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The Relationships between Performing Arts and Functions of the Cultural Centers in the Seven Cities/Counties of Southern TaiwanFang, Min-hwa 01 September 2011 (has links)
The Municipal cultural center plays the major role for culture promotion in every city/county in Taiwan. It has great influence on performing arts industry in the past 20 years. Facing the environment change, a municipal cultural center should know how to adjust its functions to meet the needs of the theater in the future.
The researcher studied the cultural centers in the seven cities/counties of southern Taiwan before of the merger of 2011, analyzed the development of performing arts, arts activities, audience participation, and the utilization of these cultural centers. The staffs of seven cultural centers, fourteen performing arts groups, and four experts¡¦ opinions are asked in order to know the strength and weakness of cultural center. To accomplish these purposes, the researcher applied the case study method of qualitative research in this study. The study also adopted questionnaire survey and interview to collect data.
On the part of the cultural centers, it showed that: 1. Cultural centers usually meet the demands of performing arts groups and provide venue. 2. Cultural centers make their own application schedules, twice a year. 3. Most of the cultural centers have middle-sized theaters. 4. The renting cost of the venue depends on each center. 5. The performances of the cultural centers usually come from domestic groups. The programs directly sponsored by the cultural centers are rare. On the part of performing arts groups, most of them are satisfied with the assistance of the cultural centers. However, they still raise some issues which cultural centers should improve, such as the application schedule, the usage time of the venue, the venues staffs¡¦ collaboration, the provision and improvement of the theaters¡¦ equipments, promotion method and higher subsidy.
The study concluded that the cultural centers should adjust their policies, redefine their positions, raise the budget, cultivate the professional talent of the workers, develop self-characteristic, cooperate with other centers, improve the quality of programs, give clear channel of the information, enhance the relationships with the communities and develop the audience.
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The Changing Policies Towards Southern Thailand and The Separatist Movement in ThailandLin, Ho-Sheng 27 August 2012 (has links)
The focus of this study is to analyze the relationship of change in Thailand¡¦s southern policy and separatist movements, or the relationship between the Bangkok regime¡¦s policies toward Malay-Muslims in southern Thailand and the Separatist Movement. The research approach is to explain the root causes for Malay-Muslim in southern Thailand in armed resistance against the central government, moderation and radical periods in the Separatist Movement.
According to historical institutionalism, the process of institutional and historical development is a ¡§punctuated equilibrium,¡¨ and historical contexts evolve according to ¡§path dependency.¡¨ Except when crises in the external environmental changes cause ¡§punctuated equilibria,¡¨ it would basically cause those in power to establish new coping strategies that cause change or collapse to the old system. In late 19th century, expansion by the English and French colonialism and imperialism in Indochina caused King Chulalongkorn to accelerate reform in national territorialization and power centralization. In turn, the Kingdom of Patani was transformed from a vassal state to a province in southern Siam, ending the power of Malay Rajas, which motivated the historical origins of southern Thailand separatism.
A review of the Thai historical development found that, after Chulalongkorn the crises in external environmental change frequently lead the ruling regime in Bangkok to establish new southern Thailand policies. In sum, the external environmental changes in the temporal sequence of colonial empires fighting for their interests against each other, threat of the Communist Party, Democratization, Globalization and war on counter-terrorism affected the new southern policies of Thailand by Rama VI, Phibun Songkram, Sarit Thanarat, Thanom Kittikachorn, Prem Tinsulanonda, and Thaksin Shinawatra. It is also intimately connected to the radicalism or moderation of the Malay-Muslim Separatist Movement.
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Impact of the Southern ocean winds on sea-ice - ocean interaction and its associated global ocean circulation in a warming worldCheon, Woo Geunn 15 May 2009 (has links)
This dissertation discusses a linkage between the Southern Ocean (SO) winds and
the global ocean circulation in the framework of a coarse-resolution global ocean general
circulation model coupled to a sea-ice model. In addition to reexamination of the
conventional linkage that begins with northward Ekman transport and extends to the
North Atlantic (NA) overturning, the author investigates a new linkage that begins with
the Southern Hemisphere (SH) sea-ice – ocean interaction perturbed by the anomalous
SO winds and extends to the SH overturning, the response of the NA overturning, and the
long-term baroclinic adjustment of the Antarctic Circumpolar Current (ACC). How the
above two linkages will interact with each other in a warming world is also investigated.
An interactive momentum flux forcing, allowing for the strength of momentum
flux between atmosphere and sea ice to vary in response to the simulated sea-ice
conditions, enhances wind-driven ice divergence to increase the fraction of leads and
polynyas, which increases dense water formation, and thus intensifies convection. Within
three experimental frameworks, this increased dense water consistently increases the Antarctic Bottom Water formation, which directly intensifies the SH overturning and
indirectly weakens the NA overturning. As a result of the hemispheric change in
overturning circulations, the meridional density gradient across the ACC appears to
increase, ultimately increasing the baroclinic part of the ACC via an enhanced thermal
wind shear.
