[Vnbiz] FW: Score/Req: 05.2/5.0] Vnbiz Digest, Vol 20, Issue 14
Nguyet Le
nguyet at dataagent.vn
Tue May 15 18:26:02 PDT 2007
Dear Hoanh & ALL,
Thank you for your warmly greetings.
Wishing you all a happy and lucky day !
Best regards,
Anh Nguyet Le Huynh
-----Original Message-----
From: vnbiz-bounces at mail.saigon.com [mailto:vnbiz-bounces at mail.saigon.com]
On Behalf Of vnbiz-request at mail.saigon.com
Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2007 9:55 PM
To: vnbiz at mail.saigon.com
Subject: [***SPAM*** Score/Req: 05.2/5.0] Vnbiz Digest, Vol 20, Issue 14
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Today's Topics:
1. Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in Scotland
(Tran Dinh Hoanh)
2. Re: Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in Scotland
(Hoang Thanh)
3. Re: Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in Scotland
(LeDieu Anh)
4. Re: Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in Scotland
(Phan, Tai)
5. China completes new power line to Vietnam (Phan, Tai)
6. Vietnam's Phu Quoc island: Trip tips (Phan, Tai)
7. Re: Staying to be a Leader -- the Champion of Values
(Tran Dinh Hoanh)
8. Re: Staying to be a Leader -- the Champion of Values
(Hong-Phong_Pho at ita.doc.gov)
9. Welcome chi Nguyet Le in to VNBIZ (Tran Dinh Hoanh)
10. Vacancies at Health Care in the Central Highlands Project
(Phuc Le Hong)
11. Re: My Schedule (Dr Hoang)
12. Fwd: Health economist consultants (Tran Dinh Hoanh)
----------------------------------------------------------------------
Message: 1
Date: Sun, 13 May 2007 08:22:17 -0400
From: "Tran Dinh Hoanh" <tdhoanh at gmail.com>
Subject: [Vnbiz] Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in
Scotland
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Message-ID:
<fe5aabf50705130522p3f7e3c3fjfb092d199ab9c7d5 at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Dear CACC,
Our sister Dang Thu Huong hdangthu at gmail.com has been selected to attend
the 2007 CIVICUS Youth Assembly in Glasgow, Scotland this month, May 23-27,
2007.
CIVICUS World Assembly http://www.civicusassembly.org/ is a forum for
international civil society representatives to get together, exchange ideas,
experiences and build strategies for a just world.
Here is some thing from CIVIUS website: The next two World Assemblies will
be held in Glasgow and will follow the common theme: "Acting Together for a
Just World " a theme inspired by events leading up to the G8 Summit, which
showed both the massive global commitment from ordinary citizens for a
better and more just world, and the absolute necessity of continuing the
struggle to achieve it.This theme will be explored through the central focus
theme: "Accountability : Delivering Results". CIVICUS recognises that
transparency and accountability are essential to good governance and the
achievement of a 'Just World'
About CIVICUS Youth Assembly:
Following outcomes from the 2006 CIVICUS World Assembly, it was clear that
there was a need for an international youth-led forum for debate and
dialogue on issues from the perspective of young people that will feed into
and inform the debate at future World Assemblies.
Working in Partnership, Oxfam in Scotland and the Scottish Youth Parliament
combined forces to set up a new initiative to develop a youth led education
programme focusing on political, economic and social justice issues
And the theme of Civicus youth assembly for this year is "*Accountability to
the future generation".* CYA select 150 delegates from 90 countries over the
world this year. And many of them are from the developing country like VN.
Congratualtions, Thu Huong. Since day 1 in this family, you have shown
great leadership and initiatives. You make us happy and proud. Enjoy the
trip, sister. And tell us all about it afterward.
Great day, THu Huong and all.
Hoanh
--
Tran Dinh Hoanh, LLB, JD
Washington DC
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Message: 2
Date: Mon, 14 May 2007 00:22:44 +0700
From: "Hoang Thanh" <httmail at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Vnbiz] Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in
Scotland
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Message-ID:
<ef2a19d00705131022p583b5f00m21b0645397b53e7 at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Congratulation Huong
what are you planing to do in the Assembly, great oppotunity for you!
