Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Navibank Saigon holds on to V-League spot

Navibank Saigon holds on to V-League spotNavibank Saigon beat Quang Ninh 2-0 in a play-off match at Da Nang’s Chi Lang Stadium on Sunday to retain its V-League berth for the next season.

An overall superior performance and two goals in five minutes midway through the second half helped ensure that Ho Chi Minh City still had a representative in the country’s top-tier football league. The squad was formerly known as the Fourth Military Zone.

While a V-League spot is valuable, Navibank Saigon faces an uphill task if it wants to do well in the next season.

Team coach Mai Duc Chung said after the match, “I’m not sure whether I will stay with the club. However, improvement is very necessary. HCMC football has being going downhill a lot.

“If the officials in charge don’t contribute to improving the squad, it will be impossible for Navibank Saigon to avoid relegation to First Division at the end of the next season because the 2011 season will be more severe.”

Club owner Nguyen Vinh Tho said it was great that the club could stay on in the V-League.

“Navibank Saigon will be strengthened. Some good players have agreed to play for the club,” Tho said. “We work for the fans, so they can trust us.”

Tho also said the club would discuss an agreement to have Chung stay with the club.

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Cartoon on legendary Hanoi founder to screen

Cartoon on legendary Hanoi founder to screen

A cartoon on a legendary Emperor, who founded Thang Long capital, now Hanoi, is scheduled to air on September 17.


The film, entitled “Dragon’s Son”, is the first long cartoon using 3D
technology in Vietnam,  Nguyen Thi Hong Ngat, Executive Director of
the Cinematography Association Studio said at a press briefing in
Hanoi on September 13.


The 90-minute footage is
about the childhood of King Ly Thai To, or Ly Cong Uan at birth, who
founded the 216-year-long Ly Dynasty in 1009.


Painters have animated over 30 characters, designed 20 major scenes and conducted almost 850 acts.


Director Pham Minh Tri said the “Dragon’s Son” is “100 percent
Vietnamese”, from sounds to music and costumes. The cartoon is
characterised by northern countryside sceneries such as banian trees,
ferry stations, pagodas and buffalo boys playing and fishing.


Ly Cong Uan was born at Co Phap Pagoda, in the village of same name, Bac Ninh province, in 974.


At the age of 3, his mother took him to the pagoda for monks there to
bring him up. He was named Ly Cong Uan by the monks and became a monk.


Under the protection and support of Ly Van Hanh, also
known as Van Hanh monk, who was a respected monk in the holy Anterior Le
Dynasty court, Uan came to the capital and took several promotions to
the Left Guard-Commander of the Anterior Citadel, a high rank in the
army system. In 1009, Le Ngoa Trieu, the last king of the Anterior Le
Dynasty died under the wrath of the people because of the ferocity and
cruelty brought on them in his time. Dao Cam Moc, a senior official, and
Vạn Hạnh monk used their power to enthrone Ly Cong Uan without any
debate, beginning the Ly Dynasty.


The then capital Hoa Lu in
the northern province of Ninh Binh was a tiny area with craggy
geography bounded by mountain ranges, which had been suitable for a
turbulent era but was not conducive to peacetime development and growth.
Ly Thai To chose to move the capital to a broader area lying in the
flat alluvial delta named Dai La, now Hanoi . In 1010, he began the
move and while travelling from the former capital to the new land, he
saw a Yellow Dragon ascending, so he changed the new land's name from
Dai La to Thang Long.


Vietnam is
celebrating the millennium anniversary of Thang Long-Hanoi on October
10, which is called the Grand Festival./.

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Monday, September 13, 2010

Vietnam-China Singing Contest kicks off

The Vietnam-China Friendship Singing Contest 2010 kicked off in Ha Long
city in the northern coastal province of Quang Ninh on Sept. 13.


The contest is being held by Quang Ninh radio and
television station and the Vietnam Television Corporation in association
with China’s Guangxi radio station and international radio station
to mark the 60 th anniversary of the two countries’ diplomatic ties.


The contest is held in both Vietnam and China
and entrants - professional and amateur singers aged between 18-60 -
will sing one Vietnamese and one Chinese song.


In China, the contest concluded in Guangxi province on July 28.


In Vietnam, the organising board will choose six contestants from 10
outstanding singers in the final round of the contest that is being
held in Ha Long city and Hanoi to the final round of the contest that
will take place in China’s Nanning city in early November 2010.


The contest aims to promote the cultural exchange and
mutual understanding between the two peoples along Vietnam’s border
provinces of Quang Ninh, Lang Son, Cao Bang, Ha Giang and Lao Cai and
China’s Guangxi and Yunnan provinces./.

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Overseas Vietnamese in France join Vu Lan festival

A large number of overseas Vietnamese in the French capital city of
Paris and surrounding areas participated in the Buddhist festival Vu
Lan, which was held at the Truc Lam Monastery on Sept. 12.


Vietnamese Ambassador to France Le Kinh Tai, the embassy staff, Head
of the Propagation of Faith of the Thua Thien-Hue Buddhist Sangha Most
Venerable Thich Quang Nhuan and Head of the Truc Lam Monastery Most
Venerable Thich Phuoc Duong also joined the event.


Most Venerable Thich Quang Nhuan preached to Buddhist followers about
the legend of Bodhisattva Muc Kien Lien’s filial piety to save her
mother. The followers prayed for good things, health, happiness, peace
of the nation and security of people.


Vu Lan
festival is organised annually on the 15th day of the 7th lunar month.
The main objective of the festival is for the people to express their
gratefulness and appreciation to their dead parents and ancestors.


