country, people and culture of Japan," Nakamura added.

Since the 17th century, Hoi An has a longstanding history of commercial exchanges with Japan. Many relics of Japan can be found in Hoi An. — VNS

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Monday, January 31, 2011

Border soldiers, families receive Tet gifts

HCM CITY — Border guards stationed in Ca Mau and Gia Lai provinces have received gifts of food and medical assistance for Tet under a programme undertaken by several HCM City organisations.

Mua Xuan Bien Gioi (Spring Comes Early on the Border) offered gifts worth VND400 million (US$19,000) to thousands of soldiers as well as poor people living in remote communes like Ia Pnon, Ia Nan, and Pleiku.

Medical volunteers provided soldiers and villagers with health checks, treatment, and drugs.

Nguyen Minh Tong, head of Border Station 723 in Ia Pon, said his men and officers are from various parts of the country and will not be able to return home for the Lunar New Year.

"We appreciate the support and love offered by organisations and individuals around the country, who bring our soldiers a taste of Tet," he said.

"Your love makes us warm and happy."

There was a show in which performers from traditional art troupes danced and sang folk songs in praise of the country, people, and soldiers.

Elsewhere, members of the HCM City Women's Association visited and gave away books, magazines, blankets, and traditional jams and candy to women and children living in remote areas of Dong Thap, An Giang, and Long An provinces.

They also sent gifts and money to poor families in Phu Yen and Binh Dinh provinces who suffered during the recent floods.

This week more than 200 HCM City university students travelled to rural districts like Nha Be and Can Gio and neighbouring provinces under a volunteering programme organised by the City's Youth Association.

Sinh Vien Don Tet Xa Nha (Migrant Students Welcome Tet 2011) encourages young people in the City to call on and help students living in poor and remote areas and heroic mothers celebrate Tet.

"We wanted to share and celebrate Tet with our friends from other provinces who have to welcome the New Year without their families," Tran Duy Phuoc, a third-year student at the Law University, said.

"We can bring them a happier spring." — VNS

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Saturday, January 29, 2011

HCM City displays Tet culture

Signature tradition: Artists at work at the calligraphy market in front of the Youth Cultural House on Pham Ngoc Thach Street in HCM City's District 1. — VNS File Photo

Signature tradition: Artists at work at the calligraphy market in front of the Youth Cultural House on Pham Ngoc Thach Street in HCM City's District 1. — VNS File Photo

HCM CITY — HCM City is preparing for traditional Tet (Lunar New Year) with music shows, charity activities, art exhibitions and calligraphy markets.

The Youth Cultural House has launched a Tet Festival for city residents, especially for students who cannot return to their hometowns during Lunar New Year festivities.

Famous singers including Phuong Thanh, Hien Thuc and Quang Linh will perform at a music show at the cultural house today.

At the Aám Tinh Mua Xuan (Warm Spring) concert, an auction of Viet Nam's largest paper crane, made of 18,000 cranes, will be held to raise funds for gifts for 15,000 poor children and people.

The city's teenagers will have a chance to learn how to make the southern Viet Nam's traditional cylindrical glutinous race cake, banh tet, at the Banh Tet Festival, held next Monday.

All cakes which are made at the event will be given to needy children.

The cultural house will also organise dozens of cultural, entertainment and sports activities until February 7.

The city's Information and Communications Department, for the first time, will host a book exhibition on Mac Thi Buoi Street, a section from Dong Khoi Street to Nguyen Hue Street, from January 31 to February 6.

The Uoc Mo (Wish) exhibition will display more than 1,000 titles of children books and thousands of other titles from eight publishers and distributors, including the HCM City Book Distribution Corporation (FAHASA), Dai Truong Phat Company, Vinabook, Sai Gon Media, the General Science Library, and Cuu Duc, Nhan Van and Thanh Nghia bookstores.

Visitors can read books on-site, borrow them, or bring their own books and exchange for others at the exhibition.

Calligraphy

As one of Vietnamese traditions, before Tet, people visit calligraphers (ong do) asking for New Year greetings that wish people happiness, healthy, wealth or longevity.

Nearly 100 young and old calligraphers wearing the traditional Vietnamese costume ao dai (traditional long dress) gathered on the city's main streets last Saturday to compose the greetings in black and yellow ink on red paper.

As usual, a red covering is on the front of the Labourer's Cultural House on Nguyen Thi Minh Khai Street in District 3.

The annual calligraphy market features 35 stalls, including members of the cultural house's Vietnamese Calligraphy Club and students from city universities.