"Report" for us, i wanna hear fr you. Good luck
Thanh
2007/5/13, Tran Dinh Hoanh <tdhoanh at gmail.com>:
>
> [ Vietnam Business Forum ]
>
>
> Dear CACC,
>
> Our sister Dang Thu Huong hdangthu at gmail.com has been selected to attend
> the 2007 CIVICUS Youth Assembly in Glasgow, Scotland this month, May
23-27,
> 2007.
>
> CIVICUS World Assembly http://www.civicusassembly.org/ is a forum for
> international civil society representatives to get together, exchange
ideas,
> experiences and build strategies for a just world.
>
> Here is some thing from CIVIUS website: The next two World Assemblies
> will be held in Glasgow and will follow the common theme: "Acting Together
> for a Just World " a theme inspired by events leading up to the G8 Summit,
> which showed both the massive global commitment from ordinary citizens for
a
> better and more just world, and the absolute necessity of continuing the
> struggle to achieve it.This theme will be explored through the central
> focus theme: "Accountability : Delivering Results". CIVICUS recognises
that
> transparency and accountability are essential to good governance and the
> achievement of a 'Just World'
>
> About CIVICUS Youth Assembly:
>
> Following outcomes from the 2006 CIVICUS World Assembly, it was clear that
> there was a need for an international youth-led forum for debate and
> dialogue on issues from the perspective of young people that will feed
into
> and inform the debate at future World Assemblies.
>
> Working in Partnership, Oxfam in Scotland and the Scottish Youth
> Parliament combined forces to set up a new initiative to develop a youth
led
> education programme focusing on political, economic and social justice
> issues
>
> And the theme of Civicus youth assembly for this year is "*Accountability
> to the future generation".* CYA select 150 delegates from 90 countries
> over the world this year. And many of them are from the developing
country
> like VN.
> Congratualtions, Thu Huong. Since day 1 in this family, you have shown
> great leadership and initiatives. You make us happy and proud. Enjoy the
> trip, sister. And tell us all about it afterward.
>
> Great day, THu Huong and all.
>
> Hoanh
>
>
> --
> Tran Dinh Hoanh, LLB, JD
> Washington DC
>
> _______________________________________________
> To subscribe/unsubscribe, please contact admins at
> vnbizadmin at vietlinks.net
> Info at http://mail.saigon.com/mailman/listinfo/vnbiz
> Archive at
> http://groups.yahoo.com/group/vnbiz/
> or http://groups-beta.google.com/group/VNBIZforum/
> or http://mail.saigon.com/pipermail/vnbiz
>
>
--
Hoang Thanh Thanh
Vietnam Digital Television VTC
8D Nguyen Thi Minh Khai- Q.1-TP.HCM
Tel: (08) 9106476
Fax: (08) 911.1140
Cell: 090.333.77.46
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Message: 3
Date: Mon, 14 May 2007 09:25:33 +0700
From: "LeDieu Anh" <a.ledieu at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Vnbiz] Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in
Scotland
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Message-ID:
<741a234c0705131925s723ed683m43f78ed8090c7e0e at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Dear Thu Huong,
Congratulations, Huong. I am so proud of you and so are your parents,
particularly your mother. That is a good news for your mother on Mother's
day.
Cheers,
Anh
On 5/13/07, Tran Dinh Hoanh <tdhoanh at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> [ Vietnam Business Forum ]
>
>
> Dear CACC,
>
> Our sister Dang Thu Huong hdangthu at gmail.com has been selected to attend
> the 2007 CIVICUS Youth Assembly in Glasgow, Scotland this month, May
23-27,
> 2007.
>
>
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Message: 4
Date: Mon, 14 May 2007 07:26:18 -0400
From: "Phan, Tai" <Tai.Phan at ed.gov>
Subject: Re: [Vnbiz] Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in
Scotland
To: <vnbiz at vietlinks.net>
Message-ID:
<4062487BDB6029428A763CAEF4E1FE5B14F5259C at wdcrobe2m03.ed.gov>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Huong,
Congratulation for the selection. I think you will do a good job and have a
lot of friends there. This will be an opportunity for you to apply your
knowledge at a wider environment and testing your skills as a leader.
Have a good time,
Tai
-----Original Message-----
From: vnbiz-bounces at mail.saigon.com [mailto:vnbiz-bounces at mail.saigon.com]On
Behalf Of LeDieu Anh
Sent: Sunday, May 13, 2007 10:26 PM
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Subject: Re: [Vnbiz] Thu Huong is attending CIVIUS Youth Assembly in
Scotland
Dear Thu Huong,
Congratulations, Huong. I am so proud of you and so are your parents,
particularly your mother. That is a good news for your mother on Mother's
day.
