Saturday, February 19, 2011

Residents compete in legendery Ha Noi rice cooking festival

People living in Thi Cam in Ha Noi's Tu Liem District gathered in the yard of the local temple on February 10 for the village's traditional rice-cooking festival.

According to legend, it originated during the 18th Hung King's rule, when General Phan Tay Nhac led troops through the village, and many villagers volunteered to join. The General organised a rice-cooking contest to choose the best cooks.

Four groups of 10 members compete. After receiving the rice and other materials, they have to pound the rice and cook it in clay pots using straw. The group with the most delicious rice is declared the winner.

Air Mekong to begin direct Ha Noi-Phu Quoc service

Air Mekong has unveiled plans to operate a daily service between Ha Noi and Phu Quoc Island this summer, making it the longest domestic air route.

Truong Thanh Vu, the carrier's director of commercial services, said the service will begin on April 28, with 90-seat Bombardier CRJ900 aircraft being put into operation. The aircraft will leave Ha Noi at 6am and Phu Quoc in the early afternoon.

Both business and economy class seats will be available, with economy fares starting at VND2.27 million (US$116) before tax.

More flights to be offered between VN, Australia

Australia and Viet Nam have signed a memorandum of understanding (MoU) to operate more flights between the two countries, according to a press release from the Australian Embassy in Ha Noi.

The MoU will add up to 3,300 additional seats a week.

Carriers from the two countries will now be allowed to operate 14 services a week with 4,200 seats to and from major Australian cities like Sydney, Melbourne, Brisbane and Perth, an increase of 1,200 seats.

They can operate seven additional services a week with around 2,100 seats to and from these destinations if the flights stop over at regional airports.

Growing number of Japanese visitors opt for incentive tours

More and more Japanese are choosing incentive tours to Viet Nam. According to local travel firms serving Japanese visitors, the trend has changed since the last decade when most Japanese visitors were young women and elderly people who chose to shop and sightsee in Viet Nam.

But now fewer young Japanese are coming while more guests are choosing to come on incentive tours.

Nguyen Ngoc Giang of OSC Travel said demand for incentive tours has been on the rise since mid-2010 and the increase will continue this year.

US television news broadcast promotes travel to Viet Nam

KPVI News 6, a National Broadcasting Company-affiliated television station in the US' Idaho state, has advised Americans to tour Viet Nam to get to know "Southeast Asia's rising star".

As the world discovers more of Viet Nam's treasures, the country is climbing higher on travellers' must-see list, it said.

"A Viet Nam tour is often the most effective way to take in the best of this fascinating country's attractions including the highlands of the far north and the beaches of the south."

In its website, KPVI News 6 said travellers will not want to miss Ha Noi, Hue, Da Nang and HCM City. — VNS

Related Articles

A new twist on an old art

HCM CITY — Tran Huu Trang Theatre's cai luong (reformed theatre) shows offered old stories in a modern style for HCM City theatre fans during Tet (Lunar New Year).

One of the shows featuring the play Da Chien Pha Song Ngan (Fighting on the Ngan River) describes parents' love and sacrifices for their children.

The work, written by Nam Chau, has been staged many times, attracting veteran performers such as Thanh Sang, Kim Tu Long and Phuong Lien.

In the version rewritten by Nguyen Thanh Chau, Tran Huu Trang invited young director Vu Minh to offer something new for fans.

Minh asked his young actors, including Trinh Trinh, Vo Minh Lam, Thanh Loan and Hoøng Quyen, to work hard to create a new style of cai luong singing and dancing.

He used beautiful clothes as well as light and sound effects to dazzle audiences.

"During the previous Tet, we often staged plays featuring social problems in a modern style to meet young fans' demands," said Phan Quoc Hung, director of the theatre.

"But this year we decided to provide a very old style of cai luong helping youth discover the music's nature," he said.

The VND500 million (US$22,000) play's financial success showed that Hung and others had made a wise decision.

During the Tet holiday, several thousand people visited District 5's Thu Do Theatre to discover the beauty of cai luong. The tickets have sold out for the next month.

In District 1, Kim Chau Stage introduced a series of extracts from famous plays like Hoa Moc Lan Tong Chinh (Mulan Enlists in the Army).