Thanh Loc, a tour guide of Viettravel, said he took part in the event when it was first launched four years ago.

"However, it took me 10 years to practise calligraphy to have confidence in selling calligraphy to people," he said.

Another calligraphy market in front of the city's Youth Cultural House on Pham Ngoc Thach Street features more than 30 artists from the cultural house's calligraphy club and neighbouring provinces.

Apart from calligraphy, ink and wash paintings, oil paintings and embroidered paintings with calligraphy are also displayed at the market.

The calligraphy works and paintings sell for VND50,000 – 1,000,000 (US$2.5 – 50), depending on the craftsmanship, size, and materials.

Both markets will remain open until February 2 (Lunar New Year's Eve). — VNS

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Friday, January 28, 2011

Cruise ship brings 3,000 visitors

Three international cruise ships brought more than 3,000 visitors and crew to HCM City last weekend.

US vessels Nautica, which came with 7,000 passengers, and SeaBourn Pride, which had 100, anchored at Sai Gon Port last Saturday. The visitors went around HCM City and to the Mekong province of Tien Giang. The Nautica later visited Chan May Port in Thua Thien-Hue and Ha Long Bay before leaving for Hong Kong. The SeaBourn Pride anchored in Da Nang and Ha Long Bay before also leaving for Hong Kong today.

The Italian-flagged Costal Classica dropped anchor at Lotus Port in HCM City and its 2,500 passengers visited HCM City and My Tho. It later went to Da Nang, Hue, and Ha Long before leaving on Wednesday.

Plan to attract Japanese investment

Thua Thien-Hue and Quang Nam provinces and Da Nang plan to set up a joint representative office in Japan as part of a programme to attract Japanese tourists to Viet Nam.

Travel firms, Vietnam Airlines, and a Japanese organisation have pledged support, and the office is expected to open later this year.

"We want to open it soon since Japan is among our important markets," said Tran Quoc Thanh, deputy director of Thua Thien-Hue Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism.

Regional countries to produce 3D tour

Viet Nam, Laos, Cambodia, and Myanmar will jointly produce a documentary titled Four Countries – One Destination to promote their tourism industry.

It will make use of 3D filming to depict the countries' history, culture, and daily life.

It will focus on exotic destinations like the Temple of Literature, Thang Long royal citadel, and handicraft villages in Ha Noi, the Mekong River, the ancient capital of Luang Prabang, and Thap Luang in Laos, Angkor Wat, the ancient capital of Angkor Thom, and Sea Lake in Cambodia, and the Shwe Dagon pagoda, ancient capital of Mandalay, and Bagas city in Myanmar.

First helicopter tour takes off

An MI 172 helicopter took off from Da Nang Airport last week with 24 tourists on board to popular sites like Son Tra Beach, Mount Ngu Hanh Son, Cua Dai Beach, and Cham Island.

It was the first helicopter tour conducted by the Northern Air Services Co and the Vitours. In the beginning, besides the Russian-made MI 172, a French EC 155B1 will also be used for the tours.

There will be a flight each before and after Tet, with each tourist paying nearly VND6 million (US$300).

Phan Thiet offers Tet festivities

Phan Thiet will hold a series of cultural and sports events from January 30 to February 8 to mark the Lunar New Year in early February.

There will be music performances, sports, folk games, and lion dances in most of the city's 16 wards.

The Bien Xanh theatre group will hold music galas in the communes of Tien Thanh, Phong Nam, and Thien Nghiep.

Tien Loi - Tien Thanh Tourist Park will have a fireworks display on New Year's Eve on February 2.

A boat race will be held on the Ca Ty River on the February 4 and the Mui Ne Sand Hill Run will be held two days later.

Furama Resort to hold Tet market

The five-star Furama Resort Da Nang will organise a Tet market for tourists from January 27 to 30, offering guests the experience and colour of a Vietnamese country market and craft village.

They can witness people making banh chung (square glutinous cake with green bean and pork), fortune tellers in traditional costumes in action, and ong do (calligraphers) drawing "parallel sentences" and creating Dong Ho folk paintings. — VNS

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Photos spotlight tourist attractions

HCM CITY — Two hundred photographs by journalists working for tourism publications are on display at an exhibition that opened in HCM City on Wednesday.

Sac Xuan Du Lich 2011 (Spring Colours in Tourism) marks the first anniversary of the HCM City Photographers Club, and has colour and black-and-white photos taken last year by 21 members depicting landscapes, people, and other images that attracted the photographers.

