Friday, April 15, 2016

RESTAURANT FOR FOREIGNER IN DAEGU CITY

RESTAURANT FOR FOREIGNER IN DAEGU CITY


PAKISTANI AND INDIAN RESTAURANT

1) NEW SALADDIN RESTAURANT

CUISINE :  PAKISTAN,INDIAN,NEPAL,SRI LNKA AND BANGLADESH FOOD( ALL ASIAN)
Address:  Front of Kyungpook National University North Gate | 3F above Tous Les Jours BakeryDaegu, South Korea
PHONE:00539423535

                                            
          


2) BALAJI RESTAURANT

CUISINE :  ASIAN FOOD
Address: 2F, 73, Dongseong-ro, Jung-guDaegu, South Korea
PHONE:  053-425-3242


                                            




AMERICAN RESTAURANT

1) VIN PLUS

CUISINE :   Pizza, Pasta and SaladsAddress: 73, Dongseong-ro 4-gil, Jung-guDaegu 700-150, South KoreaPHONE:053-242-3582

                                                          



 2) BEAN'S MARKET

CUISINE: AMERICAN DISHES
Address: 183, Daemyeongnam-ro, Nam-guDaegu, South Korea
Phone : 053-621-1952



 3) SURF  & TURF

CUISINE: AMERICAN DISHES
Address: 188, Icheon-ro, Jung-guDaegu 41956, South KoreaPhone : 070-4118-0188


4) T.G.I  FRIDAY'S DAEGOO BEOMEO

CUISINE: AMERICAN & INTERNATIONAL DISHESAddress: 43-4, Beomeo3-dong, Suseong-guDaegu, South KoreaPHONE: 053-742-0321













JAPANESE RESTAURANT 


1) HARUENSOKU DAEGU NOVOTEL


CUISINE: Japanese, Asian, Fusion, Middle Eastern, AfghaniAddress: 611, Gukchaebosang-ro, Jung-gu | B1 Daegu City CenterDaegu 41913, South KoreaPHONE: 053-4243788

                                 



2) JEONWON TONKATSU

CUISINE: JapaneseAddress: 4-10, Samdeokdong1-ga, Jung-guDaegu, South Korea 
PHONE: 053-424-8220


                                 



3) SENDORI 

CUISINE: JapaneseAddress:  152-8, Dusan-dongDaegu, South Korea
PHONE: 053-765-4200



THAI RESTAURANT 

1) HI THAI 

CUISINE: THAIAddress:   53, Gongpyeong-ro, Jung-guDaegu 41938, South Korea
PHONE: 010-8611-0562

                                 




2) PAN ASIA

CUISINE: Asian, Thai, Korean, Indonesian
Address: 
  21-9 Samdeok-dong 1-ga, Jung-guDaegu, South Korea
PHONE: 053-287-7940

                               





CHINESE RESTAURANT 


 1) SINSIN BANJEOM

CUISINE: CHINESE
Address: 
 8-6, Gongpyeong-dong, Jung-guDaegu, South Korea
PHONE: 053-426-9468


                                           



 

2) NOODLE BOWL

CUISINE: CHINESEAddress:  211, Dongdaegu-ro, Suseong-guDaegu, South KoreaPHONE: 053-763-9000

                                 




 3) GAWANGMYEONG BANJEOM

CUISINE: CHINESE
Address: 
 350-20, Chilseongdong2-ga, Buk-guDaegu, South Korea
PHONE: 053-424-0938




TO BE CONTINUED......................

P.S: DATA COLLECT FROM INTERNET,MAY BE WRONG


Monday, April 11, 2016

THE 14TH TOUR EXPO DAEGU GYEONGBUK ( 14TH APRIL ~ 17 APRIL)

UPCOMING EVENT IN DAEGU ( 14TH APRIL  ~ 17 APRIL)

THE 14TH TOUR EXPO DAEGU 
GYEONGBUK

STRATING PERIOD: 14 APRIL ~ 17 APRIL ( 4 DAYS)

HELD ON : EXCO DAEGU

HOST: DAEGU METROPOLITAN CITY

ABOUT EVENT:
Local/Overseas Tourism Promotion section
Daegu, Gyengsanbuk-do, Domestic and Foreign tour, Sister city, Mega event, Festival Promotion
Medical Tourism section
Medical center & companies, Spa, Beauty and Fitness products
Educational information section
Introducing & Consulting education institutions, certificates
Travel Products section
Selling & Counseling Domestic and Foreign travel products
Official Events
Opening ceremony, VIP Welcome Luncheon, Welcome party for Delegates from Home and Abroad, FAM Tour for Participating Buyers from Abroad, Closing Ceremony
Main Programs
Traditional Folklore performances by Local and Foreign Troupes, World Food Festival, World Costume Experience, Lucky-Draw, Showing Exhibitor’s promotion video
Special Programs
Tourism service Contest, Tourism Story-telling Contest, Multicultural family Tour experience, B2B Travel Mart, Meeting with the ambassadors of all the countries




