Vietnamese Professional Society Southern California
Vietnamese Professional Society - Southern California
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Tieng Viet

Yellow Triangle Writing Vietnamese On The Computer
  • How do I write Vietnamese in emails and word documents?
  • What’s Unicode? Why should I use Unicode when I want to write Vietnamese?
  • Why do all my i’s become capitalized once I use VPSKeys?
  • Why do capital letters with Vietnamese signs show up as big boxes?
  • Someone sent me this file and I can’t read anything in it. What should I do?

If you have asked yourself these questions before, then the Vietnamese Professionals Society - Southern California chapter has a FREE workshop for you.

Abstract: Geared towards the everyday computer user, this workshops covers software and concepts related to using Vietnamese signs on the computer. We will cover the software used to write Vietnamese in documents and emails as well as describe Vietnamese computer formats such as VNI, VPS and Unicode. After this workshop, you will be able to use actual Vietnamese signs in your documents and emails and convert between different Vietnamese legacy formats. Other than Microsoft Windows and Microsoft Word, no further technical skills are necessary. This 2-3 hour workshop will be conducted primarily in Vietnamese.

Time: Sunday, August 6th, 2006 at 1 PM
Location: Việt Nam Tương Tế Hội, 7621 Westminster, Garden Grove, CA 92683
Cost: Free to the public
Registration: send an email to nguyentriminh@yahoo.com

Speaker: Minh T. Nguyen has been a long-time, active member of the Vietnamese Professionals Society, where he regularly gives workshops in Unicode, Internet technologies and Microsoft .NET. As a past co-host of the VPS TV show "Diễn Đàn Khoa Học" on SBTN, he also brings technical and scientific topics to general Vietnamese community. He published his first book "Visual Studio .NET Tips and Tricks" in 2004 and currently resides in San Jose, where he works as a Software Design Engineer for Microsoft.


Yellow Triangle Vietnamese Professionals Society in VietACT's Walk Against Trafficking


The Vietnamese Professionals Society of Southern California invite everyone to join us in the fight against human trafficking. On May 13th, 2006 VPS Southern California will join with VietACT and the Union of Vietnamese Student Association of Southern California in a relay to raise over $35,000 for the victims of human trafficking in Asia.

As part of a national relay, this walk will take place in Little Saigon along Bolsa Avenue. Registration is $20 and will include a Walk Against Human Trafficking t-shirt and goodie bag.

Please visit www.thsv.org or www.vietact.org for more information or click here for the VPS registration.

Hope to see everyone out on Bolsa on the 13th. Headquarters for the WALK AGAINST TRAFFICKING will begin at Nguoi Viet Daily News Community Room, 14771 Moran Street, Westminster, California.

VPS Southern California



Yellow Triangle 

1st VPS Southern California 2006 Cultural Dinner

Date: Saturday, March 4, 2006

Time: 6:00 PM to 11 PM.   

Location: Ms. Hien Pham's House

Theme: Effective Ways to Help Vietnamese People in Vietnam

Please come and join us in this event.  Share your thoughts and values in our search for effective ways in helping our people and understanding our culture.  Mr. Dung Tran and Ms. Xuan Vu will be moderators for the night.  Each of us will have an opportunity to present our ideas and suggestions.

Our great cuisine for the night originates from the great Central Land of Miền Trung

The menu consists of the following:  1) Bánh Bèo, 2) Bún Bò Huế, 3) Bánh Bột Lọc and 4) Nghêu Xúc Bánh Tráng.  For refreshment, we have soda, beer and wine. For dessert, we will have Bánh Chuối.   

Please reserve through email @ hienphamdo@yahoo.com or antrinh23@yahoo.com. so arrangement can be made to accomodate everyone.

Status: Completed.  For the summary of the event, please click on Cultural Dinner.


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VPS Southern California 2006 Wine Tasting Event

Date: Saturday, February 18, 2006

Meeting Time: 9:00am

Meeting Place: Furiwa Restaurant (NE Corner of Brookhurst and Westminster)

Address: 13826 Brookhurst Ave.

