Wednesday, December 8, 2010

School kids learn to conserve water

HSBC Vietnam in partnership with the Office of Education and Training of District 1 launched a water saving campaign at eight primary schools in HCMC on Monday.

The organizers hope to raise the children’s awareness with a fun competition called Water Saving Heroes. The launching ceremony was held at Hoa Binh Primary School on Monday where hundreds of students and teachers participated in an interactive day with lots of water educational activities.

Around 8,300 students and more than 700 teachers of eight primary schools in District 1 will participate in the three-month project, teaching the importance of water and good water saving practices in the local community.

Each student will be presented a Water Saving Diary so that they can keep track of their water saving activities during the three-month campaign. Students’ parents will also be encouraged to participate by saving water at home and sending their monthly water bill to school for a family competition. After the campaign, the family with the highest average saving ratio over two months will win a shopping voucher valued at VND3 million for either an eco trip or a water saving washing machine.

HSBC’s Water Saving Campaign is part of the HSBC Climate Camp held earlier this year and is one of the action plans built by HSBC Climate Ambassadors to cope with climate change.

Every year, HSBC Vietnam Corporate Sustainability organises and sponsors many innovative community-oriented initiatives related to education, the environment and social issues and encourages bank staff to become actively involved. HSBC’s Water Saving Campaign will run from December 2010 until March next year with a closing event at Thao Cam Vien Park.

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Tuesday, December 7, 2010

School kids learn to conserve water

HSBC Vietnam in partnership with the Office of Education and Training of District 1 launched a water saving campaign at eight primary schools in HCMC on Monday.

The organizers hope to raise the children’s awareness with a fun competition called Water Saving Heroes. The launching ceremony was held at Hoa Binh Primary School on Monday where hundreds of students and teachers participated in an interactive day with lots of water educational activities.

Around 8,300 students and more than 700 teachers of eight primary schools in District 1 will participate in the three-month project, teaching the importance of water and good water saving practices in the local community.

Each student will be presented a Water Saving Diary so that they can keep track of their water saving activities during the three-month campaign. Students’ parents will also be encouraged to participate by saving water at home and sending their monthly water bill to school for a family competition. After the campaign, the family with the highest average saving ratio over two months will win a shopping voucher valued at VND3 million for either an eco trip or a water saving washing machine.

HSBC’s Water Saving Campaign is part of the HSBC Climate Camp held earlier this year and is one of the action plans built by HSBC Climate Ambassadors to cope with climate change.

Every year, HSBC Vietnam Corporate Sustainability organises and sponsors many innovative community-oriented initiatives related to education, the environment and social issues and encourages bank staff to become actively involved. HSBC’s Water Saving Campaign will run from December 2010 until March next year with a closing event at Thao Cam Vien Park.

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Japanese fusion quartet plays Hanoi

A music show called Karin & Quartet Music Concert will be held in the Youth Theater in Hanoi for two consecutive nights on December 8 and 9.

Karin & Quartet will be accompanied by a 16-stringed Vietnamese harp played by Vo Van Anh (a.k.a. Vanessa Vo), as well as the voice of Thu Huyen, a promising cheo (Vietnamese folk opera) singer. The fusion of Japanese and Vietnamese music will be one of the exciting musical journeys this year.

Karin produces amazing sounds on her 25-stringed koto (Japanese harp). She has traveled the world, constantly finding new inspirations.

Akihito Obama, who will join her on the shakuhachi (Japanese bamboo flute), displays a combination of eloquent traditional techniques as well as fluency in Western styles. Also traveling are Mami Ishizuka on the piano, covering a wide range of musical elements from jazz to world music, and percussionist Aki-ra Sunrise who uses self-made and other instruments from around the world.

Admission is free. Tickets are available at the Japan Foundation Center for Cultural Exchange in Vietnam, 27 Quang Trung Street in Hanoi, tel: 3944 7419.

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Coffee museum first placed in HCMC

Tourists take photos of the coffee display at Trung Nguyen coffee shop at Nguyen Van Chiem St., District 1. - Photo: Tuong Vi
Trung Nguyen’s Creative Youth Coffee House next to Diamond Plaza has transformed itself into a coffee museum for the next month.

The garden coffee shop that is on the narrow street between the Youth Cultural House and Diamond Plaza, has 100 items about coffee on display including grinders and roasting machines.  The pieces are part of a collection of 10,000 items about
coffee that belongs to a German coffee lover, Jens Burg.