Tuesday, September 22, 2015

THE STRONGMAN'S DAUGHTER & DAUGHTER OF KOREA Biography Park Geun-hye President of Republic of south korea (1952– )

THE STRONGMAN'S DAUGHTER & DAUGTHER OF KOREA( PROUD OF DAEGU)


BIOGRAPHY

PARK GEUN-HYE
Park Geun-hye was sworn in as South Korea's first female president in 2013. 
PARK GEUN-HYE

















She is the daughter of former South Korean President Park Chung-hee.

Park Geun-hye, South Korea's first female president, was born on February 2, 1952, in Daegu, in the North Gyeongsang Province of South Korea. She is the daughter of former South Korean President Park Chung-hee, who served from 1961 until his death by assassination 1979, and former first lady Yuk Young-soo, who was shot and killed in the throes of a 1974 assassination attempt on her husband.
Chung-hee began his 18-year reign when Park was 11 years old. His presidency divided South Korea and later became a controversial part of his daughter's campaign to become elected president herself. Critics called him a dictator who carried out human rights abuses and delayed the onset of democracy in South Korea; supporters claimed that he transformed the economy and helped the country recover following the Korean War.

WITH FATHER MR.PARK CHUNG-HEE



Born on February 2, 1952, in Daegu, in the North Gyeongsang Province of South Korea, Park Geun-hye is the daughter of former South Korean President Park Chung-hee, who ruled the country from 1961 to 1979. 

After earning an engineering degree from the Sogang University in 1974, Park's mother was killed during an assassination attempt on Park Chung-hee. Subsequently, Park Geun-hye, at age 22, was instated as acting first lady of South Korea.

In 1998, she was appointed vice chairperson of the recently established Grand National Party, and six years later, she won election as the Party's chairperson. Following a historic election on December 19, 2012, Park became South Korea's first female president. She was inaugurated in February 2013. Following her election victory, Park promised a "new era" of government and that she would be a "president for the people." She strives for unity and prosperity for South Korea while maintaining caution when it comes to the threat of North Korean affairs.

Following her high school graduation, Park Geun-hye enrolled at Sogang University in Seoul, South Korea, where she earned a Bachelor of Science degree in engineering in 1974. That same year, she suffered a tremendous tragedy: Her mother was shot and killed by North Korean assassin Mun Segwang, whose bullet was intended for the president. Citizens deeply mourned the death of Yuk Young-soo, who remains widely regarded as the country's most popular and beloved first lady.
Amidst her personal grief, Park was instated as the nation's acting first lady—a title requiring newfound responsibility for recent college graduate, who was then just 22 years old. But Park acclimated well to the political world: Early into her role as first lady, she gracefully and efficiently greeted dignitaries and conducted affairs of state, among a number of other responsibilities.
Five years after her mother's murder, tragedy struck again: Park's father, President Park Chung-hee, was assassinated at a dinner by his own intelligence chief, Kim Jae-kyu, on October 26, 1979.

Member of the National Assembly

Following her service as first lady, Park continued to flourish in the South Korean political world, becoming appointed vice chairperson of the Grand National Party in 1998. (The GNP had been established one year earlier, unifying the financially struggling New Korea Party and the Democratic Party.) Also in 1998, she began serving as a member of the National Assembly. She would be re-elected four times thereafter, serving in five consecutive national assemblies. By this time, Park had developed a clear goal of not only unifying South Korea's party system, but unifying and strengthening the nation as a whole.

In 2003, Park became chairperson of the GNP's presidential election committee. The following year, she was elected chairperson of the GNP. (The Party was struggling at the time, after leading a failed attempt to impeach President Roh Moo-hyun.) Setting her sights on the presidency in 2007, Park was a candidate for the Party in the primaries, but lost to Lee Myung-bak, who went on to win the presidential election. In 2012, the GNP was renamed the Saenuri ("New Frontier") Party. Park remained a prominent figure of the Saenuri Party, serving as chairperson of its emergency committee.

South Korea's First Female President

In a historic election on December 19, 2012, Park defeated 59-year-old liberal opponent and former human rights lawyer Moon Jae-in for the South Korean presidency—living up to her moniker as the "Queen of Elections" and, most notably, becoming the nation's first female president. Unmarried at the time of the election, Park has often said that she is "married" to her nation. Following her election victory, Park promised a "new era" of government and that she would be a "president for the people." She strives for unity and prosperity for South Korea while maintaining caution when it comes to the threat of North Korean affairs. Park was sworn in as president in February 2013.






