Saturday, December 25, 2010

Ha Long Bay ranks sixth on National Geographic list

HA NOI — National Geographic magazine has ranked Viet Nam's Ha Long Bay sixth in a list of the world's 10 best sailing cruises.

The magazine describes Ha Long Bay as consisting of "strangely sculpted limestone islands and outcrops, dotted with small floating villages and deserted sandy beaches. In spring and early summer the water is particularly calm and clear. This UNESCO World Heritage Site is best explored by a cruise on a junk."

The list also included the Nova Scotia and Labrador Tall Ships cruise in Canada; US Washington state's San Juan Islands; a Pirate Cruise of the Grand Cayman Island; the Star Clipper to French Polynesia; a Junk Cruise in Andaman Sea, Thailand; the Seychelles Islands; a Dhow Cruise through the Strait of Hormuz, Oman; Lamu Island, Kenya and the Evia Island Cruise, Greece.

Last month, the Lonely Planet magazine also introduced Ha Long Bay as one of the world's top ten best boat journeys.

HCM City university kicks off fashion design contest

HCM CITY — The HCM City University of Technology's annual design contest for young fashion hopefuls opens tomorrow.

HUTECH Designer 2011 will be themed Hanh Tinh Xanh (Green Earth) to send the message of environmental protection to students around the country.

Contestants can send up to 10 designs.

The jury, including designer Sy Hoang, supermodel Ha Anh, and fashion lecturers from HUTECH and the HCM City University of Architecture, will select 15 best collections that will qualify for the final.

The finalists have to make clothes from their designs for the final to be held next April at the Phan Dinh Phung Gymnasium in District 3.

The winner will get a prize of VND30 million (US$1,540).

The contest was first held in 2009 for the HUTECH student and expanded to students and young people across the country in 2010.

Last year's contest was themed We Make Change, attracting contestants from 31 universities and colleges around the country and 100 others who submitted in all 332 designs.

Vo Thi Quynh Nhu of the HCM City-based Hoa Sen University won first prize with her collection titled Vu Dieu Mau Sac (Dance of Colours).

Da Nang student wins international film award

HA NOI — Ho Thi Hieu Hien, a student at the Tay Son School in the central city of Da Nang, has won the special prize at the Japan International Film Contest for Asian Children for her film Buoi Hoc Cua Thuy (Thuy's Learning Time), beating out 65 entries from 10 Asian countries and territories.

The film previously won first prize in a film contest for Vietnamese students.

Hien also won first prize in the 39th Universal Postal Union International Letter Writing Competition in September.

Ethnic man wins prize in traditional architecture contest

HA NOI — An amateur design for a stilt house of the Chu Ru ethnic group has won second prize in the Viet Nam Institute of Architecture, Urban and Rural Planning's Traditional Vietnamese Architecture Contest.

The designer, Jahieng from Pre' village in the Central Highlands province accepted the award in Ha Noi on Thursday.

The contest, organised by the institute's Architectural History Research Department, was part of a project to collect and gather information on traditional Vietnamese architecture. — VNS

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Hotels shares Xmas spirit with children

The Ramana Hotel’s staff members with Anh Sang orphanage’s children at the Xmas Charity party - Photo: Courtesy of Ramana Hotel Saigon
Somerset HCMC, a serviced residence managed by Ascott Limited (Ascott), has organized a ‘Sharing Happiness” Day at Dieu Giac temple orphanage in District 2 and donated VND30 million to the disadvantaged children there.

Richard Tan, Ascott’s country general manager for Vietnam, and some 40 staff, residents and families joined the event with a lot of food, games, songs and art competitions. The children had a lot of fun running around and taking photos with the Santas.

Somerset HCMC has been decorated with a key card Christmas tree at its lobby. There are 125 special edition key cards for sale and all proceeds from the sale will be donated to the orphanage on Christmas Day. Extra donations are expected to total VND10 million which will be used to cover foods and education needs for the children there.

*DuxtonHotel Saigon

In the spirit of giving for this Christmas season, Duxton Hotel Saigon visited and sent Christmas gifts to orphaned children, sightless people and elderly at Bamboo Village in Dong Nai Province on December 18.

*Legend  Hotel Saigon

Management and staff of the Legend Hotel Saigon have visited Hoang Mai Center in HCMC’s Go Vap District to serve buffet lunch to disabled children and give the center VND20 million and Christmas gifts. The donation was contributed by the hotel’s management and staff, and funds saved through not sending printed seasonal greeting cards as a commitment to the environment and community.

*Ramana Hotel Saigon

The four-star Ramana Hotel Saigon on Thursday hosted Xmas Charity party for 50 orphans from Anh Sang and Ga Saigon orphanages in HCMC’s District 3.

“We have never enjoyed such delicious foods and happiness in a luxurious place like this. We are so happy and hope that next year we gather again in this place to celebrate Xmas,” an orphan identified as Phuc said.

The total amount spent on the charity event was VND90 million.

