Friday, January 21, 2011

British Council extends IELTS scholarships

Following the success of the 2010 IELTS (International English Language Testing System) scholarship scheme, the British Council will expand the program in 2011, to offer over 60 scholarships across 10 countries in Asia.

In Vietnam, British Council will award 13 IELTS scholarships worth around VND450 million, two of which for VND100 million each, aimed at High school/Pre-University/Undergraduate and Postgraduate students planning to study outside Vietnam, and 10 scholarships valued at  VND15 million aimed at high school/pre-university/undergraduate and postgraduate students planning to study in Vietnam. 

Additionally, to mark the Institute of International Education’s announcement that Vietnam has moved into the top 10 leading places of origin for students visiting the U.S.  In order to mark this occasion, the British Council is also offering one of the scholarships valued at VND100 million to a high school/pre-university/undergraduate or postgraduate student planning to study in the U.S.

These awards will be issued to the attending educational institutions in order to assist applicants with their educational expenses.

In Vietnam, last year’s scholarship recipients came from both the North and South and were each awarded VND60 million towards their tuition fees on undergraduate, foundation and A level programs at top institutes in the U.S., U.K and Australia. 

Award winners will begin their courses out or inside Vietnam at any university, college, high school or institution in 2011, which uses IELTS as part of its admission requirements. Detailed information regarding British Council IELTS Scholarship, including application materials, is available at www.britishcouncil.org/vietnam

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Van Phat Hung sponsors Mekong student loans

Phan Gia Man (R), assistant CEO of Van Phat Hung Corp., hands over a cheque for VND600.6 million to Nguyen Anh Tuan, Headmaster of Can Tho University at the exchange program in Can Tho on Tuesday - Photo: Huynh Kim
Van Phat Hung Corporation, one of STF’s Mekong Program sponsors, on Tuesday handed over VND600 million, in the form of interest-free loans for 143 Can Tho University students to pay their fees this year.

So far 337 students of the university have received the interest-free loans totaling VND1.7 billion from the Mekong Program. 

Tuyet Giang, a student from the faculty of trade law, said, “This is such a meaningful program for students. Thanks to the interest-free loan, I don’t need to work many part-time jobs to earn money for school fees and have more time to study.”

Giang and other students also registered to be volunteers for the Saigon Times Foundation – STF under the Saigon Times Group at the ceremony at the university on Tuesday.

Phan Gia Man, assistant CEO of Van Phat Hung Corp., said the company would also assist financially with the Mekong Program’s project to build 20 cement bridges to replace the traditional foot bridges in rural areas of Ca Mau Province. The project expects to be finished after the Lunar New Year. Van Phat Hung Corp. has donated VND4 billion to this program.

STF started the Mekong Program in September 2009. Its purpose is to provide interest-free loans to students in the Mekong Delta to pay their school fees. After graduation these students will return the money to the program to make loans available for other students.

Up to now, 615 students from Can Tho University, Cuu Long University, An Giang University and Ca Mau Community College have borrowed over VND3 billion, 121 of them for the second time.

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Saigon’s Queensland Flood Appeal raises US$33,000

The Queensland Floods Appeal on Monday night at Jaspas and Vino restaurants in Hai Ba Trung St. in HCMC  raised over US$33,000 to help the flood victims in the Australian state.

Over US$9,000 was raised in cash and US$24,000 was pledged with more coming in.

“It was an absolutely extraordinary response to an extraordinary tragedy in Queensland,” said Phil Johns, the president of the Australian Rules football team, Vietnam Swans, that helped AusCham organize the event with Jaspas, Vino and Commonwealth Bank.

The sponsors were led by the Boomerang Bar (US$10,000) and Meinhardt Engineering (US$5,000). There was also an individual who chipped in more than US$3,000.

The money will be sent to the Premier’s Flood Relief Appeal in the Australian state.

Of the people who attended the event many walked away with great prizes that were donated by generous local companies, resorts and hotels who wanted to help out.

Considering the event was only called on the weekend, the response was incredible and has been noted by many people in Queensland who have sent emails of thanks to the organizers which can be read on the Vietnam Swans’ website.

A second Queensland Flood Appeal will be held in Hanoi at Jaspas in the Hanoi Tower, 49 Hai Ba Trung St. this coming Friday night.

