68,630 research outputs found
Letter from Lu Hui-Ching to Yuehan Ma (June 21, 1948)
This is a copy of a letter written by Lu Hui-Ching to Yuehan (John) Ma. It is dated June 21, 1948 and is asking his opinion and support for a research and training institution for physical education in China.For more information about Lu Hui-chʻing, see:https://springfield.as.atlas-sys.com/agents/people/97
Ceremony - Lu Lu, Weiming Lu, Shan Ma
LL.M. graduatesLu Lu, Weiming Lu, and Shan Ma receive their hoods.https://scholarship.kentlaw.iit.edu/commencement_2013/1075/thumbnail.jp
HiPrompt: Few-Shot Biomedical Knowledge Fusion via Hierarchy-Oriented Prompting
Jiaying Lu, Jiaming Shen, Bo Xiong, Wenjing Ma, Steffen Staab, and Carl Yan
Ksavers Andermanis – LU Akadēmiskās nozīmītes meta autors
Raksts tapis kā turpinājums 2024. gada septembra mēneša priekšmetam par Latvijas Universitātes (LU) Akadēmisko nozīmīti, kur uzmanība pievērsta LU Akadēmiskās nozīmītes meta autoram, LU Arhitektūras fakultātes studentam un novadpētniekam, vācbaltietim Ksaveram Andermanim. K. Andermanis ne tikai ir sniedzis ieguldījumu Latvijas etnogrāfijas pētniecībā, bet arī LU simbolu izgatavošanā, kas mūsdienās saglabā savu unikalitāti un vērtību. Meta autora piederība pie LU saimes sakņojusies jau viņa ģimenē, jo viņa tēvs ir absolvējis Rīgas Politehnisko institūtu, LU priekšteci starpkaru periodā, un strādājis LU Saimniecības padomē par inspektoru.The article is a continuation of the September 2024 Museum Object on the Academic Badge of the University of Latvia (UL), which focuses on the author of the UL Academic Badge design, the student of the Faculty of Architecture and local historian, the Baltic German Ksavers Andermanis. K. Andermanis has not only contributed to the research of Latvian ethnography, but also to the production of symbols of the UL, which today retain their uniqueness and value. The author's belonging to the UL family is rooted in his family, as his father graduated from the Riga Polytechnic Institute, the predecessor of UL during the interwar period, and worked as an inspector at the UL Economical council
Niemcza diorites and moznodiorites (Sudetes, SW Poland): a record of changing geotectonic setting at ca. 340 Ma
Granites sensu lato in the Sudetes intruded in several episodes during the Variscan orogeny recording different stages of crust and mantle evolution. Correlating precise ages with geochemistry of the Variscan granites provides information on the evolution of these sources within the Variscan orogen. The Variscan intrusive rocks from the Niemcza Zone (Bohemian Massif, Sudetes, SW Poland) include undeformed dioritic to syenitic rocks and magmatically foliated granodiorites. In this study we analysed low SiO2 (48–53 wt.%) monzodioritic rocks from Przedborowa and Koźmice. The monzodiorites contain late-magmatic zircons with ages of 341.8 ± 1.9 Ma for Przedborowa and 335.6 ± 2.3 Ma for Koźmice, interpreted as emplacement ages of the dioritic magmas. Older Przedborowa rocks are lower in K, Mg, Rb and Ni than the Koźmice rocks and similar compositional trend is also observed in the Central Bohemian Plutonic Complex. The implication is that the mantle underlying the Niemcza Zone became more enriched from ca. 342 to ca. 336 Ma, probably following the collision of the Saxothuringian and Moldanubian/Lugian domains. The magmatism related to the collision occurred ca. 12 Ma later than that in the Central Bohemian Plutonic Complex, but was accompanied by a similar change in magma chemistry from high-K (Przedborowa) to shoshonitic (Koźmice, Kośmin enclaves) and probably to ultrapotassic (Wilków Wielki)
Lu Xun and World Literature
In Lu Xun and World Literature, Xiaolu Ma, Carlos Rojas, and other contributors examine various aspects of Lu Xun, who is known as the father of modern Chinese literature. Essays in this book focus on Lu Xun’s works in relation to the notions of world literature and processes of literary worlding. The contributors offer detailed analyses of Lu Xun’s own literary oeuvre and of foreign works that engage with his writings. This volume also focuses on many facets of the publication and dissemination of Lu Xun’s works’, from printing and binding to the discussions and debates that followed their release in China and abroad. This book not only makes an important contribution to the field of Lu Xun studies, but also proposes a reexamination of the category of world literature
Lu Xun's Revolution : Writing in a Time of Violence /
