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The antiques are considered typical of Vietnam’s north, south and central regions and will be first exhibited at the Museum of Fine Arts in Houston from September 13 to January 3 next year. They will then be showcased at the Asian Association Museum in New York from February 2 to May 2. The items, ranging from fine arts pieces to those relating to revolutionary history, are on loan from prominent museums nationwide including in Hanoi, Da Nang City, Hue, Ho Chi Minh City, and neighboring Dong Nai and Long An provinces. Source: Tuoi Tre |
US to display Vietnamese antiques

National museum displays 30-year collection in HCMC
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Running until the end of this year, the exhibition highlights various articles ranging from Vietnam’s largest stone yoni dating from the 12-13th century, to two Bertin vases made in the mid 19th century by France’s National Manufacture of Sèvres. Antiques belonging to Vietnamese royal families and Chinese pottery dating from the 18th century are also on display. Director Tran Thi Thuy Phuong said the items were gathered from different sources including collectors and police and customs officers who confiscated them in smuggling operations. Local and foreign benefactors, including famous antique collector Vuong Hong Sen, have also contributed to the collection, Phuong added. Titled Typical Antiques: 30 Years’ Collection, the exhibition marks the center’s celebration of its 30th anniversary. The museum is located at No.2 Nguyen Binh Khiem Street, District 1. Reported by Giao Huong |

Vietnam’s credit growth may spur inflation, Morgan Stanley says
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Property prices in some projects have increased as much as 30 percent in Vietnam and new loan creation this year is equivalent to about 17 percent of gross domestic product, economists Deyi Tan, Chetan Ahya and Shweta Singh wrote in a note published Wednesday. Vietnam’s economy accelerated in the second quarter as stimulus spending that the government values at more than US$8 billion helped drive loan growth and buoy construction activity. The nation’s banks have lent more than VND389 trillion ($21.8 billion) to businesses as part of the government’s loan-subsidy program as of July 30, according to the central bank. “Credit disbursement has provided a cushion at a time when external demand indicators remained weak,” the economists wrote. “The current mode of policy-driven recovery could face limitations. With Vietnam having a functional banking system to push out liquidity via credit growth, strong credit acceleration could pose inflationary concerns.” Inflation slowed for an 11th straight month in July, with consumer prices rising 3.3 percent from a year earlier, compared with a 3.9 percent gain in June, according to General Statistics Office figures. Monetary policy Vietnam’s inflation will soon begin accelerating again, driven by commodity prices, a weakening currency and increased bank lending, HSBC Holdings Plc economist Prakriti Sofat said last month. Inflation will probably begin accelerating in September after dropping to about 2 percent in August, she said. The State Bank of Vietnam on July 20 said it will manage monetary policy in the second half to ensure credit grows as much as 27 percent for the year. Loans growth so far this year is about 20 percent, Morgan Stanley said. “If the lending target is to be adhered to, credit disbursement for the second half will have to slow to less than half the pace of the first half,” the economists said. “The delicate task of policy adjustment will likely have to take place to reduce the possibility of demand-pull inflationary pressures.” The central bank has kept the key interest rate at 7 percent since January, after reducing it six times from 14 percent in October, to slow inflation. Shipments from Vietnam dropped 13 percent to $32.35 billion in Januaryto-July from the same period a year earlier, according to data from the General Statistics Office. Exports from Vietnam, the world’s second-biggest shipper of coffee and rice, are poised to recover as commodity prices and production increase, fund manager Dragon Capital told investors this month. “Limitations to a policy-driven recovery due to potential inflation and trade deficit pressures suggest that the growth baton will have to be passed from policy-makers to make way for a market-based export-driven recovery,” the Morgan Stanley economists said. “We believe a market-based export-driven recovery is in the cards.” Source: Bloomberg |

Yoon Eun Hye
Yoon Eun Hye và Hyun Bin rất trẻ trung, tươi tắn trong chương trình hôm 19/4. |
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Hai diễn viên trẻ cùng nhau trao đổi về chương trình. |
Rất nhiều bạn trẻ cùng tới đây tham gia hoạt động ý nghĩa này. |
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Cặp đôi cùng góp vui cho chương trình. |
Không trang điểm cầu kỳ nhưng Eun Hye vẫn rất xinh xắn. |
Nụ cười rạng rỡ của nữ diễn viên trẻ. |
Hyun Bin với kiểu tóc mới trông rất điển trai. |

Katie Holmes
Cảnh quay bà Cruise co ro trong chiếc áo dạ màu ghi xám. |
Hiện tại, mới chỉ có thông tin rò rỉ Katie vào vai một góa phụ xinh đẹp, là mục tiêu săn đuổi của những kẻ khát tiền. |
Nước mắt rơi lã chã. |
Bạn diễn của Katie Pual Dano. |
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Bà Cruise nhập vai đầy cảm xúc. |
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