The play, directed by Tran Ngoc Giau, featured cai luong stars Vu Luan, Tu Suong and Thanh Thanh Tam.

Luan and his younger colleagues also performed Ong Tao (Kitchen God), a comedy featuring dances and songs based on traditional legends.

"We will travel to remote areas in the Cuu Long (Mekong) River Delta region to stage our shows next week because we want to entertain poor farmers and children who have fewer entertainment choices than their urban counterparts," said Luan, one of the city's most talented performers.

"Most of our shows in the city offer tickets at VND150,000- 500,000 each. They cost only VND10,000 for people who live in rural areas," he said.

Like other traditional art troupes, Hung's theatre receives about VND1 billion from the Government to run the company.

"We face many challenges in offering a stable income to our performers and staging quality plays," Hung said.

He said he hoped that local companies and organisations would offer more financial support to the city's traditional music troupes. — VNS

Related Articles

Friday, February 18, 2011

French paper reviews book on 1954 battle

dfd

War of words: Pham Thanh Tam's new book on Dien Bien Phu.

PARIS — The French newspaper Le Point ran an article on Tuesday about a book on Viet Nam's 1954 victory in Dien Bien Phu by Vietnamese author Pham Thanh Tam.

War Notebook of a Young Viet Minh Soldier at Dieân Bien Phu (in French: Carnet de Guerre d'une Jeune Viet-Minh a Dien Bien Phu) was published by the France-based Armand Colin Publishing House earlier this month.

The article said that Tam was once a student at the Ha Noi University of Fine Arts who fought for the Viet Minh (Viet Nam League for Independence). Tam wrote the book after seven years at war, when he was just 22 years old, never imagining that his work would ever be published.

Tam tells readers why and how the Viet Nam People's Army defeated the French colonialists at the Dien Bien Phu stronghold.

According to the article, thousands of books have been written about the Indochina War, which ended in defeat for the French colonialists at Dien Bien Phu. However, most of them were written by French war veterans, who expressed their sorrow about the defeat in their writing.

Tam's book gives readers a chance to understand the war and the French colonialists' loss through the eyes of a solider on the other side. — VNS

Related Articles

Vietnamese students get support in Melbourne

U.S. education career orientation seminar

Around 5,000 new international students, including Vietnamese students, will receive assistance when first arriving in Melbourne until February 26.

On landing at Tullamarine International Airport in the Australian city, overseas students can visit the welcome desk and receive an information kit.

“There are 30,000 international students either studying or living in Melbourne, and we want to support them as they embark on their Melbourne education and ensure they enjoy their time while they’re here,” Robert Doyle, Melbourne’s Lord Mayor said.

Vietnamese student, Bui Hoang Trung, who is doing a Bachelor of Computing at Swinburne University said, “Arriving in a new city as a new student can be tough… The welcome desk at the airport is designed to put new students and their parents at ease.”

The info kit was the brainchild of Swinburne University of Technology and the Victorian State government. About 100 volunteers, including Swinburne teachers and international students, help out with the program to assist international students to get to know their new city. Many of the volunteers are multilingual and there are pamphlets printed in different languages.

The Student Welcome Desk has been operating at the Australia-based airport since 2009 during the two major arrival periods of international students in February and July. This month, the desk will hand out 13,000 welcome kits.

According to Australian Education International (AEI), the international arm of the Australian Government Department of Education, over 24,000 Vietnamese students have studied in Australia so far.

*The U.S. Consulate General will hold the U.S. Education and Career Orientation Seminar  at Rex Hotel, 141 Nguyen Hue Boulevard, HCMC’s District 1 on Monday Feb. 28.

The orientation is designed to guide Vietnamese students through the decision making process of studying in the U.S. The event include informing students about job demand trends in Vietnam, equipping students with the tools to choose the right U.S. schools that meet their individual needs, empowering students to ask key questions when making this decision, assisting students with the application process, educating the public about accreditation and the concept of due diligence, and informing students about the student visa application process.

The free event is scheduled from 8 a.m. to 5p.m. and includes the sessions How to Use the Internet to Search for the Right School and Accreditation; Vietnam Workforce: Projected Career Trends in Vietnam; Application Process; Student Visa and SEVIS; and Student’s Life in the U.S.

