Shanghai Daily news
Expo 2010 is quite a ways off, but the city's Songnan Town is gripped by Expo
fever. It's home to dedicated Expo boosters who travel as far as the Himalayas
to spread the word and have designed a giant writing pen-rocket souvenir.
The town in northeast Baoshan District is known for arts, crafts, culture and
originality. It has taken World Expo 2010 to its heart.
Vicente Loscertales, secretary general of the Bureau of International
Expositions, has praised Songnan residents' zeal and contributions.
Ten residents have just returned from Hong Kong where they campaigned for the
Expo and fueled enthusiasm. It was part of the Expo tour that the residents came
up with and organized themselves.
In the past three years, Songnan residents have left their footprints in
Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Anhui, Hainan provinces and other regions. They have
campaigned from neighboring regions to the slopes of Mt Everest in the Tibet
Autonomous Region.
In 2006, the chief booster Wang Weiping waved a banner with the signatures of
Expo enthusiasts as he trekked in the Himalayas.
On their way, Wang and others stopped in Lhasa, the Tibetan capital, and
cheered on the Expo in the public square in front of the Potala Palace.
According to regulations, any public gatherings must be approved by
authorities three days in advance. But Lhasa authorities waived the rules since
Wang and others were on a tight schedule.
Even on short notice, more than 200 middle school students showed up and
wrote their names on the Expo flag that was Everest-bound.
Wang runs the Website www.ooooocn.com, first set up to promote China's 2008
Olympics bid. The site now promotes the 2010 World Expo Shanghai.
The Website offers clips of local and nationwide reports and pictures of the
event. CNN and The Associated Press have both featured Songnan's Expo boosters.
In 2002, the Shanghai Expo Bureau set up the Songnan Town Correspondence
Office of the official Website - the city's first correspondence office to cover
promotions by local residents.
Songnan residents have come up with distinctive ideas to promote the grand
world's fair.
Wang and four artists invented a huge "Expo writing pen." The 7.13-meter-long
pen - shaped like a traditional ink brush - is the world's longest pen,
according to the Guinness Book of Records.
It's designed like China's Long March-2C rocket. The idea behind it is the
combination of science, philosophy and elements of traditional Chinese style.
For the rocket-shaped pen, Songnan coin collector Hua Enhong donated 100
different coins from 100 countries and regions that are participating in the
Expo. The coins were shaped into the letters "Expo 2010." Grouped around the
longest pen are four shorter pens, Western ballpoint pens, half the length.
They're like booster rockets.
"Next we are trying to make the Expo pen into a souvenir," Wang says. They
have made a sample that won third prize in the Shanghai Inventions Contest late
last year.
The new sample, about half a meter high, is made in traditional cloisonne
work, mounted on a base in the shape of a ding, a ceremonial pot representing
glory in ancient China.