Cheers,
Anh
On 5/13/07, Tran Dinh Hoanh < tdhoanh at gmail.com> wrote:
[ Vietnam Business Forum ]
Dear CACC,
Our sister Dang Thu Huong hdangthu at gmail.com <mailto:hdangthu at gmail.com>
has been selected to attend the 2007 CIVICUS Youth Assembly in Glasgow,
Scotland this month, May 23-27, 2007.
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Message: 5
Date: Mon, 14 May 2007 07:52:39 -0400
From: "Phan, Tai" <Tai.Phan at ed.gov>
Subject: [Vnbiz] China completes new power line to Vietnam
To: <vnbiz at vietlinks.net>
Message-ID:
<4062487BDB6029428A763CAEF4E1FE5B0CF41286 at wdcrobe2m03.ed.gov>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
China completes new power line to Vietnam
(Xinhua)
2007-05-13 16:40
KUNMING -- A new power transmission line designed to send electricity from
Wenshan in southwest China to Ha Giang in Vietnam has been completed and put
into service.
It is the fifth power line to transfer electricity from China to Vietnam.
The newly completed line is also the second 220-kilovolt power line to be
constructed between China and Vietnam. The first one runs between Honghe in
Yunnan and Lao Cai of Vietnam.
Yunnan Power Grid signed an agreement over the sale of electricity between
Wenshan and Ha Giang with its Vietnam counterpart last June.
Construction inside China began last July, with an investment of 173 million
yuan (21.63 million US dollars). The line extends 300 km, of which 170 km
are inside China.
According to the Yunnan Power Grid, the line is capable of sending one
billion kwh of electricity a year, but power transmission in the first year
of operation will be around 700 million kwh.
Estimates provided by Vietnam show that the northern parts of the country
will suffer a power shortage ranging from 200 million kwh to 1.2 billion kwh
between 2007 and 2010.
China has sold 1.84 billion kwh of electricity since September 2004, when
China began to transmit power to Vietnam.
------------------------------
Message: 6
Date: Mon, 14 May 2007 07:54:54 -0400
From: "Phan, Tai" <Tai.Phan at ed.gov>
Subject: [Vnbiz] Vietnam's Phu Quoc island: Trip tips
To: <vnbiz at vietlinks.net>
Message-ID:
<4062487BDB6029428A763CAEF4E1FE5B0CF41287 at wdcrobe2m03.ed.gov>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
TRAVELS WITH LONELY PLANET | VIETNAM
TRAVELS WITH LONELY PLANET: Vietnam's Phu Quoc island
A 30-mile-long, tear-shaped island is rimmed with untouched beaches.
BY ROBERT REID
Lonely Planet
Related Content
Vietnam's Phu Quoc island: Trip tips
As I pulled my motorbike off the red-dirt path toward the beach, a kid
jumped up from a hammock and two wrestling German shepherds looked up from
the turquoise water. But for the family running the hut/restaurant here, and
their giant servings of fresh squid, there was nothing but gold-sand beach
for a few miles. And I was alone.
Word spreads fast in Southeast Asia, so this scene will change. Vietnam's
Phu Quoc island, just off the Mekong Delta coast, is already the new great
hope
for the ''next Phuket,'' a new Southeast Asian beach hub to supplement
Thailand's overdeveloped ones. It's no Thailand, but that anything so
stunning has been overlooked for so long is a shock.
The mountainous 30-mile-long, tear-shaped island is rimmed with many
untouched white- and gold-sand beaches. Until recently, it's been a quiet
island of military outposts -- nearby Cambodia sometimes murmurs that the
island should be theirs -- and the world's best nuoc mam (fermented fish
sauce). Now there's talk of international flights, golf courses and casinos.
THE COMING BOOM
Phu Quoc is already starting to see a blip of the boom to come. During peak
season (October to March), Vietnamese weekenders and a smattering of
travelers-in-the-know check into the growing strip of mostly small bungalow
resorts along Bai Truong beach (often called Long Beach), south of Duong
Dong town, on the island's west side.
Many visitors take diving or snorkeling trips, particularly good off the
southern tip, or squid-fishing trips after dusk. Others just sit on the
palm-backed beach, free from the Jet Ski noise you get at other Vietnamese
beaches. It's certainly nice, yet just busy enough that you might have to
wake early to get a thatch umbrella on the sand.