Daegu’s Herbal Medicine Market (Former, Daegu Yangnyeong Market)

Daegu’s Herbal Medicine Market (Former, Daegu Yangnyeong Market)

This market, west of the central shopping district, has a history as vast as its scope. It dates from 1658, making it Korea’s oldest medicine market and still one of its largest. The stores spill onto the street with fragrant curiosities from lizards’ tails to magic mushrooms (the latter only with a prescription); you might also catch a glimpse of someone receiving acupuncture. Start at the museum to learn the uses of every spiky herb.

 Address:51-1, Namseong-ro, Jung-gu, Daegu
대구 중구 남성로 51-1

Type  & Products
Traditional Markets / Oriental herbal medicine, herbal medicine incense packs, herbal medicine alcohol, etc.



Monday, September 21, 2015

DGIST ( Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology)

DGIST

Daegu Gyeongbuk Institute of Science & Technology

DGIST is a research-oriented university with a full support from Korean government.



DGIST started with a research institution in 2004 and grew into a research-oriented university by opening graduate program in 2011, and the undergraduate program in March, 2014. DGIST focuses its research and education in six areas, such as Emerging Materials Science, Information & Communication Engineering, Robotics Engineering, Energy Systems Engineering, Brain Science, and New Biology.
The six areas are called ‘MIREBraiN’: M for Materials, I for Information & Communication, R for Robotics, E for Energy, B for Brain, and N for New Biology. The pronunciation of MIRE in Korean is the same to that of ‘future.’ DGIST’s vision, which was declared in May 2012, is to become a world-leading convergence research university by nurturing the global leaders of knowledge creation and creating future convergence technology.

Vision and goal



History





  • Dec.112003 Announced DGIST Rules(Law 6996)
  • Mar.092004 Enacted DGIST Rule Ordinance(Presidential Ordinance 18308)
  • Sep.032004 Inauguration of the first president Kyu-Suk Jung
  • Sep.072004 Registered the establishment of DGIST
  • Sep.032007 Inauguration of the second president In-Seon Lee
  • Jun.132008 Announced revised DGIST Rules(Law 9108)
  • Oct.312008 Held ground-breaking ceremony
  • Dec.142008 Enacted DGIST enforcement ordinance(Presidential Ordinance 21162)
  • May.012009 Completion of full master plan of DGIST
  • May.082009 Held DGIST vision and UI proclamation ceremony
  • Nov.222010 Completed the moving to Hyeonpung
  • Mar.022011 Held the first matriculation ceremony of the master's and doctorate degree program
  • Mar.312011 Inauguration of founding president Sung-Chul Shin
  • Jul.072011 Opened Advanced Convergence Research Center
  • Oct.142011 Established the Korea Brain Research Institute (KBRI), affiliated institute of DGIST
  • Mar.022012 Held the second matriculation ceremony of the master's and doctorate degree program
  • May.022012 Held DGIST VISION 2020 Declaration & Campus-groundbreaking ceremony
  • July.162012 Opened DGIST-LBNL Joint Research Center
  • Oct.082012 Attracted IBS Research Center 'Academy of New Biology for Plant Senescence and Life History' to DGIST
  • Oct.302012 Opened CPS Global Center
  • Feb.152013 Held the first commencement ceremony of the master's degree students
  • Mar.042013 Held the third matriculation ceremony of the master's and doctorate degree program
  • Feb.212014 Held the second commencement ceremony of the master's degree students
  • Mar.032014 Held the first matriculation ceremony of the bachelor's degree program
  • Directions

  • From downtown of Daegu

    By shuttle bus

    • DGIST operates shuttle bus for visitors. Visitors can take a shuttle bus departs from several stations of Daegu subway. Please refer to the shuttle bus timetable on Campus Life-Shuttle Bus page of this site. (Visitors can take a shuttle bus for commuters, although it is classified as shuttle for commuters.)

    By city bus

    • Take bus No.600(간선 600) or No.655(간선 655) → get off at Hyeonpung bus terminal(현풍터미널) → take bus Dalseong 8(달성 8) or Dalseong 8-1(달성 8-1) → get off at DGIST
      ※ You can find route information of above bus lines on Daegu Bus Line Guide(http://businfo.daegu.go.kr/ba/index/index.do?locale=en)(Search Route page).
    • ADDRESS: 333, Techno jungang-daero, Hyeonpung-myeon, Dalseong-gun, Daegu, Korea
    • VIRTUAL CAMPUS TOUR