Sunday, February 13, 2011

Hai Phong cancels Valentine’s kissing contest

The romantic kissing contest for 100 couples supposed take place in northern city of Hai Phong Sunday to celebrate Valentine’s Day has been canceled.

Le Tat Vinh of Provincial Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism said the agency decided not to authorize the kissing contest set to take place at Hai Phong’s Viet-Czech Cultural Center at 14 pm February 13.

Director of the center, Trinh Phuc Tue said a contract to lease the venue for the event was also canceled.

Operated under the motto “there is no everlasting love, just everlasting moments of love”, the contest, named “The party of kisses”, is meant to create a unique opportunity for the city’s youth to demonstrate the depth and length of their love for their significant others.

100 couples, all over 18 years old, had signed up for the knockout competition.

According to the contest’s rules, couples would have to compete in an assigned compulsory position which allowed only one of the two to stand while kissing.

20 would be selected from the audience to serve as judges evaluating couples’ performance.

The couple exchanging the most impressive kiss in the longest time would be awarded a special prize, a VND 15million (US$ 769) laptop.

The event, if authorized, would be hosted by joint-stock media company Golden Brand in collaboration with Doublemint Vietnam and PNJ Jewelry Company.

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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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VN pupil conquers South Pole

Poles apart: During his expedition to the South Pole, Quang will make a short documentary about the life of Antarctic inhabitants, including whales and penguins. — File Photos

Poles apart: During his expedition to the South Pole, Quang will make a short documentary about the life of Antarctic inhabitants, including whales and penguins. — File Photos

Intrepid: Quang poses with Dr Olav Orheim, a scientist working at the South Pole.

Intrepid: Quang poses with Dr Olav Orheim, a scientist working at the South Pole.

HA NOI — Ten-year-old Pham Vu Thieu Quang did not celebrate the Lunar New Year in the traditional way with sticky rice cake, but instead with icy mountains, whales, sea lions and penguins at the South Pole.

Quang became the youngest Asian person to conquer the South Pole when he and other members of his expedition reached the southernmost point of the Earth on February 2.

Accompanied by his father, businessman Pham Quang Vinh, the 4th-grade student left Ha Noi on January 29 bound for Ushuia in Argentina, where they boarded English cruise liner the MS Fram, heading to the South Pole.

During the 10-day expedition, Quang and his companions visited the Rothera Research Station, a British Antarctic Survey logistics centre on Adelaide Island. They also visited several well known regional spots, including Deception Island, Half Moon Island, Yankee Harbour, Port Lockroy Post Office and Wilhelmina Bay.

To prepare for the journey, Quang took up cycling and biked up to 20km every Sunday.

Although it is summer time at present at the South Pole, the temperature was between -14oC to -5oC, challenging conditions for little Quang who is more familiar with a tropical climate.

"I had to ask some friends that live abroad to purchase specific clothing and other equipment such as anti-UV sun-glasses, gaiters and waterproof boots," Quang's father said.

According to Vinh, the expedition was not simply a journey of discovery, but also an experience his son would never forget.

"By taking him with me to the South Pole, I wanted him to know that I, like all parents, will always support his dreams."

Documentary

Quang was extremely excited when he found out about the expedition and started to research the area he was going to explore on the internet.

Quang revealed that he planned to make a short documentary about the life of Antarctic inhabitants, including whales and penguins.

To complete the documentary, Quang will conduct interviews with explorers, crew members and expedition members.

"I will present the documentary to my classmates and other people, hoping they will be able to learn more about the area and raising their environmental awareness," Quang said. — 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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Vietnamese children's author is hit with Thais

HCM CITY — Popular children's book writer Nguyen Nhat Anh has sold the rights to Thailand-based Nanmee Books Publishing House for translation of one of his best-selling books into Thai.

Cho Toi Xin Mot Ve Di Tuoi Tho (Give Me a Ticket Back to Childhood) is a narration by an urban boy named Mui of the events in his and three friends' lives.

The book received a sensational reception from critics and readers of all ages, selling a record – for children's books – 20,000 copies within a week of being published in 2008.

It was reprinted by the Tre (Youth) Publishing House.

Translator Montira Rato will work to get the Thai version published in August to mark 35 years of diplomatic relations between Viet Nam and Thailand.

Last year the Viet Nam Writers Association nominated the book for the Southeast Asian Writers Award instituted by the Thai royal family, and it duly won the prize.

The HCM City-based Anh began writing in 1984 and is known for his simple style and accurately depicting the purity and sensitivity of children's minds.