A local told me about more remote beaches. ''Dai Beach is paradise, no
people. You haven't been yet?'' So I rented a motorcycle and took off.
I stopped first to pay respects at one of the many fish-sauce factories
along a canal in Duong Dong. The staff, busy loading bottles onto a docked
boat, laughed at my interest and let me wander freely in the tin-roof
warehouse, where I climbed ladders to peer into massive barrels of putrid
fermenting fish. The stuff stinks -- I didn't try it for a week afterward --
but is so good here that mainland and Thai fish-sauce makers sometimes slap
''Phu Quoc'' on their bottles to add market appeal.
INTO THE JUNGLE
I aired myself out on the ride east of town to a Jurassic Park-style gate
about four miles east. Inside it led to a short, rocky path, which I took
through a dense jungle -- alone but for the menacing shrieks of high-pitched
bugs. After 15 minutes I reached Suoi Tranh, a 12-foot waterfall, good for a
cool head dunk in the midday heat.
One of the best remote beaches I heard about was Bai Sao (Star Beach), about
a dozen miles south. I followed a bumpy side road off the paved road to a
gorgeous curving stretch of white sand on the island's east side. I borrowed
a lone beach restaurant's inner tube to float a bit and had some grilled
fish before heading up the island's west side paths past fishing villages.
The next day I headed to the island's mountainous north, where some beaches
are hard to reach on four wheels. In humble Cua Can fishing village, seven
miles north of Duong Dong, a shirtless man filled my gas tank by a canal.
''You're French?'' he asked. ''No, American.'' He repeated the same to
another shirtless guy who had stopped, rubbing an elbow, to watch the scene.
I crossed a three-foot-wide wood-plank bridge north of town and finally
found that untouched gold-sand Dai Beach -- three miles long, with a lone
friendly family serving seafood. Paradise (for now). And that's where I
stayed for a while
------------------------------
Message: 7
Date: Mon, 14 May 2007 10:13:41 -0400
From: "Tran Dinh Hoanh" <tdhoanh at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [Vnbiz] Staying to be a Leader -- the Champion of Values
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Message-ID:
<fe5aabf50705140713l7aa1096cyd7affb55f7120574 at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Dear Sis. Thu Huong & CACC,
Superb question, Thu Huong. How do we know ourselves? And when the folks in
authority focus more on blaming and punishment than in praising and
encouragement. how does a person know what she is good at?
Why our culture focuses more on blaming and punishing than on praising and
encouraging is an interesting question. As we grow up, we hear the adults
say things like "You shouldn't praise them, because they will become
arrogant." I used to accept that explanation as a good explanation. But the
damage of that kind of punishing behavior is so big. It really destroys the
kid's confidence and stops him from developing his full potentials.
I believe that such behavior comes from the fact that for thousands of years
the Chinese dominated us, plus a hundred years of the French. These rulers
did not want to treat us Vietnamese with dignity and did not want us to have
any confidence in ourselves. So they constantly made us feel inferior and
stupid. So they focused heavily on blaming and beating. And we just
internalized such behavior and did the same thing to ourselves. This is
the "abused-child syndrom."
The potentials in each of us are like little little plants, and
encouragement is like water. If we praise a person constantly and encourage
that person constantly, regardless of whether he wins or loses in a game,
his plants will grow into giant trees some day. If we keep harassing him
for "doing bad," he will wither away. This is true in family, school and
the work place.
I am not saying that we should not have constructive criticism once in a
while. But the ratios should be like this: At least 75 percent praising
and at max 25 percent criticism is good. Less praising and more criticism
than these ratios is bad for development, both personal and communal. If
you want you kid to do well, praise them more often than criticising them.
If you want your company to do well, praise your employees constantly and
criticize them rarely.
This issue is not only for the individual, it tremendously effects our
national development. Great question, Thu Huong.
Have a good day!
Hoanh
On 5/12/07, huong dang thu <hdangthu at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> [ Vietnam Business Forum ]
>
>
>
> Dear bro & sis,
>
>
>
> Thanks for your sharing about values.
>
>
>
> Please let me ask 1 more question for today: How can we know that we are
> possessing some values?
