1,736,140 research outputs found
Interview about Mary Whang Choy
Mary Whang Choy was arrested in Kalama Valley on May 11, 1971, protesting the eviction of farmers and Native Hawaiians
Oral History Interview, Peggy Choy (2432)
In her 2022 interview with Lori Lopez, Peggy Choy details the creation of the Asian American Studies program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. For more information on this project, go to https://asianamerican.wisc.edu/about/our-stories/. To learn more about this oral history, download & review the index first (or transcript if available). It will help determine which audio file(s) to download & listen to.In her 2022 interview with Lori Lopez, Peggy Choy details the creation of the Asian American Studies program at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She talks about her background in dance, the institutional change of the Pacific Asian Women’s Alliance, and the evolution and impact of the Asian American Studies program. This interview was conducted for the inclusion into the Asian American Studies Project for the UW-Madison Archives & Records Management oral history collection
Ed Choy Draws James Joyce
Cover for Ed Choy Draws James Joyce, from the RISD Library Zine Collection.https://digitalcommons.risd.edu/specialcollections_zinecollection/2097/thumbnail.jp
Caridina bruneiana Choy 1992
Caridina bruneiana Choy, 1992 Caridina bruneiana Choy, 1992: 49, Figs.1–4 [type locality: Brunei]; Wowor et al., 2004:343, Fig. 7A–C. Material examined. – Singapore: 2 males, cl 3.0– 3.1 mm, 1 female, cl 3.5 mm, 17 ovigerous females, cl 4.8–6.1 mm, RMNH D 16621, Jurong, Singapore, coll. E. R. Alfred, 22 Mar.1958; 3 males, cl 3.0– 3.5 mm, 3 females, cl 2.3–3.2 mm, ZRC 1979.4.18.13–18, Sungai Peng Siang, 12 miles from Chua Chu Kang Road, Singapore, 18 Aug.1961. Habitat. – Similar to C. peninsularis, i.e. in streams or rivers with seawater influence. Remarks. – With regard to the form of the rostrum, Caridina bruneiana is very similar to C. peninsularis, with which it has been found to occur together. However, it can be separated from C. peninsularis by the relatively higher rostrum, higher number of postorbital rostral teeth (2–3 vs. 3–5) and spinules on the dactylus of fifth pereiopod (19–22 vs. 38–42); and the absence of a spine on the preanal carina. Its presence in Singapore suggests a wider distribution in the Peninsular Malaysia, although it is not formally known there at present. Distribution. – Borneo, Singapore (Choy, 1992; present study).Published as part of Cai, Yixiong, Ng, Peter K. L. & Choy, Satish, 2007, Freshwater Shrimps Of The Family Atyidae (Crustacea: Decapoda: Caridea) From Peninsular Malaysia And Singapore, pp. 277-309 in Raffles Bulletin of Zoology 55 (2) on page 284, DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.533354
CHOY, UNING TURLARI VA CHOY BILAN BOG'LIQ LEKSEMALARNING LEKSIKOGRAFIK TADQIQI
Ushbu maqolada ichimliklar, ularning turlari, issiq ichimliklar sirasiga kiruvchi choy haqida ma’lumot berilgan. Choy tarixi, uni damlash sirlari, ichiga solinadigan masallig’iga qarab choy turlari haqida ham bayo etilgan. Shuningdek, maqolada choy va u bilan bog’liq leksemalarning izohli lug’atlarda berilishi misollar vositasida yoritilgan
Episode 5 - 2002: Vancouver's Book Club Choy(ce):
This episode of Vancouver Special we explore the year - 2002 - with a look back at the launch of Vancouver's first city-wide book club, One Book, One Vancouver.
CBC's sets the scene for 2002 and award-winning author Wayson Choy visits us in studio to talk about having his highly acclaimed bestseller selected as One Book, One Vancouver's inaugural title.
Popular with readers across the city and beyond, VPL's One Book, One Vancouver was created to promote and encourage a culture of reading and discussion in Vancouver. From 2002 to 2010 the program featured ten amazing books and dozens of imaginative programs – from author readings and neighbourhood walking tours to dinners in the heart of Stanley Park and boxing demonstrations in a regulation-size ring at Library Square – each designed to bring each book's theme's alive.
Wayson Choy's first novel, The Jade Peony, spent six months on The Globe and Mail's national bestseller list in 1995 and won the 1996 City of Vancouver Book Award. In 2002, it chosen as the inaugural book for One Book, One Vancouver.