Burg provided part of his collection to help Trung Nguyen Corp. set up Vietnam’s first coffee museum in Buon Ma Thuot in the Central
Highlands province of Daklak, where the coffee maker harvests most of its beans.

Two billion people world-wide drink coffee, so the exhibition is bound to have appeal. The displays show where coffee was first discovered in Ethiopia and follows its history with stories of different coffee concoctions using butter, milk, herbs and wine.

The café has a large outdoor area shaded by umbrellas and trees and a large glass walled lounge that looks across the garden area. In addition to the different kinds of Trung Ngu
yen coffee, there’s a food menu that features Gia Lai dried noodles, a dish that’s loved by highlanders.

The coffee museum opening in March in Buon Ma Thuot City will be called the Global Coffee Sanctuary and cover 50 hectares. Brazil, Japan, Russia, the U.K, Australia and Switzerland already have coffee museums but the sanctuary will have the largest number of items on display.

“We have made Buon Ma Thuot into a city of coffee to build the
coffee brand for the city, for Vietnam and the world,” Dinh Van Khiet, vice chairman of People’s Committee of Daklak Province, said.

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‘The spotlight’s already on me,’ says Miss Earth

“I am ecstatic and on top of the world,” Nicole Faria told Indian newspaper DNA minutes after being crowned Miss Earth.

Faria, who has been in the modeling business since 2005, is accustomed to applause from wide-eyed audiences while on the catwalk at the Lakme Fashion Week, Wills Lifestyle India Fashion Week, and Colombo Fashion Week and when she poses for Elle, Cosmopolitan, or Vogue.

But even she was touched when she beat 83 other contestants from around the world to seize the coveted title and become the first Indian to be crowned Miss Earth.

The 20-year-old woman from Bangalore also won the Miss Talent event after performing a scintillating belly dance combining Oriental and Middle Eastern styles. She wore a shimmering white and gold outfit and defeated 17 other finalists.

“I’m being compared with Aishwarya Rai and Sushmita Sen [Indian beauty pageant winners]. It is a really big responsibility. I know I’m entering the big league. It is something that I am eagerly looking forward to.

“The spotlight’s already on me,” she said with joy.

Faria, a former student of Mount Carmel College, has some green plans in mind already.

“I am very keen on taking on initiatives to ensure the green patches do not just remain but are multiplied. As for Bangalore, I want to start an agency with cycle rickshaws. They will not just reduce pollution but also support many families.” DNA quoted her.

She not only outshone all in the beauty sections, but also proved that beauty is a combination of brains and elegance.

In the question-and-answer round where she was asked “What time of the day do you prefer - sunrise or sunset?” she said: “Sunrise. Because each time I wake up to a new day, it feels like a new beginning to me with renewed hope.”

It was a winning answer, one that clicked with the jury and audience.

“Everyone clapped for this answer for a long time and I can still feel and hear the resounding applause in my mind.”

Her father Ian said proudly: "We are ecstatic and overjoyed although we expected it."

I know I can

Faria's success has come as no surprise to her family who are well acquainted with her winning ways and her belief in the adage "I know I can."

"We knew she would win. We were hardly surprised," Faria's uncle George Pearson told the Times of India.

Nicole has turned out to be the best advertisement for her parents, father Ian Faria, a motivational speaker and corporate trainer, and mother Anita, who works with the reputed beauty group VLCC.

"She owes a large part of her success to her father, who has always motivated her to win. It was he who taught her how to talk, how to walk. He groomed her to be a winner," George said, adding that Nicole's motivational lessons began when she was young and so did the grooming.

Speaking to Thanh Nien, she said she does not have a boyfriend but prefers someone with a strong mind and body to face challenges and troubles together.

“Vietnam and its people’s hospitality have attracted me a lot. I love the ao dai, your country’s traditional costume”.

Next year she assumes the role of the world’s environmental ambassador.

Followings are some of her images:

 hoahau 1
hoahau 2
hoahau 3
hoahau 5
hoahau 6
hoahau-(2a-GalaDiner-VN-India-Japan

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Danish artist joins Vietnamese group

Reflective: Musician Ngoc Dai will perform with his group Dai Lam Linh this Friday at Kim Ma Theatre. — File Photo

Reflective: Musician Ngoc Dai will perform with his group Dai Lam Linh this Friday at Kim Ma Theatre. — File Photo

HA NOI — Ngoc Dai and his group Dai Lam Linh will perform with Danish saxophonist Lotta Anker in a concert of contemporary music in Ha Noi on Friday.