>
>
>
> It sounds like an unreasonable question. But I'm serious about this. For
> that Vietnamese culture is a very 'modest' culture. So that we have trend
> not to give compliment. (eg, my parents never tell me that I do sth good.
> Very frequently, I should realize if I'm good by myself). Luckily that my
> parents let me detect myself so that I learn from different communities
that
> I have possess some value (that I can sing well, I can write well, I can
be
> a good leader if I follow my kind heart).
>
> I think that I'm lucky. But many of my friends, Vietnamese students really
> don't know how good they are. When they answer the question "What is your
> abilities?", I bet that they would say "I don't have any ability". (though
I
> usually find many abilities that they have).
>
> This will come to the result that we are not confident. And if we are not
> confident about ourselves, I think we will meet many of struggles, and the
> struggle may not come from the outside environment but from inside us
first.
>
>
>
>
> So, to know that we are possessing some values is not easy, I think.
> Especially sometimes, the environment prevents us from showing these
values.
> Eg: years ago, 'obedience' is a great value that most of parents expect
from
> their children. The obedient child will be considered as wonderful child.
> Now, we expect our children to be creative, to 'think it different', to be
> 'crazy'. I believe that many of today obedient adult once were the very
> creative children. But in the days that everyone appreciates the
'obedience'
> value, how can they know that 'creativity' is also a great value that they
> should pursue?
>
>
>
> Some wondering,
>
> Nice weekend, bro &sis!
>
> HeO
>
>
>
--
Tran Dinh Hoanh, LLB, JD
Washington DC
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Message: 8
Date: Mon, 14 May 2007 17:18:14 -0400
From: Hong-Phong_Pho at ita.doc.gov
Subject: Re: [Vnbiz] Staying to be a Leader -- the Champion of Values
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Cc: vnbiz at vietlinks.net, vnbiz-bounces at mail.saigon.com
Message-ID:
<OFB827ABBC.93BE1F3F-ON852572DB.0073351B-852572DB.007506DA at mail.doc.gov>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
Dear anh Hoanh et al.
I don't think we can blame this on the Chinese or the French. The
Japanese, Korean, and the Chinese themselves don't exactly have traditions
of showering praises on their children either. In fact, even the
European, most notably the British, are known to raise their children very
sternly, with strong discipline.
The West's "Spare the rod, spoil the child" is very much the same value as
the East's "Thuong cho roi cho vot, ghet cho ngoc cho bui"!
In my observation, the approach of more encouragement and less criticism
is a relatively modern approach endemic to wealthier and more free
societies in which there are more opportunities/career choices. Where
choices and opportunities are more limited,and competition keener, parents
will tend to be tougher on their children in a sometime misguided but
always sincere effort to secure a more secure future for their children.
Any observant Vietnamese child knows that he has his parent's love and
support just by looking at what they do instead of listening to what they
say. In fact Vietnames parents often praise their own kids behind their
backs, if the neighbors don't do it first.
Best, HPP
"Tran Dinh Hoanh" <tdhoanh at gmail.com>
Sent by: vnbiz-bounces at mail.saigon.com
05/14/2007 10:13 AM
Please respond to
vnbiz at vietlinks.net
To
vnbiz at vietlinks.net
cc
Subject
Re: [Vnbiz] Staying to be a Leader -- the Champion of Values
[ Vietnam Business Forum ]
Dear Sis. Thu Huong & CACC,
Superb question, Thu Huong. How do we know ourselves? And when the folks
in authority focus more on blaming and punishment than in praising and
encouragement. how does a person know what she is good at?
Why our culture focuses more on blaming and punishing than on praising and
encouraging is an interesting question. As we grow up, we hear the adults
say things like "You shouldn't praise them, because they will become
arrogant." I used to accept that explanation as a good explanation. But
the damage of that kind of punishing behavior is so big. It really
destroys the kid's confidence and stops him from developing his full
potentials.
I believe that such behavior comes from the fact that for thousands of
years the Chinese dominated us, plus a hundred years of the French. These
rulers did not want to treat us Vietnamese with dignity and did not want
us to have any confidence in ourselves. So they constantly made us feel
inferior and stupid. So they focused heavily on blaming and beating. And
we just internalized such behavior and did the same thing to ourselves.
This is the "abused-child syndrom."
The potentials in each of us are like little little plants, and
encouragement is like water. If we praise a person constantly and
encourage that person constantly, regardless of whether he wins or loses
in a game, his plants will grow into giant trees some day. If we keep
harassing him for "doing bad," he will wither away. This is true in
family, school and the work place.