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Backstreet Boys scheduled to visit Vietnam?

Backstreet Boys, one of the biggest teen-pop groups in 1990s, are scheduled to perform in Vietnam in late March, according to an unconfirmed source revealed by Thanh Nien newspaper.

Backstreet Boys will perform in both Ho Chi Minh City and Hanoi.

Thanh Nien reported that they will stay for four days in Vietnam.

The band consisting of four members A. J. McLean, Howie Dorough, Brian Littrell, Nick Carter and Kevin Richardson, was formed in Orlando, Florida in 1993.

They rose to fame with their debut international album, Backstreet Boys in 1996.

They reached to superstardom with their album Millennium in 1999 and its follow-up album, Black & Blue one year later.

Richardson left the group in 2006 to pursue other interests, leaving the band as a four-piece, but the remaining members did not rule out a possible return of the singer.

The Backstreet Boys have sold over 130 million records worldwide, making them one of the biggest selling artists of all time.

According to Billboard, they are the first group since Sade to have their first seven albums reach the top 10 on the Billboard 200.

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Lotus likely to be Vietnam’s national symbol

Lotus could become the “national flower” of Vietnam as the fragrant plant has been so far voted the most favorite flower followed by apricots.

However, the final result will only be announced on January 29th .

According to an ongoing poll carried out since April last year, at the present time, 40.3 pct of respondents show their support for lotus, 33.6 pct pick apricots, 9.5 bamboos, 8.2 pct peach flower and 1.2 pct orchids, among other popular flowers.

The Ministry of Culture, Sport and Tourism - the poll organizer - will continue to collect public opinions through the Tet’s Flowers and Drinks Festival at the Vietnam Culture and Art Exhibition Center in Hanoi lasting from 25 to 30 January.

At the festival, lotus is expected be nominated as the national flower. Visitors will have a chance to enjoy the flower through different angles: lotus in worship ceremony, in “Mot Cot” pagoda architectures, in paintings, cuisine…

During the festival, 15,000 more ballots will be handed out to visitors.

This poll has been conducted at schools, union foundations and at the Ho Chi Minh Mausoleum.

On January 29, the final vote counting will take place at the Van Ho Exhibition Center, Hanoi and be aired live on VTV1.

The flower with the most votes will become the country’s national flower.

Lotus has been a very special cultural image of the Vietnamese for generations.

It is very easy to spot with huge, green and colorful ponds of lotus everywhere in rural areas. Lotus has taken deep roots in the Vietnamese minds and hearts and widely considered as the symbol of simplicity, hospitality and purity.

Lotus has leaves, bud, flower, seed, stem, and root. Though growing in muddy ponds, lotus is able to purify the water.

Especially, lotus is not surrounded by butterflies or bees from the moment when it blossoms till it withers.

In Buddhism, lotus is a symbol of mystery, illusion, and depth. Blossomed flower symbolizes for the past, lotus cup for present, and lotus seeds for the future, continuity.

In architecture of Vietnam, in Buddhism, the image of lotus is applied in housing architecture with the meaning of salvation and enlightenment.

Typical architectures with lotus are the one-pillar pagoda in Ha Noi, "Cửu phẩm Liên Hoa" tower, But Thap pagoda in Bac Ninh…

 

lotus

lotus

lotus

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Flowers, drinks fest planned for Tet

HA NOI - A festival of Spring Flowers and Drinks will be organised next Tuesday to celebrate Tet (the Lunar New Year).

The festival will be held in Ha Noi's Viet Nam Culture and Arts Exhibition Centre. It will introduce traditional customs and feature arts performances and games for visitors such as the traditional long dress show, calligraphy exhibition and a photo exhibition of lotus flowers, the top candidate for the title Viet Nam National Flower.

The exhibition will also show wines and spirits made by modern and traditional methods, with rewards for the most popular.

As many as 50 entrepreneurs will take part in the festival to introduce products served for Tet, such as decorative objects, ornamental trees and consumer goods.

This year the annual event will feature a market-day of the mountainous province of Ha Giang with local specialities, cuisine and festivities of the area's ethnic people such as a pan-pipe, dance and folk duet.

This year's festivities will run at the centre, located at 2 Hoa Lu Street, until the end of January. - VNS

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Thursday, January 20, 2011

Tet products become creative

With their increasing prosperity, Vietnamese consumers are willing to shell out extra money to buy quality or unusual products for Tet and manufacturers are obliging.