Recognized as modern China’s preeminent man of letters, Lu Xun (1881–1936) is revered as the nation’s conscience, a writer comparable to Shakespeare or Tolstoy. Gloria Davies’s vivid portrait gives readers a better sense of this influential author by situating the man Mao Zedong hailed as "the sage of modern China" in his turbulent time and place.Widely recognized as modern China’s preeminent man of letters, Lu Xun (1881–1936) is revered as the voice of a nation’s conscience, a writer comparable to Shakespeare and Tolstoy in stature and influence. Gloria Davies’s portrait now gives readers a better sense of this influential author by situating the man Mao Zedong hailed as "the sage of modern China" in his turbulent time and place. In Davies’s vivid rendering, we encounter a writer passionately engaged with the heady arguments and intrigues of a country on the eve of revolution. She traces political tensions in Lu Xun’s works which reflect the larger conflict in modern Chinese thought between egalitarian and authoritarian impulses. During the last phase of Lu Xun’s career, the so-called "years on the left," we see how fiercely he defended a literature in which the people would speak for themselves, and we come to understand why Lu Xun continues to inspire the debates shaping China today. Although Lu Xun was never a Communist, his legacy was fully enlisted to support the Party in the decades following his death. Far from the apologist of political violence portrayed by Maoist interpreters, however, Lu Xun emerges here as an energetic opponent of despotism, a humanist for whom empathy, not ideological zeal, was the key to achieving revolutionary ends. Limned with precision and insight, Lu Xun’s Revolution is a major contribution to the ongoing reappraisal of this foundational figure.Recognized as modern China’s preeminent man of letters, Lu Xun (1881–1936) is revered as the nation’s conscience, a writer comparable to Shakespeare or Tolstoy. Gloria Davies’s vivid portrait gives readers a better sense of this influential author by situating the man Mao Zedong hailed as "the sage of modern China" in his turbulent time and place.Widely recognized as modern China’s preeminent man of letters, Lu Xun (1881–1936) is revered as the voice of a nation’s conscience, a writer comparable to Shakespeare and Tolstoy in stature and influence. Gloria Davies’s portrait now gives readers a better sense of this influential author by situating the man Mao Zedong hailed as "the sage of modern China" in his turbulent time and place. In Davies’s vivid rendering, we encounter a writer passionately engaged with the heady arguments and intrigues of a country on the eve of revolution. She traces political tensions in Lu Xun’s works which reflect the larger conflict in modern Chinese thought between egalitarian and authoritarian impulses. During the last phase of Lu Xun’s career, the so-called "years on the left," we see how fiercely he defended a literature in which the people would speak for themselves, and we come to understand why Lu Xun continues to inspire the debates shaping China today. Although Lu Xun was never a Communist, his legacy was fully enlisted to support the Party in the decades following his death. Far from the apologist of political violence portrayed by Maoist interpreters, however, Lu Xun emerges here as an energetic opponent of despotism, a humanist for whom empathy, not ideological zeal, was the key to achieving revolutionary ends. Limned with precision and insight, Lu Xun’s Revolution is a major contribution to the ongoing reappraisal of this foundational figure.Electronic reproduction. :Mode of access: Internet via World Wide Web.DaviesGloria: Gloria Davies is a literary scholar and historian of China at Monash University in Australia. She is also Adjunct Director of the Australian Centre on China in the World at the Australian National University.Description based on online resource; title from PDF title page (publisher’s Web site, viewed May 26, 2011
Lu Xun zaoqi wenyan lunwen li suo tansuo de xin wenhua (The 'New Culture' formulated in Lu Xun's early classical-style essays)
This article links a number of the main themes expressed in Lu Xun's early wenyan essays, written in Japan in 1906-1908, with the concerns of the New Culture Movement, which emerged later (circa 1919) in China. The author argues that these book-length theses written in dense classical language were in fact intellectual precursors to the New Culture Movement and its aftermath. It delineates a partial outcome of the author's Australian Research Council (ARC) project on the early Lu Xun and his formative period in Japan
Ceropales (Ceropales) yunnanensis Lu & Bashir & Li & Ma 2019, sp. nov.