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Friday, December 24, 2010

Cambridge ESOL launches competition for teachers

Cambridge ESOL, part of the U.K-based University of Cambridge, has announced the 2011 Cambridge English Competition for teachers worldwide who do not speak English as mother tongue.

Those joining the competition will submit a 150-word essay by March 1, 2011 to talk about their experience, difficulties and challenges that they have faced when teaching English in their countries.

The topic of this year’s competition is “Briefing your solution for difficulties as teaching English and what you do to create a better learning experience for your students.”

Six winners will be selected and each of them will be offered one of three development courses, including Language and Methodology Refresher (Young Learners), Language and Methodology Refresher (Secondary/Adults), and Teaching Business English for two weeks.

These six teachers will start their courses at the U.K-based Bell Teacher Campus, Homerton College in Cambridge and will be fully-funded for their trips to the U.K from August 14-27, 2011.

In 2010, Cambridge ESOL received over 2,000 entries from teachers in 45 countries. Vietnam and four other teachers from Taiwan, Poland, Kazakhstan and Argentina won the trip to Cambridge to improve English teaching methods.

For more information, visit www.cambridgeesol.org/wow/events/cambridge-english-competition.html or email at  info@cambridgeesol.org.vn, and for registration at  www.surveymonkey.com/s/camenglishentryform

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City welcomes in festive season

Seasonal cheer: Singer Minh Hang performs at a music show. Young performers will tour the streets for charity before entertaining audiences with popular Christmas and New Year songs. — VNS File Photo

Seasonal cheer: Singer Minh Hang performs at a music show. Young performers will tour the streets for charity before entertaining audiences with popular Christmas and New Year songs. — VNS File Photo

HCM CITY — Christmas Eve music and other performances in HCM City tonight will feature some big names and promise to provide something for everyone.

Pop superstars like My Linh, Hong Nhung, Phuong Thanh, and Ho Ngoc Ha, and dance groups like Hoang Thong will perform at many places in the city.

A large, open-air show sponsored by Maritime Bank and others will be held at District 10's Thong Nhat Gymnasium.

The concert, Toi Tin (I Believe), will be directed by Pham Hoang Nam and his Vietnamese and foreign crew, including music director Duc Tri, theatre design director John Park, and visual effects specialist Yap Kok Wai.

Young stars like Ha Anh Tuan, Phuong Linh, and Minh Hang will perform along with the more experienced Quang Dung and Dan Truong.

The free concert is expected to attract more than 20,000 people.

Young artists will tour the city streets for charity before going to people's houses and singing popular Christmas and New Year songs.

A fashion show at the Youth Cultural House will feature the latest collections by young designers from the city's Fine Arts College.

Dam Sen Park's theatre festival, Gala Xmas 2011, which will feature popular cai luong (reformed theatre) stars and comedians, has already attracted thousands of migrant workers and students.

The World of Bethlehem Legends, an ice sculpture festival which has some of the world's architectural wonders carved in ice, opened at the Suoi Tien Tourist Park this week, attracting thousands of children and their parents.

Dozens of ice sculptors have been invited to make the sculptures for the event that will go on into the new year. Thousands of bulbs make the show a blaze of colours.

Santa Claus and his helpers will give away gifts and food to young visitors to the park.

The city Young People's Association has got hundreds of young volunteers to dress in traditional red and white costumes to spread the Christmas cheer to poor and homeless children around the city.

"I volunteered to be Santa because for me Christmas is about giving and making children happy," Tran Minh Chien, a third-year student at the city's Law University, said.

Chien and his friends will visit orphanages and shelters in the rural districts of Nha Be and Binh Chanh. "We will sing and dance with the children and hope to cheer them up," he said. — VNS

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King Le historical novel wins top prize

HCM CITY — Veteran author Nguyen Quang Than's historical novel, Hoi The (Revenge Vows), has received the first prize for fiction from the Viet Nam Writers Association in Ha Noi.

The prize is given every three years to honour the best books in fiction, a literary genre that is often highly challenging for both veterans and young writers.

Hoi The features the tales of Emperor Le Thai To and his loyal courtier Nguyen Trai, one of Viet Nam's greatest politicians and poets.

They began their campaign against China's Ming occupation in 1418.

The novel vividly portrays the heroic deeds of the king and his people, highlighting the strength of the people's inner life.

Seventy-four-year old Than is known for his realistic writing style that sensitively hides romantic feelings.

Although he began writing in 1957, he did not receive a prize until 1983 when his children's book Chu Be Co Tai Mo Khoa (The Boy Can Open Every Door) was given an award by the association.

Than's best-known works, including Huong Dat (The Flavour of Land) in 1964, Ba Nguoi Ban (Three Friends) in 1970, and Con Ngua Man Chau (The Manchu's Horse) in 2000, have been issued by leading publishers and attract both old and young readers.

The association selected Hoi The for the award this year from 247 literary works authored by veteran and young writers across the country.