La Quoc Khanh, deputy director of the HCM City Culture, Sport and Tourism Department, thanked them for their contribution in showcasing the multi-colours and diversity of HCM City and also the country to both domestic and international audiences.

The exhibition, at the Journalists Association's office in District 1, will go on until February 10.

Last year club members held a photo exhibition in February to mark the 1,000th anniversary of capital Ha Noi last year and another themed HCM City – 24 Hours in April.

An exhibition titled Truong Sa Ngay Nay (Truong Sa Nowadays) by Hoang Chi Hung, the club's head, last August raised VND200 million (US$10,000) for soldiers on Truong Sa (Spratly) Island. — VNS

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Awareness Of Climate Change

HCM City must be steadfast in the determination to relocate polluters in the inner city to avert the effects of climate change

It was almost nine o’clock last Wednesday morning, but the sky was bleak and still shrouded by a thin mist. A gentle rain then unexpectedly came down. Taking the motorbike for a customer, the security guard in front of a bank on Nguyen Van Linh Parkway in HCM City’s District 7 sighed, “Oh well, we can’t predict what the weather will be like nowadays. Saigon used to have two seasons in a year, the dry and the rainy ones. But it doesn’t anymore. Everything’s changed because of climate change!”

Spring rains and mist are expected in HCM City. To some, very fine showers in the springtime are even a source of inspiration for poetic creativity. Explaining misty mornings this past week, meteorologists said that the misty weather is an annual phenomenon in the dry season in HCM City. They predicted that the city would have more mist and colder temperature in the sunny season this year.

So, mist and rains in the dry season are usual weather patterns in Saigon. But the security guard’s blame on climate change for the precariousness of the weather may be justifiable as well.

Believe it or not, the environment in this southern city has deteriorated over the years despite efforts made by authorities and communities to reverse the bad situation. Access http://hepa.gov.vn, the official website of the HCM City Environmental Protection Agency, and you’ll find some statistics backing this argument.

Measurements taken in November this year indicate that air pollution in general was worse than that in October. For instance, 90% of the measurements of the dirt content were below par, ranging from 0.43 to 0.91mg/m3, or 1.4-2.7 times higher than the national standard.

Noise pollution is also worrisome. Almost nine out of ten measurements were higher than the permitted level, ranging from 66 to 85dB. For your reference, humans feel comfortable if the noise surrounding them is from 40 to 60dB, and can tolerate for a short while noise whose intensity is from 60 to 80dB. However, if noise exceeds the 80dB level, it will adversely affect human health and hearing ability.

What’s more, organic, biological and oil contamination in the Dong Nai River, the main source of water supply for HCM City and the neighboring provinces, was ever higher.

Environmental protection in HCM City, hamstrung by a lack of the local residents’ awareness, remains a thorny issue. But public awareness of environmental protection and climate change is being raised among the local communities. What the security guard said at the beginning of this article can be seen as an encouraging sign.
In a late October working session between members of the HCM City People’s Council and the municipal Department of Natural Resources and Environment, delegates pointed out three vexing problems for the environment. Council members cited relocation of polluting factories in the inner city, contaminated canals and arroyos and untreated wastewater discharged by hospitals. They are all old issues which have dragged on for years, though.

These problems should have been radically tackled. In the meeting, Truong Trong Nghia, vice chairman of the Economic-Budgetary Committee of the People’s Council, was quoted by the local press as saying that seven polluting businesses in the relocation program which started in 2003 were still in place in residential quarters. Worse, these big manufacturing polluters are either state-owned or have a state stake. Over the past seven years, they have been there and have polluted the city unpunished!

When it was first launched in 2007, the Department of Environmental Police under the Ministry of Public Security was expected to minimize pollution in Vietnam. In fact, environmental police have done their job. A speaker at the meeting, Nguyen Quoc Hung, head of the environmental police in HCM City, said since June 2009, environmental police officers under his supervision had fined 155 polluting businesses. The polluters had to pay VND3.2 billion for their violations. However, as the fines were way too modest relative to the costs of installing treating facilities, polluting entities have opted for paying fines rather than buying treatment equipment.

In protecting the city’s living environment, who should lead the way? Authorities or the public? Whoever does that should pay attention to the following fact. Environmental experts have pointed out that HCM City is among the 10 cities in the world which are most affected by climate change.