2. Ceropales (C.) yunnanensis Lu & Li, sp. nov. (Figure 1, b–c. Figure 3. Figure 4, a–f) Diagnosis. The new species clearly differs from Ceropales (C.) ligea Bingham, 1903 (from the Oriental, Palearctic and Australo-papuan regions) in the C. helvetica -group and other congeners by combination of characters detailed as follow: sp. nov. C. (C.) ligea Bingham, 1903 C. (C.) yunnanensis Lu & Li, sp. nov. a Temple distinctly broader than one third of greatest width of eye Temple narrower than one third of greatest width of eye (6:15) (13:40) (Fig 3. d) b Ocelli in a right angled triangle (♀) Ocelli in acute triangle (♀) (Fig 3. c) c Lower margin of last sternum largely curved, but slightly Lower margin of last sternum flat in lateral view (Fig 3. concaved by apex flat in lateral view g) d Orbital groove at most 1/3 outer eye margin (♀) Orbital groove well developed, beyond half length of outer eye margin (♀) (Fig 3. d) e Mandible as a rule largely black (♂), or basal half white with a Basal half of mandible black, apical half brown (♀ ♂) large black spot, or often entirely white, at most with a minute black spot f Gastral sternum 9 stumpy, scarcely longer than width Gastral sternum 9 distinctly longer than width and raised like a roof longitudinal medially (Fig 4. c–d) g Paramere in male genitalia never dilated, outer side with long Paramere in male genitalia dilated and expanded and scattered hairs laterally apically, outer side with rigid and erect setae (Fig 4. e–f) Description. Female (Fig 1. b). Body length 7–9 mm, fore wing length 6.7 mm. Black; yellowish white: labrum except black spot medially, clypeus except black spot medially, lower frons, streak on inner margin of eyes to ocular sinus, spots on antennal joints 1–2 below, spot between antennal sockets, interrupted line on outer eye margin, pronotal tubercle, posterolateral angle of pronotum, spot on metanotum medially, lateral corner of propodeum, spot on fore face of fore coxa, small spot on outer face of mid and hind coxae apically, inner lateral margin of all trochanters apically, small spot on outer face of fore and mid femurs apically, spot on outer face of fore tibia apically (sometimes absent), spots on both side of gastral terga 1–3 subapically, and a large spot on tergum 6; mandible apically, flagellum joints 1–2 beneath (sometimes only flagellum joint 1 below), most part of fore tibia, hind femur (black on both apical margin) ferruginous (Fig 1. b). Wings hyaline, brownish, veins dark brown. Body covered with silky pubescence. Head. Labrum exposed. Mandible bidentate apically. Clypeus short, slightly convex in lateral view, anterior margin nearly straight, slightly emarginated medially (Fig 3. a). Frons and vertex with adjacent, small punctures mixed with sparse, shallow punctures on upper frons, and some deeper and densely set punctures only along inner eye margin above (Fig 3. b). Frontal line shallow, extending to anterior ocellus. Ocelli in acute triangle, ocellar area elevated (Fig 3. c). Frons conspicuously elevated between antennal sockets, slightly curved before antennal sockets and upper frons bent in obtuse-angle on 2/3 away from antennal sockets in lateral view (Fig 3. d). Orbital groove shiny, well developed, beyond the half length of outer eye margin (Fig 3. d). HW: HL = 86: 49; POD: OOD = 12: 17; length ratios of scape, pedicel, flagellomere I–IV and IX–XI = 15: 10: 18: 18: 18: 18: 18: 20. Mesosoma. Pronotum with shallow, scattered punctures dorsally, anterior area with tuberculate prominence laterally, both lateral sides vertically impressed medially and with short, longitudinal rugae in impression, anterolateral angle acute, posterolateral angle rounded (Fig 3. e), posterior margin slightly arcuate. Mesonotum