190,019 research outputs found
Cheng-Yung Kuo Interview
Bio: Cheng-Yung Kuo was born and raised in Taiwan. He immigrated to the United States 11 years ago to study art. Enrolling in a community college on the south side of Chicago he graduated with honors as a Phi Theta Kappa All-USA Academic Team Nominee in 2006. He transferred to the School of Art Institute of Chicago to receive his Bachelors of Fine Arts. In 2009 he received his Masters of Fine Arts degree from SAIC. Now three years out of college, Cheng-Yung Kuo works at a company called Primitive and works on his personal artwork on the side.
These are links to Cheng-Yung Kuo’s artist profile and personal websites providing an online gallery and information on his up-coming shows.
http://www.kcyarts.com/
http://www.chengyungkuo.com
Supplemental Material - Humor Styles and Marital Satisfaction: Cluster Analysis of the Relationship
Supplemental Material for Humor Styles and Marital Satisfaction: Cluster Analysis of the Relationship by Meng-Ning Tsai, Yung-Chieh Cheng, and Hsueh-Chih Chen in Psychological Reports</p
A Six-Year Follow-Up Study of Intellectual and Behavoral Development of Yu-Cheng (Oil Child) Children
Original Documents of Yung cheng chu p'i yü chih
The palace memorials bearing vermillion endorsements handwritten by Ch’ing Emperor Yung-cheng in the possession of the National Palace Museum, Taipei, number more than 22,300 in Chinese, published, unpublished and not to be published, and 890 in Manchu. The Chinese palace memorials published in Yungcheng chu p’i yü chih are only about 7,000; that is, two thirds of the documents still remain unpublished. Comparison of the published documents with their originals reveals considerable textual differences. The published texts frequently omit a passage and replace words and phrases. Many of such abridgements appear to result from political considerations. Stylistically, vernacular forms that often cloud the text of the originals are replaced by classical, more precise expressions in the published text. The same can be said of the imperial vermillion endorsements by Yung-cheng. This must be the result of the editing by the literate staff of the Hanlin Academy done at the time of publication on the original text of the palace memorials that were mostly composed by official clerks, private secretaries who were failed Civil Service Examination candidates, and military officers who had little culture. Also clerical errors found in the originals are corrected in their published form. It should be noted, moreover, that the passages stricken out in the originals by Yung-cheng’s vermillion brush, which are not reproduced in their published form, sometimes carry highly important information. Thus the original documents of Yung cheng chu p’i yü chih are, not only superior in quantity to the published edition, but extremely valuable as primary historical sources. There is not the slightest doubt that, if the originals are printed as they are, study of the history of the Yung-cheng period will advance tremendously.journal articl
Chen Yung-Fa, Zhongguo gongchan geming qishi nian
Chen Yung-Fa, the author of an authoritative study of the Chinese communist revolution, Making Revolution , provides us here with an excellent overview, covering seventy years of that revolution, from the early beginnings of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) in the 1920s until the 1990s. In Making Revolution, he showed that during the Sino-Japanese war the revolution was far from being the outcome of spontaneous mass movements. In fact, it was brought about by localised political activity aim..
Performance of a novel evolutionary genetic-based multi-user detector for multi-carrier CDMA communication systems
Soft Computing February 2017, Volume 21, Issue 4, pp 1031–1039 Performance of a novel evolutionary genetic-based multi-user detector for multi-carrier CDMA communication systems Authors:Authors and affiliations Yung-Fa Huang, Tan-Hsu Tan, Chia-Hsin Cheng, Wei-Chen Lai,Hsing-Chung Chen Email autho
Carrier trapping effects on photoluminescence decay time in InGaN/GaN quantum wells with nanocluster structures
Carrier trapping effects on photoluminescence decay time in InGaN/GaN quantum wells with nanocluster structures
Anti-HIV tigliane diterpenoids from Reutealis trisperma
Lu, Yan, Huang, Ya-Si, Chen, Chin-Ho, Akiyama, Toshiyuki, Morris-Natschke, Susan L., Cheng, Yung-Yi, Chen, Ih-Sheng, Yang, Sheng-Zehn, Chen, Dao-Feng, Lee, Kuo-Hsiung (2020): Anti-HIV tigliane diterpenoids from Reutealis trisperma. Phytochemistry (112360) 174: 1-6, DOI: 10.1016/j.phytochem.2020.112360, URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.phytochem.2020.11236
The Bordered Red Banner Archives and Other Historical Sources on the Eight Banners from the Yung-cheng Period
Jōkōki Tō, Yōsei chō 鐘紅旗檔 雍正朝 (The Bordered Red Banner Archives, Yung-cheng Period), published by The Seminar on Manchu History, Toyo Bunko, March, 1972, contains the text of the earliest 54 Manchu documents among more than 2,400, which cover a period of more than two-hundred years between 1723 and 1925. Most of the documents are memorials to the throne (wesimburengge), to which imperial decrees (hese) are added. Each item, often comprising several documents, is kept in an envelope which bears the date, a Chinese character from the Thousand Character Essay corresponding to a particular year and a number to indicate the sequence within that year, and a very brief summary of the contents. The documents may be divided by their contents into four categories: inheritance of the posts of arrow commander (nirui janggin); inheritance of hereditary titles; appointment of officials; and records of administrative affairs.It is no accident that no documents from the K’ang-hsi or earlier reigns are found in the Bordered Red Banner Archives. Until Yung-cheng came to the throne, the banner commanders (gūsa be kadalara amban), who had no office buildings of their own, used to attend to their duties at their private homes, and consequently their papers were often lost; in the reign of Yung-cheng, archives from the times previous to 1690’s were no longer available for consultation. To improve the situation, Yung-cheng ordered a series of reforms, including official cataloging and preservation of the banner archives, prescription of set forms, stamping of the official seals of banner commanders, and others, with a view to preventing such illegal practices as rewriting older documents showing antecedents. The Bordered Red Banner Archives, Yung-cheng Period is the best indication of what were done for preservation of documents under Yung-cheng and of how the imperial power began at that time to penetrate the hitherto immune social structure of the Eight Banners.journal articl
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