His other famous books include Toi La Be To (I'm Be To) and Dao Mong Mo (The Dreamlike Island), both about young girls and boys. Both have seen reprints.

His latest book, Toi Thay Hoa Vang Tren Co Xanh (I See Yellow Flowers on the Green Grass), sold 32,000 copies in just two months of publication last year.

Co Gai Den Tu Hom Qua (The Girl Comes from Yesterday), which Tre published in 1995, remains one of the country's best-selling kids' books.

Moscow University recently included it in the curriculum for Vietnamese-language students.

It is also expected to be translated into Russian. — VNS

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Local books translated into two languages

Author Nguyen Nhat Anh talks about his recent book, Toi Thay Hoa Vang Tren Co Xanh, with readers - Photo: Tuong Vi
Two books by author-for-teens, Nguyen Nhat Anh, will be translated into Thai and Russian, Tre Publishing House said.

In mid January, Nguyen Nhat Anh signed a contract with Thai publisher Nanmeebooks Co., Ltd. to allow them translate into Thai his teen novel, Cho Toi Xin Mot Ve Di Tuoi Tho (Give me a ticket back to childhood), which won the Vietnam Writers’ Association award in 2009 and a Southeast Asian Writers Award.

Another of Anh’s teen novels, Co Gai Den Tu Hom Qua (The girl from Thursday), will be translated into Russian for possible inclusion in the Vietnamese Studies curriculum at Moscow State University in Russia.

Doctor Maxim Syunnerberg, the author of Russian-Vietnamese Dictionary and associate professor of Vietnamese studies at the Asia and Africa Institute of the university nominated the book for translation to help Russian students learn Vietnamese.

Doctor Montira Rato will be in charge of the translation for Cho Toi Xin Mot Ve Di Tuoi Tho into Thai with the Thai version to be published in Thailand in August, to mark 35 years of diplomatic relations between Vietnam and Thailand. Four years ago, Rato translated a war diary by Dang Thuy Tram that was kept by American veterans for 35 years with the intention of eventually returning it to Tram’s family.

Anh’s most recent novel, Toi Thay Hoa Vang Tren Co Xanh (I saw a yellow flower on the green grass), had a 5,000 copy reprint released on Thursday following the sell-out of 30,000 copies here and overseas since it was first released 50 days ago.

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When fishermen have a whale of a time

Having a coastline of 3,260 km means for Vietnam the sea is intimately connected with its economy, culture, and history and has had a major influence on them.

Not surprisingly, fishing communities have traditionally celebrated festivals throughout the year, mostly to revere nature and invoke its blessings.

With the New Year just past, the celebrations reach a crescendo as people pray for a lucky year, good weather, good catches, and just good luck.

As an old Vietnamese saying has it, the first month of a year is for making merry.

Traveling south from Quang Ninh through 22 provinces, one can witness festivals one after another.

In Phan Thiet, for hundreds of years a boat race dressed in splendid costumes has taken place on the Ca Ty River on the second day of the New Year.

Local coracles also join in and compete for the prize.

City dwellers flock to the river banks, which are a splash of red due to team flags, and cheer the teams.

As the race began, a spectator managed to shout to us amid the clamor of the excited crowds: “Yeah it is a yearly tradition we are all proud of. It symbolizes our strength and determination versus the power of nature.”

More solemn but no less important is the Nghinh Ong Festival (Welcome the Guardian), the most widely celebrated festival from Quang Binh Province down, each place with its own version of it.

The festival is closely connected with locals’ practice of worshipping whales which are believed to guard fishermen at sea.

Tales of fishermen protected from sharks or brought ashore after their boats were wrecked have been handed down through generations and retold time and again to pay tribute to the huge mammals.

No matter how far they are out at sea, fishermen always make it back home in time to attend what is the year’s biggest festival for them.

 sea 2

In Ho Chi Minh City, the Nghinh Ong Festival celebrated in Can Gio District features a procession towards the sea from a temple where the whale is worshipped.

Along its route, fishermen and their families make votive offerings and burn incense to pray for a year of good catches and blessings.

“We fishermen never use his real name, but refer to him as ‘Mr’ to show our respect and gratitude,” one local whispered amid the solemn atmosphere as the procession passed.

The procession then climbs aboard the main golden dragon boat which is escorted by groups of flamboyantly decorated fishing boats.

Offerings presented, the flotilla returns to shore where groups of lion and dragon dancers formally welcome the spirit of the sacred guardian back to the temple.

The festival then turns lively with traditional singing and dancing and theatrical and sports performances in which fishermen and other locals eagerly participate.

After a year of hard and dangerous work at sea, the fishermen deservedly let their hair down.

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