28,528 research outputs found
2018 March 19 concert at Cornell University of Wu Man and the Huayin Puppet Band
Edited full-length concert video.World renowned pipa player Wu Man and the Huayin Shadow Puppet Band performed in concert on March 19, 2018 at Cornell's Barnes Hall. This short documentary provides a glimpse behind the scenes with interviews with Wu Man, band members as well as provides complete song performances of group, solo, and shadow puppets.Cornell East Asia Program1_u6ejeoa
Story about man-eating creatures by Wu Decai
Elan annotation file for the audio file with the same name. Transcription and translation double checked and verified with Wu Decai and Wu Rongf
The Knights, Orchestra, and Wu Man, Pipa
February 8th, 2013
The Knights, orchestra, and Wu Man, pipa, performed Stravinsky: Concerto in E-Flat (Dumbarton Oaks); Harrison: Concerto for Pipa and Orchestra; Milhaud (arr. The Knights): Le boeuf sur le toit; Wu Man (arr. Ljova/C. Jacobsen): Blue and Green for Pipa and Orchestra.
Photo credit: Yale School of Musichttps://digitalcommons.rockefeller.edu/tri-institutional-noon-recitals/1280/thumbnail.jp
Nanniwan (China), General Wang Zhen and Wu Man-yu
China: 40,000, Wu Man Yu, Min Ping; Naniwan [Nanniwan] stokes mortarOn the left, Wu Man-yu, Labour Hero Number One of the Border Regions, with General Wang Cheng [Wang Zhen], youthful Commander of the famous 359th Brigade.Caption from similar image published in Harrison Forman's book Report from Red ChinaGrayscaleForman Nitrate Negatives, Box 2
China, General Wang Zhen and Wu Man-yu in Yan'an
Caption from Report from Red China and Xi xing man ying: On the left, Wu Man-yu, Labour Hero Number One of the Border Regions, with General Wang Cheng [Wang Zhen], youthful Commander of the famous 359th Brigade.China: Yanan [Yan'an]Forman, H. (1946). Report from Red China. London: Robert Hale Limited.; Forman, H. (1946). Xi xing man ying. Shanghai: Shanghai shu bao gong si.GrayscaleForman Nitrate Negatives, Box 1
Control and Filtering for Discrete Linear Repetitive Processes with H infty and ell 2--ell infty Performance
Repetitive processes are characterized by a series of sweeps, termed passes, through a set of dynamics defined over a finite duration known as the pass length. On each pass an output, termed the pass profile, is produced which acts as a forcing function on, and hence contributes to, the dynamics of the next pass profile. This can lead to oscillations which increase in amplitude in the pass to pass direction and cannot be controlled by standard control laws. Here we give new results on the design of physically based control laws for the sub-class of so-called discrete linear repetitive processes which arise in applications areas such as iterative learning control. The main contribution is to show how control law design can be undertaken within the framework of a general robust filtering problem with guaranteed levels of performance. In particular, we develop algorithms for the design of an H? and dynamic output feedback controller and filter which guarantees that the resulting controlled (filtering error) process, respectively, is stable along the pass and has prescribed disturbance attenuation performance as measured by and – norms
Justification of installing 4GL in Hong Kong environment.
by Wu Chung Man, Ronnie.Thesis (M.B.A.)--Chinese University of Hong Kong, 1988.Bibliography: leaves 43-45
Crazy rich families in Singapore: Property, trust and business disputes, and the incompatibility of English Principles
Shanghai Quartet with Guest Artist Wu Man
Does Montclair State’s resident string quartet ever rest on its laurels? Banish the thought. The Shanghai Quartet and celebrated pipa virtuoso Wu Man perform the world premiere of Lei Liang’s Five Seasons, commissioned by the Quartet. The program also includes Beethoven’s Quartet op. 18, no. 3; Schumann’s Quartet op. 41, no.1; and Wang Huiran’s “Dance of the Yi People,” performed on the pipa.https://digitalcommons.montclair.edu/peak-performances-2010-2011/1003/thumbnail.jp
Wu\u27s The Man with the Compound Eyes and the Worlding of Environmental Literature
In her article Wu\u27s The Man with the Compound Eyes and the Worlding of Environmental Literature Shiuhhuah Serena Chou discusses Mingyi Wu\u27s novel in the context of ecocriticism\u27s transcultural turn. Chou presents an overview of the cultural milieu in which Wu rises onto the world literary scene and proceeds by examining the problematics and potentials of ecocritical studies\u27 transnationalization. Chou argues that while Wu\u27s desire to understand the local through the vocabulary of the global, his readership reveals a sense of ecocosmopolitanism. The globalized local or localized global in Wu\u27s novel reveals a cosmopolitan sense of the world and the readership of The Man with the Compound Eyes reveals the worlding of ecocriticism as a process of cultural adaptation and translation
- …