I am not saying that we should not have constructive criticism once in a
while. But the ratios should be like this: At least 75 percent praising
and at max 25 percent criticism is good. Less praising and more criticism
than these ratios is bad for development, both personal and communal. If
you want you kid to do well, praise them more often than criticising them.
If you want your company to do well, praise your employees constantly and
criticize them rarely.
This issue is not only for the individual, it tremendously effects our
national development. Great question, Thu Huong.
Have a good day!
Hoanh
On 5/12/07, huong dang thu <hdangthu at gmail.com > wrote:
[ Vietnam Business Forum ]
Dear bro & sis,
Thanks for your sharing about values.
Please let me ask 1 more question for today: How can we know that we are
possessing some values?
It sounds like an unreasonable question. But I'm serious about this. For
that Vietnamese culture is a very 'modest' culture. So that we have trend
not to give compliment. (eg, my parents never tell me that I do sth good.
Very frequently, I should realize if I'm good by myself). Luckily that my
parents let me detect myself so that I learn from different communities
that I have possess some value (that I can sing well, I can write well, I
can be a good leader if I follow my kind heart).
I think that I'm lucky. But many of my friends, Vietnamese students really
don't know how good they are. When they answer the question "What is your
abilities?", I bet that they would say "I don't have any ability". (though
I usually find many abilities that they have).
This will come to the result that we are not confident. And if we are not
confident about ourselves, I think we will meet many of struggles, and the
struggle may not come from the outside environment but from inside us
first.
So, to know that we are possessing some values is not easy, I think.
Especially sometimes, the environment prevents us from showing these
values. Eg: years ago, 'obedience' is a great value that most of parents
expect from their children. The obedient child will be considered as
wonderful child. Now, we expect our children to be creative, to 'think it
different', to be 'crazy'. I believe that many of today obedient adult
once were the very creative children. But in the days that everyone
appreciates the 'obedience' value, how can they know that 'creativity' is
also a great value that they should pursue?
Some wondering,
Nice weekend, bro &sis!
HeO
--
Tran Dinh Hoanh, LLB, JD
Washington DC _______________________________________________
To subscribe/unsubscribe, please contact admins at
vnbizadmin at vietlinks.net
Info at http://mail.saigon.com/mailman/listinfo/vnbiz
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Message: 9
Date: Mon, 14 May 2007 22:46:28 -0400
From: "Tran Dinh Hoanh" <tdhoanh at gmail.com>
Subject: [Vnbiz] Welcome chi Nguyet Le in to VNBIZ
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Message-ID:
<fe5aabf50705141946k32c1e044q1109aa24eff12051 at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Dear CACC,
Please join to welcome chi Nguyet Le (Le Thi Nguyet?) into our VNBIZ family.
Chi Nguyet nguyet at dataagent.com is a technical writer/researcher at
dataagent. Welcome in, sister Nguyet. Brother Phong John of Dataagent has
been with VNBIZ even before VNBIZ time. I hope you will have fun with us
and will talk a little more :-) Please feel free to share info, insight,
heart and mind with us.
Great day, sister Nguyet and all.
Hoanh
--
Tran Dinh Hoanh, LLB, JD
Washington DC
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Message: 10
Date: Tue, 15 May 2007 00:58:31 -0700 (PDT)
From: Phuc Le Hong <phuclebr at yahoo.com>
Subject: [Vnbiz] Vacancies at Health Care in the Central Highlands
Project
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Cc: hvthuy at yahoo.com
Message-ID: <106241.34568.qm at web31812.mail.mud.yahoo.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Dear Friends,
Our project (Health Care in the Central Highlands project) is currently in
need of qualified national consultants with different backgrounds for a
short or long period. Please find below a list of our available vacancies
and we encourage all potential candidates to apply providing that you have a
keen interest in project matters, good English, enthusiasm and eagerness to
conduct field visits. Experienced candidates will be given priority. Our
list includes:
1. National health economist
2. National primary health care consultant
3. National M&E consultant
4. National consultant to support provinces in ??????Health care Fund for
the Poor?????? activities
5. Translator/Interpreter
6. Planning consultant
Remuneration is subject to negotiation. If anyone of you would like to
have details of above positions, please feel free to contact our office: Ms.