And, VPL librarian Tim McMillan brings is back to bring it all together with some great reads you can find at your library.
The theme song is “North Wind” by Vancouver band Lakefield, from the album Sounds from the Treeline
Differences in acquisition of organic nitrogen in soils between bok choy and tomato
Seedlings of bok choy and tomato were grown in soils with different N nitrogen [no N (-N), ammonium sulfate (AS), and cattle farmyard manure (CM)]. Comparison between soils treated with -N and CM indicated that the growth and N accumulation in bok choy were significantly enhanced by CM treatment, whereas no difference was found in tomato. In the rhizosphere soils, the highest protease activity was detected in CM treatment irrespective of species. Correlation analysis between rhizospheric protease activity and total N accumulation of plant treated with -N and CM showed a significant positive correlation only for bok choy. The determination of amino acid absorption rate in excised roots indicated that glycine was taken up at a significantly higher rate in bok choy than tomato. This study suggested that at least two possible factors affected the acquisition of organic N: rhizospheric protease activity and ability to absorb amino acids in roots
Envisioning future bodies: Choy Ka Fai’s experimental practice at the interface of choreography, media art and archival processes
Berlin-based Singaporean dance and multimedia artist Choy Ka Fai experiments with digital mapping, the storage and transmission of choreography and Asian spiritual dance practices. He has built a comprehensive and growing archive of recorded choreographies from artistic, spiritual, folkloric, and pop cultural contexts. It includes avatars of dancers, field and video recordings of dances and rituals and interviews with various protagonists. Choy Ka Fai explores altered and expanded corporeal states and the relationships between bodies and both worldly and spiritual phenomena. In his work, organic, material and data-based bodies appear side by side on an equal level and futuristic and queer potentials of human and digital bodies are made visible.
In conversation with Lucie Ortmann Choy Ka Fai emphasises the fundamental importance of the practise of archiving for his work. He talks about his methods of showing and sharing his extensive, collected and created material in constantly new formats, ranging from performance, video installation, lecture to digital games, and how he continues to develop it further. He also reflects on the challenging processes of transferring and translating spiritual practises and dance cultures to different contexts and audiences
Envisioning future bodies: Choy Ka Fai’s experimental practice at the interface of choreography, media art and archival processes
Berlin-based Singaporean dance and multimedia artist Choy Ka Fai experiments with digital mapping, the storage and transmission of choreography and Asian spiritual dance practices. He has built a comprehensive and growing archive of recorded choreographies from artistic, spiritual, folkloric, and pop cultural contexts. It includes avatars of dancers, field and video recordings of dances and rituals and interviews with various protagonists. Choy Ka Fai explores altered and expanded corporeal states and the relationships between bodies and both worldly and spiritual phenomena. In his work, organic, material and data-based bodies appear side by side on an equal level and futuristic and queer potentials of human and digital bodies are made visible.
In conversation with Lucie Ortmann Choy Ka Fai emphasises the fundamental importance of the practise of archiving for his work. He talks about his methods of showing and sharing his extensive, collected and created material in constantly new formats, ranging from performance, video installation, lecture to digital games, and how he continues to develop it further. He also reflects on the challenging processes of transferring and translating spiritual practises and dance cultures to different contexts and audiences
Envisioning future bodies: Choy Ka Fai’s experimental practice at the interface of choreography, media art and archival processes
Berlin-based Singaporean dance and multimedia artist Choy Ka Fai experiments with digital mapping, the storage and transmission of choreography and Asian spiritual dance practices. He has built a comprehensive and growing archive of recorded choreographies from artistic, spiritual, folkloric, and pop cultural contexts. It includes avatars of dancers, field and video recordings of dances and rituals and interviews with various protagonists. Choy Ka Fai explores altered and expanded corporeal states and the relationships between bodies and both worldly and spiritual phenomena. In his work, organic, material and data-based bodies appear side by side on an equal level and futuristic and queer potentials of human and digital bodies are made visible.
In conversation with Lucie Ortmann Choy Ka Fai emphasises the fundamental importance of the practise of archiving for his work. He talks about his methods of showing and sharing his extensive, collected and created material in constantly new formats, ranging from performance, video installation, lecture to digital games, and how he continues to develop it further. He also reflects on the challenging processes of transferring and translating spiritual practises and dance cultures to different contexts and audiences
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