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Pham was born in Saigon, Vietnam, to Pham Viet Son and Bang Kim Linh. His grandfathers were Pham Van Son (the historian, war journalist, and military officer) [28] [29] and Bang Ba Lan (the poet, photographer, literature teacher, journalist, and artist).
In 2009, Pham opened his own restaurant, Forage, in Utah with co-Chef Bowman Brown. [6] In 2011 Pham received the Best New Chef Award from Food & Wine Magazine. [6] In 2012, Pham was an Iron Chef America winner by beating Chef Bobby Flay. He also appeared on the second season of Extreme Chef. [2]
Pham was born in Vietnam. In 1979, at about age 12, Pham, his mother, and younger brother immigrated as Vietnamese boat people to Malaysia, where they were declined as refugees [3] after being twice-robbed by Thai pirates. [4] They traveled on another boat to Indonesia, where they spent 10 months in a refugee camp.
Hung Yen University of Technology and Education (Vietnamese: Trường Đại học Sư phạm kỹ thuật Hưng Yên) is a government-funded university in Hưng Yên Province, Vietnam.
Thức opened EIS as a computer shop in 1993 which assembled its own computers, and by 1994 the brand dominated the home PC market in Ho Chi Minh City. [4] Later on it became an internet service provider, and in 1998 became the first Vietnamese ISP to branch out from dial-up to an integrated services digital network.
The institute was renamed National Academy of Technology in 1972. 2 years later, it became one with Thủ Đức Polytechnic University. On October 27, 1976, Prime Minister Pham Van Dong signed Decision No. 426/TTg to make it Ho Chi Minh City University of Technology. In 1996, the university joined the Vietnam National University system.
Pham Minh Chinh has a son and a daughter. His younger brother, Pham Tri Thuc, held the position of Vice Chairman of the National Assembly Law Committee and was an assembly member during the XIII and XIV sessions. [37] His younger sister, Pham Thi Thanh, is the Director-General of Internal Affairs at the Government Office. [38]
Phạm is the Sino-Vietnamese reading of the Chữ Hán: 范.. Phạm arose in historical sources from around the third century CE. It was the title prepositions before names of kings of Lâm Ấp, kings of Funan, the eight chiefs of Jiao, and several tribal figures along the Annamite Mountain between the third to the seventh century CE.