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・ Nguyễn Phích
・ Nguyễn Phú Trọng
・ Nguyễn Phúc Bửu Chánh
・ Nguyen Huu Canh
・ Nguyen Huu Chanh
・ Nguyen Huy Dau
・ Nguyen Khac Chinh
・ Nguyen Manh Dung
・ Nguyen Manh Tuong
・ Nguyen Minh Chuyen
・ Nguyen Minh Duc
・ Nguyen Minh Phuong
・ Nguyen Ngoc Duy
・ Nguyen Ngoc Thanh
・ Nguyen Quang Lap
Nguyen Qui Duc
・ Nguyen Quoc Quan
・ Nguyen Tan Hoang
・ Nguyen Thanh Hien
・ Nguyen Thanh Long Giang
・ Nguyen Thi Lua
・ Nguyen Tu Quang
・ Nguyen v. Barnes & Noble, Inc.
・ Nguyen v. INS
・ Nguyen Van Bình
・ Nguyen Van Hung
・ Nguyen Van Nghi
・ Nguyen Van Quyet
・ Nguyen Van Thinh
・ Nguyen Van Troi Stadium


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Nguyen Qui Duc : ウィキペディア英語版
Nguyen Qui Duc
Nguyen Qui Duc (Nguyễn Quí Đức in Vietnamese) is a Vietnamese American radio broadcaster, writer, editor and translator.
Born in Da Lat, Vietnam, he came to the United States in 1975, returning in the fall of 2006 to live in Hanoi, Vietnam. He has been a radio producer and writer since 1979, working for the British Broadcasting Corporation in London and KALW-FM in San Francisco and as a commentator for National Public Radio. He was the host of ''Pacific Time'', KQED-FM Public Radio's national program on Asian and Asian American Affairs, from 2000 to 2006. His essays have been published in ''The Asian Wall Street Journal Weekly, The New York Times Magazine, The San Francisco Examiner, The San Jose Mercury News'' and other newspapers. Other essays, poems, and short stories have appeared in ''City Lights Review, Salamander, Zyzzyza, Manoa Journal, Van, Van Hoc'', and ''Hop Luu'', as well as in several anthologies such as ''Under Western Eyes'', ''Watermark'', and ''Veterans of War, Veterans of Peace.''
Nguyen Qui Duc is the author of ''Where the Ashes Are: The Odyssey of a Vietnamese Family'', and the translator of the novella ''Behind The Red Mist'' by Ho Anh Thai, (Curbstone Press, 1997). He was also co-editor, with John Balaban, of ''Vietnam: A Traveler's Literary Companion'' (Whereabouts Press, 1995), and ''Once Upon A Dream, The Vietnamese American Experience'', (Andrews and McMeel, 1995). His translation of ''The Time Tree, Poems by Huu Thinh'', (Curbstone Press, 2004), with George Evans, was a finalist for the 2004 Translation Prize by the Northern California Book Reviewers Association.
He was awarded the Overseas Press Club's ''Citation of Excellence'' for his reports from Viet Nam for NPR in 1989, and in 1994, he was artist-in-residence at the Villa Montalvo Estates for the Arts, where he wrote the play ''A Soldier Named Tony D.'', based on a short story by Lê Minh Khuê, and produced in 1995 by EXIT Theatre at Knuth Hall, San Francisco. In 2001, Nguyen was named ''One of 30 Most Notable Asian Americans'' by A-Media. His documentary on Chinese youths, ''Shanghai Nights'', was part of PBS Frontline/World series that was awarded the 2004 ''Edward R. Murrow Award of Excellence in Television Documentary'' from the Overseas Press Club of America, and the same year, he also received a fellowship for outstanding achievements from the Alexander Gerbode Foundation. In October 2006, he received the ''Distinguished Service Award'' for his contributions to journalism from the Society of Professional Journalists.
==References==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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