VPS will have an all day trip visit to the Wine Country of Temecula. Come and learn how wine is made and enjoy a wide selection from various California wine makers. For more information please click on the flyer.

Please reserve ASAP @ qhlotus21@msn.com so there can be a head count. Transporation is self-provided or by carpooling with other members.

Status: Complete. Please click on details to find complete information such as flyer, itinary, links to map and contents of various wineries plus the history of the City Temecula.


Yellow Triangle 

VPS First Annual Benefit Gala

on Saturday, October 8, 2005
at the Doubletree Hotel in Orange

Benefit GalaWe’re proud to introduce our First Annual Benefit Gala, a black-tie fundraising evening that pays tribute to the accomplishments of our young community, while at the same time supporting a worthwhile cause – the assistance of victims of human trafficking and labor exploitations. Please join us.

Visit www.vps.org/namcali/gala2005 to learn more.


Yellow Triangle 

Home Ownership for First Time Home Buyers

Time: Saturday, August 20th, 2005, from 10:30 AM to 12:00 PM

Location: Citibank, 12221 Brookhurst Street, 2nd floor, Garden Grove, CA (corner of Chapman)

Fee: NO COST

Abstract:

If you are in the market to purchase your own home and are a first time buyer, this workshop will help you to better understand the current real estate market and ways in which you may qualify for financing without putting down 20%, paying PMI (private mortgage insurance) or FICO score requirement. There are also programs in which you might qualify for grants and/or subsidies for down payment assistance and/or closing costs. Citibank has these programs in partnership with local non-profit organizations.

To qualify for these programs, you must be:

  1. A first time homebuyer
  2. Have documented income below $94,625

Speaker: Phillip Nguyen, Vice President of Business Development for Citibank

Seating is limited to 35 people. You must RSVP to south_ca@hcgvn.org or call Xuan Vu.


Yellow Triangle Vietnamese Mental Health Professionals Speak on Family Emotional Challenges.

Do you know the number of Vietnamese in the United States having poor mental health stemming from the inability to recognize and deal with emotional issues in their families?

Don’t be a part of this statistics. Learn how to help yourself and your family. Come to our FREE Speaker Panel to learn about Family Emotional Challenges and how to make the necessary changes to improve your emotional and physical well-being.

Time: Sunday, July 31st, 2005, 2:00 - 4:00 PM
Location: Người Việt Community Center (14771 Moran Street, Westminster)
Fee: NO COST

Abstracts: Family emotional challenges can be difficult to identify and handle. Many of the emotional problems in the families are exacerbated by insufficient understanding of mental health. Mental health has been unaware, unspoken of, and many times forgotten in the families. The attendees will receive an overview of the significant roles mental health plays in parent-child and spousal relationships. Attendees will learn about the characteristics of an abusive relationship and signs of a potential abusive partner. Finally, the attendees will be informed of available community resources and services that can help improve the well being of family.

Main topics and the speakers:

  1. Signs of abusive partners in relationships.
    Ha-Tien Nguyen, MA, LMFT, Psychotherapist, Vietnamese American Human Service Association
  2. Highlights of the affects of mental health in family relationships.
    Hannah-Le Shroeder MS, LMFT, Pschotherapist, Aspiring Change Institute.
  3. Taking care of your health (physical and emotional)
    Tricia Nguyen, MPA, Excecutive Director, Nhan Hoa Medical Clinic

Please contact the VPS Southern California Chapter for more information or RSVP:
Dong Xuyen, MSW, LCSW, dxuyen@hotmail.com
Alternate Email: south_ca@hcgvn.org


Yellow Triangle VPS cordially invites you to join us at Happy Hour!!

VPS Happy HourFriday, March 18, 2005 at 7:00pm

Le Jardin Restaurant
17431 Brookhurst Street, Unit A
(corner of Slater)
Fountain Valley, CA 92708

Come straight from work, bring your friends and co-workers!

SEE YOU ALL THERE!!!

Portions of the evening’s proceeds will go to VPS funds. Your support of this fundraising effort is greatly appreciated.