The Truc Lam Monastery belongs to the Truc Lam Yen Tu sect which was
founded by King Tran Nhan Tong. The pagoda was inaugurated in 1990 and
has become a familiar destination of Vietnamese students and Buddhist
followers in France./.

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First int’l piano contest closes in Hanoi

First int’l piano contest closes in Hanoi

Vietnam won three second prizes and two third prizes at the
international piano competition, which was held in Vietnam for the
first time from September 5-12.


In the group A for
pianists from 10-13, Vietnamese contestant Do Hoang Linh Chi and
Canada’s Vu Duc Manh Vincent picked up second prizes, each worth 500 USD
in cash. The first prize worth 1,000 USD went to Kiroki Ukine from
Japan .


In the 14-17-year-old group, Tran Viet Bao
and Luu Duc Anh of Vietnam together with Montesclaros Ma Regina from
the Philippines earned second prizes, each worth 800 USD.
Especially, Tran Viet Bao received the best contestant in Nocturne
performance presented by the Vietnamese Musician Association.


In the group, Nguyen Le Binh An took third prize and was presented with Dang Thai Son Scholarship.


In the group C, Luu Hong Quang of the host country and Shih Wei Chen
from Taiwan won third prizes, each worth 800 USD. The first prize
worth 2,000 USD belongs to Kim Kyung Hoon from the Republic of Korea
.


Tran Viet Bao also received Dang Thai Son Scholarship./.

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Vietnam international film fest focuses on Asian pictures

Vietnam's first international film festival will be held in Hanoi from
October 17-21 to celebrate the capital's millennium, said Le Ngoc Minh,
deputy director of the Ministry of Culture's Cinema Department.


Thirty cinematic works by Asian directors in three categories,
including feature films, documentaries and short films, will be screened
during the festival.


Competitive entries will
include both celluloid features and documentaries produced within the
last two years. Entries may or may not have been screened already, but
they should not have been broadcast on television or the internet.


Eight award categories will include best feature, best short film,
best documentary, best director, best actor, best actress, the NETPAC
(Network for the Promotion of Asian Cinema) prize, and the Journalists
prize.


Three conferences on Vietnamese cinema will
be held during the festival, including Solutions to Enhance Production
of Vietnamese Films, Vietnam – an Attractive Environment for
Producing Films, and Building a Vietnamese Cinema Industry.


Two Vietnamese feature films will participate in the competition:
Trung Uy (Lieutenant) by director Ha Son and Long Thanh Cam Gia Ca (A
Song about a Musician in the Thang Long Citadel) by director Dao Ba Son.


The feature film jury will include Australian
director Phillip Noyce, director of the Venice Film Festival Marco
Muller, French cameraman Francois Catonne, actress Kang Su-yeon from the
Republic of Korea , and Vietnamese director Dang Nhat Minh.


Jury members for the short film and documentary categories will
include French cameraman Mathieu Poirot Delpech and Vietnamese director
Bui Dinh Hac.


Aruna Vasudev, the founder and
President of NETPAC, Philippine director Doy Del Mundo, and Vietnamese
cinema critic Ngo Phuong Lan will sit on the NETPAC prize jury.


Journalists who cover cinema will sit on the Journalists Award panel.


Films will be screened at the National Cinema Centre, MegaStar Cinema
branches and Cine Complex. Some films will also be screened outdoors in
the King Ly Thai To Garden and in the square in front of the Hanoi Opera
House.


The opening and closing ceremonies will be held at the National Convention Centre on October 17 and 21, respectively.


A music gala will be held for participants at the Temple of Literature .


Three outdoor photo exhibitions will also be held in the city centre during the festival./.

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US Tennis defends roofless courts after Open washout

arthur ashe stadium
The Arthur Ashe Stadium

The US Tennis Association defended their decision to carry on staging the US Open without the benefit of a covered court even as rain on Sunday postponed the men’s final for the third year in a row.

The rain forced world number one Rafa Nadal, seeking to become the seventh man to complete a career grand slam, and Serbian third seed Novak Djokovic to wait until Monday to contest the last grand slam final of the year.

Both the Australian Open and Wimbledon championships have retractable roofs to deal with dodgy weather and French Open officials have discussed the possibility.

“It’s technically complex and financially challenging,” USTA spokesman Chris Widmaier told Reuters. “At a cost of more than US$150 million, do you spend that on a roof or continue to fund grassroots tennis programs in this country?”

Widmaier said $100 million had been spent on improvements at the Flushing Meadows complex in the last five years, with the biggest expense being a new indoor training center.

He also said money from the US Open was funneled into player development, grants and scholarships and to improving tennis facilities around the country, which included providing help to resurface 1,100 courts across the United States.

Widmaier said USTA president Lucy Garvin is heading a committee that will make recommendations to the tennis association on future improvements to the National Tennis Center complex and some options being looked at included covering smaller courts at less expense.

The tournament’s second court, Louis Armstrong Stadium, seats 10,500 compared to 23,771 at Arthur Ashe Stadium.

Four-time US Open winner John Mcenroe, now a TV commentator at the championships, said last year he had lobbied USTA officials from the start to put a roof over Arthur Ashe Stadium when it was built to replace Louis Armstrong Stadium in 1997 as the tournament’s main stage.

“It seemed like a no-brainer but people at the USTA decided they wanted to build the biggest (stadium),” McEnroe said about the Ashe center court. “But at the same price they could’ve had a slightly smaller stadium and had a roof.”

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