The concert will also include singers Thanh Lam, Linh Dung, and Ha Linh, the Thai Ha ca tru (ceremonial singing) troupe, and a 12-member string band from the Viet Nam Academy of Music.

The programme would aim to combine traditional and modern, Eastern and Western music, Dai said.

"The artists will perform as they tell stories in their own ways," said Dai.

"For instance, the song "Regret" will be performed three times, experimentally by Linh Dung and Thanh Lam, in a pop style by Ha Linh, and in Lotta Anker's version.

"I met Lotta last year and I like her very much," he added. "She listens my music too and I wanted to collaborate with her."

Anker arrived in Viet Nam last week and has been rehearsing with Dai's band and material.

Dai debuted his first symphony in 1979 before he had even graduated from the Viet Nam National Academy of Music. He has written about 500 songs in various genres and released four CDs. His 2002 concert Solar Eclipse I was a shock to the Viet Nam music scene and was recognised as a landmark of innovation and originality.

For this Friday's concert, the stage will be designed by artist Dang Huy Quyen in a black-and-white motif echoing the yin and yang.

The concert, funded by the Danish Culture Exchange and Development Foundation, will take place at the 8pm at the Kim Ma Theatre, 71 Kim Ma Street. — VNS

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Dac Lac hangs on to vanishing heritage

Gong show: Centuries-old gong music is the precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. — VNA/VNS Photos Thanh Ha & Hong Ky

Gong show: Centuries-old gong music is the precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. — VNA/VNS Photos Thanh Ha & Hong Ky

DAC LAC — The Central Highlands province of Dac Lac is being stripped of its cultural heritage as gongs, drums and many ancient hunting knives and tools are used to feed the thriving trade in ethnic antiques, officials warn.

Buon Trap Town in Krong Ana District boasts an all-woman team playing the Jo, a gong designed exclusively for women of the E De ethnic group.

"The team play on two ten-gong sets which are owned by a local family. Six gongs were sold to antique collectors in recent years and two others were broken," said Tran Viet Du, an official with the district's Culture Office said.

"When the team play the Jo, we have to rent gongs from a nearby town for the performers," Du said.

"Buon Trap is one of many locations in the province where gongs have been sold to traders that can never be replaced again," said Y Wai Bya, director of Dac Lac's Culture, Sports and Tourism Department.

"That is due largely to the poverty of the local people. Many people do not hesitate to sell antique gongs to collectors to get large sums of money," he said.

Du and Bya are among many officials who have expressed growing alarm about the antique trade in Central Highlands provinces.

"Researchers specialising in the Central Highlands' culture and history need to come up with long-term strategies for the preservation of gongs, drums and other old items relating to ethnic culture," Bya said.

Bya admitted that the province still lacked policies to preserve gongs and train officials to gain a profound understanding of traditional music and the culture of ethnic people.

Bya said the provincial People's Committee recently approved a policy to assist gong owners.

"Each family that owns an antique gong will receive an annual stipend of VND500,000 (US$25) from the province," he said, giving no further details.

The committee is also working on a project to build in each village a museum to display traditional musical instruments and items used in the daily lives of the ethnic people.

"More festivals will be organised in Dac Lac's villages and districts where ethnic people can perform gongs, drums and introduce their folk music to outside audiences," Bya said.

The centuries-old gong music is a precious cultural heritage of Viet Nam's ethnic people. They play the gong to commemorate a good harvest, during festivals, and to mark occasions like the birth of children, weddings, and funerals.

The Central Highlands gong culture was recognised as a Masterpiece of Oral and Intangible Cultural Heritage by UNESCO in 2006.

Cultural researcher Y Duong, grandson of Y Jut Nie K'Dam, author of the first Vietnamese – E De Dictionary, said he had spent many years working on a project to protect gongs and would submit it soon to the Dac Lac People's Committee for consideration.

Apart from ancient gongs and drums, K'pan long benches used by gong performers and tools used by hunters of elephants and wild animals are much sought after by antique traders.

Ama Pet, a well-known elephant hunter in Buon Don town, said he was among few people who still kept the leather ropes used in elephant hunting.

Pet caught and domesticated 15 elephants using his rope which is more than 10m in length. Elephant hunting is now banned in Dac Lac. He said he intends to sell his rope to have money to spend for the family.

He said he has priced the rope at VND15 million (US$750) including a piece of buffalo leather used to cover the back of the elephant. — VNS

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