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Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Tet gala cheers up stranded city workers

Spring is in the air: Singer Cam Ly and her dancers perform at the Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Gala, a music event for migrant workers organised by the HCM City Labour Federation and its partners. — File Photo

Spring is in the air: Singer Cam Ly and her dancers perform at the Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Gala, a music event for migrant workers organised by the HCM City Labour Federation and its partners. — File Photo

HCM CITY — More than 25,000 migrant workers at HCM City's Pou Yuen Company and Tan Tao Industrial Park attended a special performance on Monday featuring "a happy taste of Tet".

The event, called Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Gala Welcomes Tet, is part of the HCM City Labour Federation's charity and cultural activities for the holiday.

Dozens of local and foreign organisations and sponsors are involved in the federation's community work.

More than 50 singers, dancers and actors participated in the gala, including the year's winners of the Mai Vang Award, an annual event that honours local performers in different fields of entertainment.

Famous dancer Linh Nga and young members of the dance group Little Stars opened the show by performing Tinh Dat Phuong Nam (The Love of the Southern Land), a traditional dance choreographed by Vuong Linh and Dang Hung.

Pop stars Dam Vinh Hung, Ha Anh Tuan, Thanh Thao and Cam Ly highlighted the show when they performed popular songs, including Buoc Chan Mua Xuan (Spring Steps), Xuan Da Ve (Spring is Coming) and Xuan Que Huong (Homeland Spring).

For their first time before larger audiences, young singers Noo Phuoc Thinh, Cao Thai Son and Dong Nghi left a strong impression by singing and dancing Xuan Ben Em (Spring and You), Hoa Co Mua Xuan (Spring Flowers) and Ngot Ngao (Sweet).

Singer and movie star Ly Hung, 2010 Golden Ochna winner in film, performed a series of folk songs together with martial arts.

For many young workers, this was the first time they had seen these icons on stage.

Doan Van Nghi, who moved from his hometown in Kien Giang Province's Rach Gia City, said: "Hearing traditional tunes on the radio through the voices of skilled artists like Cam Ly keeps my soul at peace."

"Through the gala, my co-workers, who have no chance to return home for Tet, will feel a happy spring because of these entertainment activities," said Nghi, who added he believed music and theatre can improve the intellect and lighten the heart.

Both Nghi and his younger sister decided to stay in their rental rooms on a tiny alley in Binh Tan District this Tet because "we wanted to save more money to support our big family in Rach Gia."

Cu Phat Nghiep, chairman of the Pou Yuen Company's labour union, said his staff spent a month working hard with the organisers and artists to bring migrant workers closer during Tet.

Nguyen Huy Can, chairman of the Labour Federation, said the music programme's organisers hoped to encourage people to pay more attention to the lives of poor, migrant labourers.

"We are here to share our love and support," he added.

The artists will perform in other industrial parks in HCM City as well as in neighbouring provinces during the Tet holiday. — VNS

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Monday, January 24, 2011

HCM City's children set for 10 new amusement parks

Floating around: Children at HCM City's Dai Nam amusement park. The city's authorities plan to build 10 new amusement parks and three cultural centres for children during the next two years. — VNS File Photo

Floating around: Children at HCM City's Dai Nam amusement park. The city's authorities plan to build 10 new amusement parks and three cultural centres for children during the next two years. — VNS File Photo

HCM CITY — The HCM City People's Committee is giving priority to building 10 amusement parks and three cultural centres for children this year.

A centre each will be built in Tan Phu, Hoc Mon and Binh Chanh districts this year while the amusement parks will be completed next year. Work on all of them will begin this year.

The 10 will be modelled on the Khanh Hoi Children's Entertainment Area in District 4, a free, 13,000sq.m facility that attracts 1,500-2,000 children every day.

One each will be built in the Can Thanh Town Park in Can Gio District, Phu Lam Park in District 6, Le Thi Rieng Park in District 10, the Youth Activity Centre in Nha Be District, the Binh Chanh Commune Cultural Park in Binh Chanh District, with the districts funding them.

The City Department of Transport will build four others at Gia Dinh Park in Go Vap District and Tao Dan Park, 23/9 Park, and Le Van Tam Park in District 1.

The city Department of Labour, Invalids and Social Affairs will build the last one at the Youth Education and Vocational Training Centre.

The People's Committee has also ordered construction of the Rach Chiec Physical Training and Sport Complex, the City Museum, the symphony and opera theatre, and the City Circus in the Thu Thiem New Urban Area in District 2.