Saigon Fisco, for instance, has unveiled a special frozen hotpot. Unlike normal hotpots, this one weighs almost a kilogram, has enough seafood for 10 people, and is targeted at families that gather or travel together during Tet.

Housewives will be much less desperate this year considering some of the other foods on sale, especially Vissan’s new herbal chickens. These chickens were fed a diet of mixed natural herbs for about two months before being slaughtered, ensuring their meat is much firmer and better tasting than normal chickens.

Each chicken weighs 1.3-1.5kg and costs VND104,000 (US$5.3) per kilogram. A Vissan spokesperson since this was the company’s first attempt at this and quality had to be strictly controlled, it would produce only 5,000 herbal chickens for Tet.

Another unusual treat this year is the candied grapefruit peel that comes in thin yellow slices like candied ginger, and amazingly, tastes bitter, sweet, salty, and pungent at the same time.

The strong, lingering taste of grapefruit peel in our throat can be further accentuated by a cup of hot tea, and we can feel the heat permeating the whole body.

Ngoc Thuy, owner of Thanh Long candied fruits supplier, said making candied grapefruit peels is a demanding process, and 10 tons of peels yield just a ton of candies. “The price is around VND70,000 for a kilo. Since it first appeared in the market, it has attracted a lot of customers, especially in the central and northern regions where people consume them to keep themselves warm during the freezing cold of Tet.”

Watermelons are a must-have fruit during the New Year. This year farmers in Long An and Hau Giang Provinces will introduce organic watermelons for the first time in cooperation with Syngenta Company.

Truong Tran Quang Phuong, Syngenta’s southern regional sales director, said farmers who participate in the organic watermelons program must scrupulously follow growing procedures such as not using forbidden chemicals and proper disposal of pesticides.

“When harvest time comes, the company and local authorities will take samples for analysis and only when they meet all the requirements will the melons be certified as organic,” he explained.

Unusually-shaped melons continue to be in great demand. There are square or sycee-shaped melons and even ones with words like Phuoc (Fortune), Loc (Prosperity), Tho (Longevity) etched on their peels.

However, despite the much higher supply this year, their prices are not lower than last year.

According to a melon supplier in An Giang Province, a mixed pair of melons -- one square and one round -- costs VND800,000 ($40), while a pair of square ones and a pair with embossed words cost VND1.2 million.

Artistic speakers

hang sang 2

Customers choosing artworks that double up as speakers at AA Company

Paintings that are actually speakers with excellent sound quality will be a unique gadget to show off to visitors during Tet.

This idea was conceived a long time ago by Nguyen Hung Son, director of AA Company (District 11), and now artistic speakers in more and more designs and materials have hit the market.

With sound equipment imported from Taiwan, China, Denmark, and other places, and paintings made by artists in various styles, the company provides customers a wide range of choice.

Customers can also provide photos or artworks for making custom-built speakers. The speakers too come in a wide range -- from 1.5W to over 100W -- and even lend themselves to karaoke singing.

AA also offers speakers of under 30W with a music collection integrated in a built-in USB that do not have to be connected to amplifiers and disc players unlike in the case of speakers of 60W and above.

For all of the above, prices range from $150 to $350.

According to Son, the most important factor remains the sound quality and it is also the hardest to ensure. Admittedly, in terms of sound these speakers cannot be compared to top-of-the-range speakers, but they are still a good choice for people who want to dazzle their Tet visitors.

Ornamental apricot blossom trees rented

An unusual service is the rental of apricot blossom trees. Thong, the owner of Minh Thuy apricot blossom garden in Thu Duc District, HCMC, said that the number of people renting the trees this year is large despite the high price of VND10 million to VND50 million for a tree that is more than 50 years old.

Hieu, owner of another apricot garden nearby, said more than 100 trees have been rented for up to VND15 million. A rough survey shows the rental costs 30 percent-50 percent of a tree’s value.

Gardeners said those renting trees are mostly households or businesses that cannot take care of the trees all year round and only needed them during Tet. People can rent the trees until next year, paying the owners an upkeep fee of up to 20 percent of their value.

hang sang 3

High-value apricot blossom trees are of high demand this Tet season

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