Yellow Triangle Writing Vietnamese on Computer

Writing, reading and printing Vietnamese will no longer be an issue after this course…

  • When using Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint, and many other applications
  • When using email or the internet
  • And much much more. . .

The VPS SoCal Chapter will provide you with the VPS Keys Software in addition to other related materials at the workshop.

Time: Sunday, March 6, 2005, at 1:00 PM
Location: Người Việt Community Center (14771 Moran Street, Westminster)
Fee: $5 (minimal fee to help us cover facility and other class costs)

RSVP (optional) or questions, please contact the VPS Southern California Chapter at: south_ca@hcgvn.org.


Yellow Triangle VPS North American Conference 2004

Professionals connecting to other professionals: heard and 'scene'

From: http://www.nguoi-viet.com/absolutenm/anmviewer.asp?a=12553&z=8

Click to enlarge Nguoi Viet paper Click to enlarge Nguoi Viet paper

The scene: In Santa Ana, in Southern California, nearly 200 Vietnamese, carrying their business cards, gathered last weekend to find ways to share information — and ways to work together — at the long-awaited Vietnamese Professionals Society North American Conference.

The flags of their home country and adopted country flanked the stage inside a hotel ballroom. Minh T. Nguyễn, the event’s chair, said: “We cannot refuse our heritage. So, we have to figure out how to take our knowledge — powerful knowledge that’s based on education and experience — to create new friendships and new bonds.”

He hoped participants and organizers would unite to set an action plan to move their immigrant community forward in America, and to help those who are left behind in the place of their birth.

Nguyễn, a software engineer from the Washington suburb of Bellevue, said he has devoted countless hours to finalizing details. To host something this size takes teamwork, “and I’m grateful that for the first time, nine chapters of VPS actually came together and gave it their best. We are so excited.”

The people: One-fourth of those attending included students, much to the delight of the organizing committee, whose leaders are always looking for fresh talent, fresh ideas.

“We ask ourselves: ‘How do we get our young professionals out there, who have access to everything, including money, how do we get them to give back?’

“We want them to have a voice in politics, here and elsewhere,” said Xuân Vũ, a financial and investment analyst and co-chair of the conference along with Nguyễn. Members of chapters from around the United States flew in to attend, coming from as near as San Jose and as far as Europe.

Moreover, about 40 attendees made the trek from Texas, 10 from Washington state, 15 from Washington, D.C.

Nam Nguyễn, who works in product research and development for a mining company, hails from Toronto. “This is truly about sharing our experiences,” he said, “to bring back to wherever we are from the best practices of how to do something.”

“This time around,” added Vũ, who has been planning for six months, “we’re introducing more interesting topics than in the past. We are trying to focus on the latest issues in our community.”

The panels: Some in the crowd had trouble choosing. The titles tempted them: from the opening “Political Status and the Development of a Civil Society in Vietnam” to the closing “Lessons of Vietnam’s History,” to talks in between dealing with human trafficking, entertainment, the global economy and reporting across cultures. Other sessions focused on the international criminal court, and developing a school curriculum that would include Vietnamese culture and history.

In the science and technology workshop, presenters shared data about the latest research on solar energy and the controversy surrounding Internet fire-walls. With the firewalls — which exist in Vietnam preventing citizens from logging into sites that provide news critical of the Communist party — panelists debated whether it’s censorship or an aid to Web surfers.

Nguyễn said he was especially thrilled to hear Paul Baranowski, widely considered an expert on Internet censorship, speak. “These are issues that we are concerned about, because ideally, we want people to have the information they need,” he said.

Others who spoke with Baranowski included: Nguyên Nguyễn, a systems engineer at Raytheon; and Mai Thanh Truyết, executive president of the Vietnamese American Science and Technology Society and who has studied global warming and solar energy.

In a workshop focusing on “Charity: Vietnam and the Social Ills of Poverty,” three presenters gave their views about what “illnesses” they are working to reduce and the groups collaborating with them.