Around 1.7 million children aged below 16 live in the city but there are few amusement and entertainment venues for them. — VNS

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Collected works of Uncle Ho released

HA NOI — The 15-volume Ho Chi Minh Toan Tap (Complete Works by Ho Chi Minh) was re-issued on Monday for the third time on the occasion of the 11th National Party Congress.

A total 3,300 copies with updated information on important documents of the late president have been printed. The collection was published for the first time in 1990 to commemorate Ho Chi Minh's 100th birthday and included 10 volumes. It was later reprinted in 2000 and included 12 volumes.

Nguyen Duy Hung, director of the National Politics Publishing House, said the latest edition would help readers more fully understand the invaluable spiritual legacy left by the late president.

Noble prizes to be announced

HCM CITY — The Mai Vang (Golden Ochna) Awards 2010 for musicians and actors will be announced on Saturday.

The singing awards at Hoa Binh Theatre, HCM City, will be broadcast live.

There will be five categories – Favourite Male and Female Pop Singers, Favourite Male and Female Country Singers and Favourite Song.

There will also be awards for Favourite Male and Female Stage Artists, Best Comic Actor and Best Stage Play.

The acting category will include best TV Actor and Actress, Best Movie Actor and Actress, Favourite Master of Ceremonies (MC) and best Film of the Year.

Meanwhile, on Monday, the Mai Vang Awards will be presented to the best 10 singers.

The annual awards have been organised by Nguoi Lao Dong newspaper since 1995.

HCM City TV spreads Tet cheer

HCM CITY — A music performance by pop stars and auction of ornamental trees and fish will be part of a charity event HCM City Television and Farmers Association will organise tomorrow to raise funds for poor farmers in the city during Tet (Lunar New Year).

The proceeds from the annual programme will be used to repair or build more than 150 houses for poor farmers and gift health insurance cards and presents to them.

Organisers will auction two rare mai (ochna) trees with "beautiful roots" which will bring their owners "luck and wealth", and two sets of Japanese carp symbolising the five elements and four directions.

The concert will be held at 7pm at the HTV Theatre, and broadcast live on HTV9.

Last year the programme managed to raise more than VND3.9 billion (US$185,000), enabling 237 houses to be repaired or built and 927 health insurance cards and 117 scholarships to be provided.

Ha Noi waiter represents region

HCM CITY — Tran Trong Hai Ha from Green Tangerine Restaurant in Ha Noi has won the ticket to represent South East Asia in the Asia sommelier competition in June.

After winning The Best Vietnamese Sommelier Competition for French Wine 2010 last October, Ha represented Viet Nam in the Southeast Asia sommelier competition at the Equatorial Hotel last week and won The First Runner-up prize. Peter Teng from Malaysia was the winner.

Both also won a course on wine tasting in France on March.

The contest was organised by Sopexa, which is the French food and wines PR and communications agency, and Saigon Bartender Sommelier Guild.

Ha and Teng beat eight representatives from Indonesia, Malaysia, Taiwan, Thailand and Viet Nam. — VNS

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Wednesday, January 19, 2011

HCM City to hold Lunar New Year festival

Party time: The 3D design of the gate on Nguyen Hue Flower Street is set to help kick off the Tet Tan Mao (New Year of the Cat) Festival in HCM City's centre. — File Photo

Party time: The 3D design of the gate on Nguyen Hue Flower Street is set to help kick off the Tet Tan Mao (New Year of the Cat) Festival in HCM City's centre. — File Photo

HCM CITY — The HCM City People's Committee has assigned local tour company Saigontourist Holding Company and other administrative agencies to organise the Tet Tan Mao (Lunar New Year of the Cat) Festival in the city's downtown.

Since the first time it was held in 2004, Tet Giap Than (Lunar New Year of the Monkey), the Nguyen Hue Flower Street and the related Banh Tet (cylindrical glutinous rice cake) Festival has been a hit with residents and tourists in HCM City.

The event has become one of the city's unique cultural offerings, and is welcomed by both local and overseas Vietnamese.

It also offers a great sightseeing opportunities for tourists coming to HCM City during the Tet holiday.

Tet Tan Mao holiday is going to be bigger and better than ever with lots of interesting activities: Nguyen Hue Flower Street and Banh Tet Festival, fireworks, special lighting, snapshots of New Year, The Face of Tet decoration contest and door shows.

The eighth Nguyen Hue Flower Street will be held from January 31 until February 6 (December 28 – January 4 on the lunar calendar) and will be hosted in the area along Nguyen Hue Boulevard from City Hall to the Sai Gon River.