Phuc, Tel: 844-7262927 (ext. 16), Fax: 844-7262928. We would be grateful for
any suggestions or referrals you can provide. All of you are welcomed.
Sincerely,
For and on behalf of Dr. Ha Van Thuy
Le Hong Phuc
Procurement Staff
Health Care in the Central Highlands Project
---------------------------------
Sick sense of humor? Visit Yahoo! TV's Comedy with an Edge to see what's on,
when.
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Message: 11
Date: Tue, 15 May 2007 20:28:06 +0700
From: "Dr Hoang" <hoang at fpt.vn>
Subject: Re: [Vnbiz] My Schedule
To: <vnbiz at vietlinks.net>
Message-ID: <02a001c796f6$8ac9f140$0202fea9 at D4NSTM1S>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
Dear Bro Hoanh,
I am so sorry to hear the news, may your mon get well soon.
ATuan
----- Original Message -----
From: Tran Dinh Hoanh
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Sent: Friday, May 04, 2007 7:46 PM
Subject: [Vnbiz] My Schedule
[ Vietnam Business Forum ]
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: Tran Dinh Hoanh <tdhoanh at gmail.com>
Date: May 4, 2007 8:45 AM
Subject: My Schedule
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Dear CACC,
My mom has recently been hit by a stroke. She is still in the hospital.
Phuong and I need to spend time with her often. So we are overloaded. That
means, I may be a little slow. So if you wonder why I have not responded to
your message, you know why. Sorry for any in convenience this may generate.
Have a good day,
Hoanh
--
Tran Dinh Hoanh, LLB, JD
Washington DC
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
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Message: 12
Date: Tue, 15 May 2007 10:52:15 -0400
From: "Tran Dinh Hoanh" <tdhoanh at gmail.com>
Subject: [Vnbiz] Fwd: Health economist consultants
To: vnbiz at vietlinks.net
Message-ID:
<fe5aabf50705150752t696ebf14m7f17126cb9876ae0 at mail.gmail.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
Dear CACC,
Job notice from anh Thuy.
Good day!
Hoanh
---------- Forwarded message ----------
From: ha van thuy <hvthuy at yahoo.com>
Date: May 14, 2007 4:31 AM
Subject: Fw: Health economist consultants
To: tdhoanh at gmail.com
Cc: Hich yttn <hich-yttn at vnn.vn>
Dear Anh Hoanh,
How are you? Well I hope. And how is your mother? I wish that she will
recover soon.
Please read the message below. I am encountering difficulties in recruiting
qualified consultants. Could I post it on your forum as an advertisement?
Kind regards,
Ha Van Thuy
----- Forwarded Message ----
From: "lstuddert at adb.org" <lstuddert at adb.org>
To: "Axelson, Mr Henrik (VTN)" <axelsonh at vtn.wpro.who.int>
Cc: giovanni bentivegna <giovannibentivegna at yahoo.it>;
christian.lien at foreign.ministry.se; Ha Van Thuy <hvthuy at yahoo.com>;
khoamoh at yahoo.com; kthuong at adb.org; longmoh at yahoo.com; phuclebr at yahoo.com;
Bj?rn Ekman <Bjorn.Ekman at med.lu.se>
Sent: Monday, May 14, 2007 2:47:12 PM
Subject: Health economist consultants
Dear Henrik,
Welcome back!
For the Health Care in Central Highlands Project of ADB and MOH we are
struggling to find national health economists to serve as consultants and
work with our international experts (Dr Govanni Bentivegna, recently
arrived; and Dr Bjorn Ekman, to return for a two month period in a few
weeks).
This matter has now become extremely urgent and the PMU, led by Dr Thuy,
will be making an urgent effort in the next two weeks to recruit someone -
for a short or long period. We are willing to consider people of various
amounts of experience - even newly graduated students, or graduate students
that might combine some short-term inputs with study, but with a keen
interest in the subject matter and good english would be considered. We are
looking in the areas of health economics and primary health care.
I wonder if you know of any good people, particularly in the area of health
economics?
We would be most grateful for any suggestions or referrals you can provide,
best,
lisa
Lisa J. Studdert
Health Specialist
Viet Nam Resident Mission, Hanoi
Asian Development Bank
Tel (84-4) 933 1374, Ext. 102
www.adb.org
--
Tran Dinh Hoanh, LLB, JD
Washington DC
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