with shallow, scattered punctures, and their interspaces much larger than their diameters, parapsidal furrow extending from posterior margin to 2/3 length of mesonotum; mesopleuron with scattered punctures; some dense and deep punctures set below the tegula, nearly 2 × diameters apart (Fig 3. e). Scutellum with prescutelar sulcus, median area conspicuously elevated and with fine punctures; short, longitudinal rugae laterally. Metanotum conspicuously elevated medially, slightly longitudinal concave at apex and polished; with short, longitudinal rugae laterally. Postnotum slightly broadened medially and narrowed laterally, with few transverse rugae, shiny. Propodeum conspicuously flat in its entire length in lateral view (Fig 3. e), surface with microscopically fine transverse rugulosity, medial sulcus reaching half-length of propodeum and transversely clathrate, posterior margin nearly straight, posterolateral angle of propodeum rounded (Fig 3. f), lateral side of propodeum with a conspicuous, deep oblique suture medially, with fine, sparse punctures below suture (Fig 3. e). Legs. Tarsal claws (except hind tarsal claw) normal, slightly curved apically, with a short, erect and acute subapical tooth. Wings. Fore wing upper margin of submarginal cell III obviously shorter than submarginal cell II, lower margin of submarginal cell III obviously longer than lower submarginal cell II; submarginal cell II receiving crossvein 1m-cu medially; submarginal cell III receiving crossvein 2m-cu medially. Vein A and crossvein cu-a of hind wing forming obtuse angle, M + CuA diverging after cu-a (Fig 3. h). Metasoma. Short and fusiform. Last sternum strongly compressed laterally, lower margin flat in lateral view, pointed apically (Fig 3. g). Male (Fig 1. c). Differs from female as follows: body length 6 mm, fore wing length 5.8 mm. Spot on tegula white; lower side of antennal last four joints ferruginous. HW: HL = 72: 44 (Fig 4. a); POD: OOD = 13: 19; A1: A2: A3: A4: A5: A6: A12: A13 = 14: 9: 15: 15: 15: 15: 13: 17. Fore tarsomeres II–IV normal, tarsomere V large, inner side deeply emarginated medially; inner claw of fore tarsus very deeply split owing to unusually large, not truncate inner tooth basally (Fig 4. b); other claws of fore and mid tarsi normal, slightly curved apically, with a short, erect and acute subapical tooth; claws of hind tarsus rectangularly curved. Gastral sternum 9 distinctly longer than width and raised like a roof longitudinal medially, broadly rounded apically and with a tuft of erect long hairs (Fig 4. c–d). Paramere in genitalia conspicuously dilated and expanded apically, outer side with rigid, erect and scattered setae (Fig 4. e–f). Material examined: Type material. Holotype: ♀, CHINA: Yunnan: Simao City, Jingdong County, Jinping town, 24°27′N, 100°49′E, 28. IV. 2005, coll. Li Ma. Paratypes: 1♂, CHINA: Yunnan: Simao City, Jingdong County, Jinping town, 24°27′N, 100°49′E, 28. IV. 2005, coll. Hesheng Wang; 1♀, CHINA: Yunnan: Simao City, Jingdong County, Jinping town, 24°27′N, 100°49′E, 28. IV. 2005, coll. Hesheng Wang; 2♀♀, CHINA: Yunnan: Simao City, Jingdong County, Jinping town, 24°27′N, 100°49′E, 28. IV. 2005, coll. Chunju Liu. Distribution. China (Yunnan). Etymology. The new species is named after Yunnan Province of China where the type species was collected.Published as part of Lu, Hai-Xia, Bashir, Nawaz Haider, Li, Qiang & Ma, Li, 2019, Two new species of Ceropales (Ceropales) Latreille (Hymenoptera, Pompilidae), with a key to species from China, pp. 211-220 in Zootaxa 4551 (2) on pages 213-218, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4551.2.5, http://zenodo.org/record/262280
Ceropales (Ceropales) longisulcata Lu & Bashir & Li & Ma 2019, sp. nov.