Related Articles

VEF fellowship applications open

Vietnam Education Foundation (VEF) has announced that online application forms for the VEF Fellowship Program for funding to study in the U.S. are now available.

The deadline for students who haven’t yet got a place in a U.S. university is April 10. The deadline for students who have already secured a place at a university is March 10.

The VEF Fellowship Program is one of the key components of VEF’s mandate to enhance bilateral relations between the United States and Vietnam through international educational exchange programs that help improve Vietnamese Science and Technology (S&T) capacities.

VEF provides fellowships to the most talented Vietnamese for graduate study in the United States in S&T. Fellows are selected through a highly competitive, open and transparent process. VEF maintains high standards of excellence by choosing only top-notch students who demonstrate the ability to thrive in an U.S. academic setting.

 In order to produce young scientists and faculty for Vietnam, VEF prefers Ph.D. candidates. Working experience or government affiliation is not required.
VEF has placed 306 Fellows at 70 top universities in the United States.

VEF was established by the U.S. Congress under the Vietnam Education Foundation Act (2000) with the purpose of establishing educational exchange activities for Vietnamese nationals and also for Americans to teach at Vietnamese universities.

To access the forms go to www.vef.gov.

Related Articles

VEF fellowship applications open

Vietnam Education Foundation (VEF) has announced that online application forms for the VEF Fellowship Program for funding to study in the U.S. are now available.

The deadline for students who haven’t yet got a place in a U.S. university is April 10. The deadline for students who have already secured a place at a university is March 10.

The VEF Fellowship Program is one of the key components of VEF’s mandate to enhance bilateral relations between the United States and Vietnam through international educational exchange programs that help improve Vietnamese Science and Technology (S&T) capacities.

VEF provides fellowships to the most talented Vietnamese for graduate study in the United States in S&T. Fellows are selected through a highly competitive, open and transparent process. VEF maintains high standards of excellence by choosing only top-notch students who demonstrate the ability to thrive in an U.S. academic setting.

 In order to produce young scientists and faculty for Vietnam, VEF prefers Ph.D. candidates. Working experience or government affiliation is not required.
VEF has placed 306 Fellows at 70 top universities in the United States.

VEF was established by the U.S. Congress under the Vietnam Education Foundation Act (2000) with the purpose of establishing educational exchange activities for Vietnamese nationals and also for Americans to teach at Vietnamese universities.

To access the forms go to www.vef.gov.

Related Articles

New book traces last decade of Vietnam’s development

A new book called Vietnam tu nam 2011 – Vuot lens u nghiet nga cua thoi gian is a compilation of articles by Tran Van Tho
The Saigon Times Foundation has released a new book that tracks the country’s development since the late 1990s through newspaper and magazine articles by Prof. Tran Van Tho from Waseda University, Japan.

Tri Thuc Publishing House published the book Vietnam tu nam 2011 – Vuot len su nghiet nga cua thoi gian (Vietnam from 2011 – overcoming the cruelty of time) which contains nearly 50 of the professor’s articles in Vietnamese that have been published, mostly in Thoi bao Kinh te Sai Gon published by Saigon Times Group.

The compiled articles express the writer’s hopes over the past decade that Vietnam would regain the time it had lost and catch up with the developed world.

Tran Van Tho, a researcher on Vietnam’s economy, education, culture and society, theorizes about national policy and discusses the hot issues here and globally. Articles include: From the Quang Trung spring to the twentieth century; Establishment Nguyen Trai spirit in Viet-Trung economic tie, Express railway: Vietnam on Thursday and Japan 50 years ago.

The printing costs were sponsored by Trung Nguyen Coffee Company. It has 362 pages and costs VND89,000. All proceeds from book sales will be used by the Saigon Times Foundation to grant scholarships for students in Hoi An City, Quang Nam Province, where the writer went to highschool.

To buy it, contact the reader relations department of Saigon Times Group at 3821 0019, email: phathanh@thesaigontimes.vn or Miss Hoang Tuyen of the Saigon Times Foundation at 3740 2712.

Related Articles