Quỳnh Kiều, a pediatrician and winner of a “Pride in the Profession” award from the American Medical Association, spoke about Project Vietnam, which sends a team of medical volunteers each year to the country to provide health care and train local doctors. Over a 10-day period on her trip in 2003, the workers — 152 people in all — performed 98 surgeries, examined 2,175 patients and led seminars for people from 40 provinces.

“Every year I save one summer month so I can go back to Vietnam,” added Thành Nguyễn, another presenter who heads SAP-VN, which stands for Social Assistance Program for Vietnam, a non-profit group founded in 1992. Hundreds of corrective surgeries for desperate children have been provided by his volunteers in villages across the homeland, thanks to the help of donors, fundraising and awareness.

The citizens of Vietnam “cannot care for themselves, so how can they help others?” Nguyễn asked the audience, adding that it’s the responsibility of social-services groups to come forward with assistance.

“There’s an illness, the illness of fear,” that is rampant in Vietnam, said Hội Trịnh, a volunteer lawyer working to resettle thousands of Vietnamese boat people long stranded in the Philippines. “Because people are so poor, they fear everything. They focus on now, on how to survive right now, not toward the future.”

The politics: In one popular panel, Vietnamese American candidates in the upcoming election shared the motivations that led them to run for office as well as the challenges they face.

Peter Nguyễn and Kim-Oanh Nguyễn-Lâm, vying for seats on the Westminster and Garden Grove school boards, respectively,

“Nobody knows you. You don’t have any connections. No one will fund your campaigns,” Nguyễn-Lâm said she was told when she decided to submit her name for the November ballot. But she wasn’t discouraged. As a university professor, she wants to focus on children, and soon, “people came from all walks of life” to support her, she added, “connecting to something bigger than who I am.”

Nguyễn, a real-estate broker and widower raising a daughter, said it’s important to work with parents such as Vietnamese parents, who are trying to help their youngsters retain their heritage. He favors offering Vietnamese-language instruction in the schools, along with teaming with local Hispanics to boost after-school programs for their kids.

Từơng Thắng Trần, in a rare appearance at a public forum, said he wants to represent his fellow citizens on the Garden Grove City Council and is willing “to earn” each individual’s vote. “With Vietnamese people, I don’t have any problems convincing them to vote for me, or for any other Vietnamese running,” said the engineer, whose voice is familiar to thousands of refugees who listen to him on the radio in Southern California.

His campaign has been marred by an investigation from the District Attorney’s office, looking into whether he actually lives in Garden Grove or neighboring Irvine, since he owns houses in both cities. They “used that as an excuse so that Hispanics and Caucasians will not vote for me,” Trần said, after responding to press inquiries, saying that he knows residency rules and that he qualifies. If elected, he hopes to boost higher education in the city, possibly by developing its Harbor Boulevard corridor while continuing to fight against any casino that wants to open in the area.

“My advice to anybody who wants to run is to go home and ask your wife first,” he added, explaining that his spouse was diagnosed with breast cancer, prompting him to leave work and community commitments to stay home for two years to take care of her.

“She knows that if there’s something happening, I will be there for her. But now, the timing is right, as her health has improved, for him to get into politics.

Trần’s daughter, age 7, often asks him: “Are you going to win this election? If you don’t think you will win, why do you run in the first place?”

He responds by explaining to her the importance of service, while encouraging young people in the audience to follow their passions.

Trần, Nguyễn and Nguyễn-Lam all have won endorsements from the Vietnamese American Political Action Committee.

Behind the scenes: This was a valuable way to network, participants told each other in the hallway in between sessions.

VPS members worked closely with their counterparts from the Union of Vietnamese Student Associations of Southern California, gaining sponsorship from top funder Wells Fargo to launch the conference, costing about $33,000, according to co-chair Nguyễn. Past conferences have been held in Hawaii; Anaheim, Calif.; Houston; Washington, D.C., and Dallas.

“To me, it’s already a success, as I said in the opening ceremony,” he said. “We have a record 31 speakers and we have everyone working together.”




Vietnamese Professional Society - Southern California
3114 S. Maddock, Santa Ana, CA 92704, USA, south_ca@vps.org