1. Ceropales (Ceropales) longisulcata Lu & Li, sp. nov. (Figure 1–a. Figure 2) Diagnosis. The new species clearly differs from the Australian species Ceropales (C.) australensis Moczar, 1989 in the C. helvetica -group and other congeners by combination of characters shown as follows: Description. Female (Fig 1a). Body length 6 mm, fore wing length 4 mm. Black; white to yellow: labrum except darkened patch medially, clypeus except black spot medially, basal half of mandible except small spot medially, lower frons except two small triangular black spots below antennal sockets, inner margin of eyes to ocular sinus, spots on antennal joints 1–2 below, spot between antennal sockets, malar space, bands on outer margin of eyes, pronotal tubercle, anterolateral angle of pronotum and streak on posterior margin, spot on tegulae, small spot on scutellum (sometimes absent), metanotum, posterior margin of mesopleuron medially, lateral corner of propodeum, spots on outer face of fore coxa largely, outer face of mid and hind coxae, outer face of fore and mid femurs apically, streak on outer face of fore tibia, a pair of emarginated bands on gastral terga 1–4 subapically, and a large spot on tergum 6; apical half of mandible, fore femur, mid femur and tibia, hind femur (apical margin brown) ferruginous; fore tibia and tarsus, mid tarsus, spurs of fore and mid tibia yellowish-brown; hind tibia and tarsus dark-brown (Figs 1. a). Wings hyaline, brownish, veins dark brown. Body covered with silky pubescence. Head. Labrum exposed. Mandible bidentate apically. Clypeus slightly convex in lateral view; anterior margin nearly straight, slightly emarginated medially (Fig 2. a). Frons and vertex with adjacent, small punctures mixed with sparse, larger punctures on upper frons, and some deeper and densely set punctures only along the inner margin of eye above (Fig 2. b), area between antennal sockets conspicuously elevated. Frontal line shallow, extending to 2/3 length from antennal sockets to anterior-ocellus. Ocelli in acute triangle (Fig 2. c), ocellar area elevated. Orbital groove shiny, undeveloped, as long as 1/3 length of outer eye margin (Fig 2. d). Frons slightly curved down before antennal sockets, upper frons bent in obtuse-angle on 2/3 away from antennal sockets in lateral view (Fig 2. d). HW: HL = 74: 46; POD: OOD = 12: 17; length ratios of scape, pedicel, flagellomere I–IV and IX–XI = 15: 10: 18: 18: 18: 18: 18: 20. Mesosoma. Pronotum with sparse, shallow punctures dorsally, anterior area with tuberculate prominence laterally, both lateral sides vertically impressed medially and with short longitudinal rugae in impression, anterolateral angle acute, posterolateral angle rounded (Fig 2. e), posterior margin nearly straight. Mesonotum with scattered punctures, and their interspaces much larger than their diameters, parapsidal furrow extending from posterior margin to 2/3 length of mesonotum; mesopleuron with scattered punctures, and some denser and deep punctures set below tegula, punctures nearly 1.5 × diameters apart (Fig 2. e). Scutellum with prescutelar sulcus, median area conspicuously elevated and with fine punctures, with short, longitudinal rugae laterally. Metanotum conspicuously elevated medially and polished at apex, with short, longitudinal rugae laterally. Postnotum slightly broadened medially and very narrow laterally, with few transverse rugae, shiny. Metapleuron with fine, sparse punctures. Propodeum conspicuously flat in its entire length in lateral view, hardly convex basally (Fig 2. e), surface with microscopically fine, transverse rugulosity, medial sulcus reaching nearly half length of propodeum and transversely clathrate, posterior margin nearly straight, posterolateral angle of propodeum rounded (Fig 2. f),lateral side of propodeum without a conspicuous oblique suture medially, only rather shallowly impressed. Legs. Tarsal claws (except hind tarsal claws) normal, slightly curved apically, with short, erect and acute subapical tooth. Wings. Fore wing upper margin of submarginal cell III obviously shorter than submarginal cell II, lower margin of submarginal cell III obviously longer than submarginal cell II; submarginal cell II receiving crossvein 1m-cu medially; submarginal cell III receiving crossvein 2m-cu medially. Vein A and crossvein cu-a of hind wing forming obtuse angle, M + CuA diverging after cu-a (Fig 2. g). Metasoma. Short and fusiform. Lower margin of last sternum flat in lateral view, pointed apically (Fig 2. h). Male. Unknown. Material examined: Type material. Holotype: ♀, CHINA: Inner Mongolia: Liangsuhai wetland, 40°36′N, 108°43′E, Yellow Pan; 1. IX. 2013, coll. Li Jiang, Jian Zhu, Xiaoqian Shi. Paratypes: 1 ♀, CHINA: Inner Mongolia: Liangsuhai wetland, 40°36′N, 108°43′E, Yellow Pan; 1. IX. 2013, coll. Li Jiang, Jian Zhu, Xiaoqian Shi; 1 ♀, CHINA: Inner Mongolia: Wulanchabu League, 39°37″N, 109°16′′E, 20. VII. 2009, coll. Rui Zhang. Distribution. China (Inner Mongolia). Etymology. The specific name longisulcata is derived from the Latin long- (= long), and Latin sulcata (= sulcus), refers to the long longitudinal median sulcus of propodeum, that reaches nearly half the length of the propodeum, which is one of the diagnostic characteristics of this species.Published as part of Lu, Hai-Xia, Bashir, Nawaz Haider, Li, Qiang & Ma, Li, 2019, Two new species of Ceropales (Ceropales) Latreille (Hymenoptera, Pompilidae), with a key to species from China, pp. 211-220 in Zootaxa 4551 (2) on pages 212-213, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4551.2.5, http://zenodo.org/record/262280
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