It will be closed to traffic for the holiday week.

In addition, the nearby Le Loi Street from Quach Thi Trang Square to the Municipal Theatre will be open for pedestrians from 6-11pm on February 6.
This year's Flower Street is titled New Heights as the city strives for higher achievements in economy, politics and society.

The street will be divided into several smaller parts decorated in different spring themes: Hon Viet (Viet Nam's Soul), Tet Phuong Nam (Southern Tet), Noi Vong Tay Lon (Circle of Unity), Tam Cao Moi (New Height), and Xuan An Vui (Happy and Peaceful Spring).

The entire street will be especially colourful, illuminated by a myriad colour.

Attractions will include flower arrangements, a wishing pond to collect money for charity, coffee stalls, folk music and games.

The Banh Tet Festival from January 26 to 31 is jointly organised by all the city's 24 districts.

Activities will include a banh tet cooking contest and a 10,000 banh tet gift programme for disadvantaged children and alms houses in the city, organised by Saigontourist in co-operation with the HCM City Department of Labour, War Invalids and Social Affairs, and Dam Sen Cultural Park.

The fireworks displays on Lunar New Year's Eve (February 2) will take place at eight places around the city while Le Loi and Dong Khoi streets will be decorated with hundreds of lights from January 26 to February 14.
Saigontourist will also hold the The Face of Tet decoration contest and door shows, and a series of performances including lion dances, folk music, and drumming at the Caravelle, Rex, Majestic, Grand, Continental, Kim Do, Oscar, Bong Sen and Palace hotels from January 31 to February 6. — VNS

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Monday, January 17, 2011

Tinges Of Rural Life

In the very heart of this biggest city of Vietnam, several thingsare reminiscent of rural lifestyle

Several rural products can easily be found in Saigon. Bambooware and rattanware—such as baskets of all shapes and sizes—are on sale on the sidewalk or push carts. They are also sedge mats, bamboo venetian blinds, and a great variety of brooms carried on bicycles to virtually every door inside alleys in the inner city.

These rural products can also be baskets of small guavas, bình bát (wild sweetsop – Annona reticulata), cm dp (green rice flakes) and rau càng cua (Herba peperomiae), many of which have been embedded in urban children’s childhood memories. Favorite sweet soups in the countryside, especially in the Mekong Delta, have invaded many quarters of Saigon, particularly where the poor live.

At the market, in addition to vegetables which are universally accepted by urban Vietnamese are several ones specific to rural areas—rau lang (leaves and branches of sweet potato), bông súng (India red water lily), bông iên in (Sesbania), to name just a few.

They all make the urban meal more delicious because of their unusual taste. In fact, they can prompt a city dweller to feel a tinge of rural smell or taste although he or she is in the middle of the city.

It is these rural products transported by unsophisticated means that are sources of income for many families, keeping alive their children’s hope for a better future. The modern urban lifestyle can do away with these rural products. However, without them, that lifestyle would become dull and lack the taste and flavor of the native land. The predecessors of generations of today’s city dwellers came from the countryside where the above rural products were part of their daily life.

So, every time the Lunar New Year festival comes, Nguyen Hue Boulevard has a chance to turn into a street of flowers. On the boulevard, many visitors stop at the exhibits reminiscent of the countryside. That can be a scarecrow made of hay, a terra-cotta vase containing rainwater, a lift net, a small wooden boat or a clump of bamboo standing next to a cluster of banana trees.

To the Saigonese who have gained first-hand experience of rural life, images of a specific rural product may signify something. A small bamboo basket with a coat of red-brown varnish may depict a grandfather at work when he made baskets at the front yard. A man selling rural products door to door on his push cart may remind somebody of his or her father who made his living hawking around markets in the delta. A woman carrying a bamboo pole on the shoulders laden with two heavy baskets at the two ends reminisces about a mother in the countryside coming home with her baskets full of sweet potatoes, cassava and dried fish. In this regard, rural products are not only something to taste or use but also a way to revive sweet memories.

Stop for a moment to taste or touch these rural products in the hustle and bustle of the urban life. Take the chance as you may no longer be able to do so in the future when the current of urbanization will wash them all away.

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Soul Of The City

Every city has its own landmarks. The best part of the soul of a city, however, must be formed by its inhabitants.

Some years ago, an American intern at our editorial office asked Saigon Stories what we thought about the city we are living in. As a common sense, anybody is expected to love their home town or birthplace. But what makes we hold deep affection for our hometown also relates to other things in addition to the birthplace.

