2011年11月3日星期四

Some say the government needs to do more

The story of a young married schoolteacher whose relentless optimism is Rosetta Stone Language challengedwhen a seemingly perfect family moves in next door, The film, wrote Jeremy Mathews, "has a wonderful peculiarity to it." (Another Scandinavian comedy, Sweden's "Simple Simon," made the Academy shortlist last year.)Serbia: "Montevideo, God Bless You!"Director: Dragan BjelogrlicA box-office hit in its homeland, "Montevideo, God Bless You!" deals with the Yugoslavian soccer team's participation in the 1930 World Cup tournament in Montevideo, Uruguay. It is loosely based on a novel, "Montevideo, Bog te video," by sports journalist Vladimir Stankovic.South Korea: "The Front Line"Director: Jang JunKorean director Jang Hun's third film is set during a ceasefire in the Korean War in 1951, and deals with a South Korean lieutenant whose investigation into the killing of a commander uncovers odd circumstances along the war's eastern front. HONG KONG VS SINGAPORE Singapore's tight supply is also expected to ease with theopening of new sites, including the launch of a second campus bythe popular United World College that Rosetta Stone language software charges around $25,000 intuition fees per year, while Cognitas, a U.K. education group,will open a 2,750 place school next year. In space-starved Hong Kong, where land is among the mostexpensive in the world, the government says it is trying to easethe supply bottleneck by allocating new greenfield sites andbuildings that will create 5,000 school places in the next fewyears. Some say the government needs to do more, particularly withthe former British colony's business allure already hit by highproperty and rental costs, along with poor air pollution. As Hong Kong drags its feet, the governments of Malaysia,Thailand and South Korea are gearing up to become educationalhubs. Malaysia for example, is developing Iskander EduCity nearSingapore, which has attracted major investment from RafflesEducation Corp , one of Asia's largest privateeducation groups. "It's critical. If you don't get that right or if we can'toffer that to people considering coming to Hong Kong, they'll goto Singapore, they'll go to Shanghai, or they'll stay put, soit's an absolute Rosetta Stone Italian deal-breaker," Robert Chipman, head of HongKong's American Chamber of Commerce, told Reuters Insider TV. "

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