The association presented three second prizes to Huu Phuong's Chan Troi Mua Ha (The Sun Above the Horizon in Summer), Nguyen Quang Ha's Vung Lom (Main Point), and Nguyen Van Tho's Quyen. All of the works feature a slice of contemporary writing.

With her latest book Xuan Tu Chieu, the Ha Noi-based writer Y Ban shared third prize with nine writers who also showed their writing skills on their work's papers.

Published by the Phu Nu (Women) Printing House in 2008, Xuan Tu Chieu tells the stories about life and love of three married women named Xuan, Tu and Chieu, who try to escape from fixed social mores to free thoughts and lifestyles.

In her interview with the Mot&Cuoc Song (Fashion&Life) magazine after her book's release, Ban said: "I tried to put myself into every word in Xuan Tu Chieu."

In the book, she uses a new, simple and candid writing skill that leaves a very strong impression on readers' minds.

The association wants to honour fiction writers and encourage people, especially the young, to read novels, which often include serious topics about history, culture, life, according to poet Huu Thinh, chairman of the association. — VNS

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Folk cultural researchers honoured in Ha Noi

HA NOI — Valuable pieces of research on folk literature and art were granted prizes by the Viet Nam Folk Arts and Literature Association on Wednesday in Ha Noi at an annual association event.

Research on the spiritual customs of the Thai ethnic group who live in the northern mountainous region of Viet Nam by Luong Thi Dai and Lo Xuan Hinh and a book on the geography of Quang Xuong District in the central province of Thanh Hoa by Hoang Tuan Pho received the most prestigious awards on the occasion.

Pho's work provided a range of information on the coastal district of Quang Xuong including its history, geographical traits and potential development in tourism and traditional handicrafts.

Dai and Hinh researched the long-standing traditions of the Thai people, concentrating on their marriage ceremony, known as sen phan be.

The association awarded 66 prizes selected from 89 entries in the fields of philology, folk culture, performing arts, geography, traditional customs and folk knowledge, according to To Ngoc Thanh, the association's president.

Academy to present quarterly concert for children

HA NOI — The Viet Nam National Academy of Music will offer a special concert for children every quarter at the academy's campus, according to piano instructor Ta Quang Dong, who initiated and organised the programme.

"We spare a regular concert for children as we hope to bring them a real appreciation for European classical music, " Dong told Viet Nam News. "Vietnamese audiences have little knowledge of this kind of music, which is partly a result of our improper music education.

"Children audiences like to see children perform," he said. "At the same time, young artists will get a chance to perform in front of a real audience rather than waiting for scarce opportunities to perform in major shows."

"Classical music is the root from which a music student begins before concentrating on other genres," Dong said. "Today, more wealthy families are facilitating their children's music education, not to earn a living but to enhance their aesthetic sense."

17th century stone steles found in northern province

VINH PHUC — Sixty-eight stone steles dating from the 17th century have been catalogued by the Department of Culture, Sports and Tourism of the northern province of Vinh Phuc.

Stone steles, often found in pagodas, temples and community halls, provide valuable information on history, tradition, geography and customs, said Tran Van Quang, the department's director. Contents carved on the steles recorded notable events, he said.

However, Quang warned that communities were often not aware of the significance of the carved stone and that regional authorities had no plans to preserve it.

Heavy rains bring brighter news as artefacts are unearthed

NGHE AN — People in Do Luong District and Cua Lo Town in the central province of Nghe An have collected 40 pottery pieces dating from the Ly and Tran dynasties (the 10th-18th centuries) in recent months.

Most of the artefacts, including dishes, bowls, pots and cups, were found by farmers after heavy rain washed the soil away.

Many of the pieces were decorated with lotus and daisies, enamelled in different colours. They are now being stored at the provincial museum. — VNS

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Renaissane Riverside names director of finance

Stathi Kallinikos
Stathi Kallinikos has been appointed as director of finance of the Renaissance Riverside Hotel Saigon.

Stathi Kallinikos has been through many positions at the Nikko and Hyatt hotels before he joined Marriott in 2000, first working at the Renaissance Chancery Court Hotel in London. In the following years he assumed managerial positions at the Renaissance Leipzig Hotel in Germany, the Marriott Grosvenor Square in London, the Sydney Harbour Marriott Hotel, and the JW Marriott Hotel Jakarta.

Stathi Kallinikos received his BSc in Hotel & Restaurant Management from the University of Nevada, Las Vegas in the United States and his Diploma in Accountancy from the Bournemouth University in Great Britain.

“Personally I am looking forward to the full Vietnamese experience and I will most likely be spotted out and about at HCMC’s cafés, restaurants, markets and green spaces….(and anywhere in Vietnam where there happens to be a beach),” Stathi Kallinikos said, hinting at his habit of going places.

‘As for the new role at the Renaissance Riverside Saigon, it’s great to be back with the Renaissance brand after a few years away, she’s looking as good as ever!” he added.

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