Saigon-HCM City celebrated its tricentennial in 1998. Three hundred years before that date, Nguyen Huu Canh (1650-1700), a high-ranking mandarin under the auspices of Lord Nguyen Phuc Chu, made an inspection trip to the south in 1698 to assert the Lord’s sovereignty over this region. Ever since, the city has earned its prestige due to its openness to the new. In other words, early in the making, Saigon has been a place of convergence where people from every corner of the country meet, do business and settle to build their home.

Saigon-HCM City is still unrivalled in Vietnam as far as population is concerned, even compared with the newly expanded Hanoi which has now outranked the second city in respect of surface area. But the soul of a city requires other elements beside grandeur and large population. Others—such as culture, architecture, living quality and the quality (conduct and education) of the inhabitants—really count as well.

A city cannot exist in human mind without some certain landmarks. In the case of New York, it is the Empire State Building. Imagine Paris without the Eiffel Tower, or Kuala Lumpur lacking the Petronas Twin Towers. In Vietnam, Hanoi’s closest association is arguably the Sword Lake.

Look at these metropolitan symbols and you will see that they are not necessarily the biggest or latest or state-of-the-art structures. Well, the Petronas Towers may be among the highest or costliest buildings in Malaysia, but the Eiffel Tower is not on the same scale in Paris. Likewise, among the dozens of lakes dotting Hanoi, the 12-hectare Sword Lake looks so modest versus the West Lake whose water surface is 500 hectares and the roads circling around it are 17km in length. But the vast West Lake simply cannot compete with its tiny counterpart in the rivalry for a single symbol of Vietnam’s capital. Again, this reality shows that the soul representing a city requires more than simply being big or populous.

How about Saigon?

In February last year, HCM City authorities announced the lists of 100 things most exciting to tourists. Among the best picks ranging from best shopping places and most exciting sightseeing tours to best souvenirs and top nightlife destinations, Ben Thanh Market emerged as one of the top choices of both domestic and expatriate travelers. It is by no means the biggest in town. But when you ask a Saigonese about which market they think can symbolize their city, in most of the cases, rest assured that Ben Thanh is the first name coming to their mind. The reasons for the choice involve history, culture and the deep attachment of Saigonese to the market which has accumulated for centuries.

You can list other landmarks of Saigon—the Notre Dame Cathedral, the HCM City General Post Office, Nha Rong Wharf (Ho Chi Minh Museum) and the Reunification Palace, to name just a few. Concerning architecture, Saigon has more to offer. If you want to see a private house, it is the former residence of the late billionaire Hui Bon Hoa, now the HCM City Fine Art Museum, in District 1. How about educational institutions? Any of Nguyen Thi Minh Khai, Le Quy Don and Le Hong Phong high schools in districts 3 and 5 would be the answer.

Many would argue that the soul of a city should also embrace the way local inhabitants preserve historic or cultural sites. If we take this into account, Givral Café and Xuan Thu Bookstore on Dong Khoi Street in District 1, which used to register their places in Saigon’s history, should be restored to keep the soul of Saigon.

Three years ago, during a three-day visit to HCM City, Erwin Oliva, an on-line journalist from the Philippine Daily Inquirer, told Saigon Stories that downtown Saigon was like the center of a province in the Philippines. Oliva was right at the time because he might have compared Saigon’s center with the edifice-clad Makati City in Manila. But the Filipino journalist may change his mind if on his return to Saigon he visits Phu My Hung new urban area in District 7 which can be comparable to the best residential complex in the Philippines.

The best part of the soul of a city, however, must be its inhabitants. In other words, it is the lifestyle of city dwellers that matters. In this regard, Saigon has much room to improve. Violations of traffic rules are rampant, litter is almost ubiquitous, threats and acts of violence on the streets are daily stories. Meanwhile, air and noise pollution is becoming unbearable. These are the dark side of Saigon.

Regrettably, that dark side of the “Saigonse soul” has been worse over the years. Even in the “Model Urban Area,” a title given by the Ministry of Construction to Phu My Hung, disregard of traffic rules and litter are not rare.
But there is no reason for overpessimism. Life is always a mixture of the bad and the good, and life becomes better as soon as the good side prevails over the bad one.

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Friday, January 14, 2011

Special Tet tours for visitors

HCM City-based travel agencies have unveiled special tours for foreigners who want to experience the atmosphere of the Lunar New Year or Tet.

Ben Thanh Tourist has launched a one-day tour to the Mekong Delta province of Vinh Long that will take visitors to Vinh Sang Tourist Park and people's houses in Vinh Long to take a look at rural life and Tet celebrations. It costs US$45 per person for groups of ten.

Saigontourist Travel Service Co has launched a tour called Celebrate Tet with Saigonese for five hours which will take in Cho Lon by cyclo, the flower market, and other tourist destinations in HCM City. Foreign guests can also join local people in making banh tet (the cylindrical glutinous rice cake) and have a meal with a local family. The tour is priced at $30 while a tour of My Tho costs $45.

A toast to beer drinking record

The first Viet Nam Beer Festival organised by the Mekong Star JSC will attempt to break a beer drinking record in HCM City later this month.

On each day of the festival from January 21 to 23 at the Ministry Zone 7 Stadium, 5,000 guests are expected to come to enjoy the local and international beers, Vietnamese and western foods, DJs, and live music.

On the first night an attempt to break the Vietnamese record for the most people to offer a toast will be made.

Cebu Pacific adds VN flights

Philippine carrier Cebu Pacific has added two more fights to its HCM City-Manila service, and plans to turn it into a daily service next Friday.

The additions take the number of flights a week to six.

The carrier carried around 30,000 passengers to and from Viet Nam last year, and expects to increase that number in 2011, Candice Lyog, the airline's vice-president for marketing and distribution, said.

Cham culture to go on display

The Cham Cultural Exhibition Centre in Binh Thuan Province will host a week of cultural events from January 30 to February 8 for Tet (Lunar New Year).

The highlights of the events will be an exhibition of costumes worn by Cham royalty, their crowns, seals, swords, and betel nut-making accessories.

Visitors can also see musical instruments and objects used by the Cham people in festivals, farming equipment such as buffalo carts and fish traps, stone jewellery, stone statues of Apsaras — the heavenly nymph of Hindu mythology – the gods Ganesa and Avalokitesvara, and a lion, linga-yoni, and documents written in the Cham language.

Rija Nugar (New Year Festival) and folk art performances will be held every night.

Saigontourist offers yacht tour

Saigontourist Travel Service Co has announced a four-day tour to Nha Trang from HCM City which includes a yacht tour in Nha Trang on board the four-star yacht King.

In Nha Trang, the yacht tour will start at the wharf in front of King Bao Dai's palace before cruising to Tre, Mun, Mot, Mieu, and Tam islands.

Visitors will cruise around Mun for swimming in the ocean, coral reef diving, and fishing before stopping at the Tri Nguyen Aquarium. Tourists on board the $1 million yacht can also request to stop at sights along the way.

The first batch of tourists will leave HCM City on January 22 and there will be one every Saturday. More information about the tour that will cost VND3.4 millon to 5.7 million is available at www.dulichtet.com . —VNS

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Thursday, January 13, 2011

From Poland with nostalgia

To paint a nation: Viet Nam by Vietnamese-Polish artist Hoang Ngoc Huu is being displayed at his solo Hoi Tuong (Reminiscence) painting exhibition in HCM City. — VNS Photo Duc Ngoc

To paint a nation: Viet Nam by Vietnamese-Polish artist Hoang Ngoc Huu is being displayed at his solo Hoi Tuong (Reminiscence) painting exhibition in HCM City. — VNS Photo Duc Ngoc

HCM CITY — The memories of his homeland and his love for it suffuse the works of Vietnamese-Polish artist Hoang Ngoc Huu whose works are on display at an exhibition in HCM City.

"I am happy to have my first ever solo exhibition in my home country," Huu says.

Hoi Tuong (Reminiscence), organised by the Lotus Gallery and HCM City Exhibition Centre, features 66 oil paintings he created back in Poland.

"Painting is both my soul and expression of love to the motherland and my family there," the 70-year-old artist said.

Many of the works are simply named – Viet Nam, Thieu Nu Hue (Hue Woman) and Le Hoi Hai Ba Trung (Festival Memorising Trung Sisters).

He also pays tribute to his new life in Poland through paintings like Thieu Nu Ba Lan (Polish Woman).

Huu, who was born in Hue, moved to Poland in 1969 to continue his studies in shipbuilding and went on to marry a local woman.

In 1983, instead of writing a diary, he began to draw to register his nostalgia for his homeland.

His works have been displayed at several solo and group exhibitions in Poland, German, Russia, Japan, and China.

The exhibition, at the HCM City Exhibition Centre, 92 Le Thanh Ton Street, runs until next Thursday. — VNS

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