Subsequently, impacts of the poleward shifted and intensified SH subpolar
westerly winds (SWWs) on the global ocean circulation are investigated in phases. When
the SWWs are only shifted poleward, the effect of the anomalous winds is transmitted to
the northern NA, decreasing both the NA overturning and the North Atlantic Deep Water
(NADW) outflow. However, when the SWWs are shifted poleward and intensified, this
effect is cut off by the intensified Deacon cell overturning, and is not transmitted to the
northern NA, and instead increases the NADW outflow substantially. To sum up, with
respect to the SO winds perturbed by the global warming, the SH overturning cell and the
NADW outflow increase, leading to an increase in the volume transport of the ACC.
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Bigger Eyes in a Wider Universe: The American Understanding of Earth in Outer Space, 1893-1941.Prosser, Jodicus W. 2009 May 1900 (has links)
Between 1893 and 1941, the understanding of the Milky Way galaxy within the
American culture changed from a sphere to a spiral and Earth's location within it changed
from the center to the periphery. These changes were based primarily upon scientific
theories developed at Mount Wilson Observatory near Pasadena, California. This
dissertation is an "astrosophy" that traces the history of changing depictions of the Milky
Way in selected published sources and identifies key individuals, theories and
technologies involved. It also demonstrates why the accepted depictions of the universe
envisioned at Mount Wilson were cultural-scientific products created, in part, as the
result of place.
Southern California became the hearth of a culture that justified its superiority
based upon its unique climate. Clear skies, remarkable visibility, and a perceived
existence of intense natural light became the basis for the promotion of Mount Wilson as
the premier location for astronomical observations. Conservation, en plein air paintings,
and the concept of paysage moralis are Southern Californian cultural products of the early 1900s that promoted an idealized society capable of exceptional intellectual
endeavors and scientific accomplishments.
The efforts of astronomers Hale, Shapley, Adams, Hubble and Ritchey resulted in
the changing American understanding of the universe. This dissertation reveals how the
diverse social interactions of these astronomers intersected Arroyo Seco meetings,
women's organizations, the Valley Hunt Club elites, and philanthropic groups that
comprised the schizophrenic culture of Pasadena. Their astronomical theories are
compared to other aspects of the Southern Californian culture revealed in the writings of
Raymond Chandler, Nathanael West and John Fante. The desire of astronomers to gain
prestige from their discoveries is compared to competition in the creative processes of
Hollywood. The theories created by astronomers and the films of the motion picture
industry relied upon establishing an accepted second space within the minds of their
audiences. By the end of the study period, the universe accepted by most Americans was
a "California Universe". It was not a discovery of pure science, but rather a culturalscientific
product of the Mount Wilson astronomers, the Pasadena community and the
landscape and culture of Southern California.
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Analysis of Upwelling Changes in the Eastern Equatorial Pacific during El Niño Southern OscillationPerugachi Salamea, Carlos 2011 December 1900 (has links)
The ocean reanalysis Simple Ocean Data Assimilation (SODA) 2.2.4 is used to explore the changes in upwelling from normal conditions to either El Nino or La Nina conditions. Physical and thermodynamic variables from the reanalysis are used to explore the structure and behavior of El Nino Southern Oscillation (ENSO) events. The results of this analysis show that sea surface temperature (SST), entrainment velocity, wind stress, mixed layer depth, wind curl, and heat content anomalies are in general agreement with ENSO theory. Interestingly, the distribution of upwelling based on the entrainment velocity is very patchy, which led us to explore zonal and meridional sections of vertical velocity. We used three methods to compute changes in upwelling during ENSO events. The first method computes upwelling within the areas of SST anomalies during ENSO events. During El Nino events upwelling shows prominent decadal variability, while during La Nina the decadal variability is weaker. A new upwelling index is used for the second method, and upwelling is computed in the areas of strong upwelling anomalies. The variability of upwelling is higher in periods of reduced upwelling than in periods of strong upwelling. Despite the fact that the new index is computed independently, it agrees in the timing of the index used to define ENSO events for this research. The first and second methods show that the amplitude of SST anomalies and upwelling anomalies do not have a direct relationship, suggesting that upwelling does not explain all of the variance in SST. The last method used is to compute changes in upwelling in the Nino 1+2 region during ENSO events. In the east Pacific there is almost no correlation between upwelling and SST anomalies during ENSO, but this might be attributed to the fact that the Nino 1+2 region is a relatively small region compared to the Nino 3.4 region that is used to define ENSO events. In general, the time series of SST and upwelling anomalies agree well just in the cases when ENSO events are prominently in the eastern Pacific. A comparison between yearly fisheries data from Ecuador and Peru and monthly data of SST anomalies during ENSO years is presented showing that during El Nino events the fish catch decreases and during La Nina events the fish catch increases. We infer that the increase or decrease in fish catch is associated to changes in fish populations, and that these changes are mainly due to availability of nutrients and changes in temperature during ENSO events.
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The Study of Southern Science Park TFT-LCD Indstrial Cluster-Wen, Zheng 20 July 2004 (has links)
The original of industrial cluster analysis is to distinguish what is cluster. It is developing to overview industrial district and to conclude the potential industry. In the light of these defects, we cloud improve them for industrial development. This industrial cluster analysis of variables by literatures, including of Industrial Concentration Factor, Cluster Dependency Factor, Economic Prosperity Factor, and four strategic resources that influence development of cluster, including of High Quality Human Resource, Technology and Knowledge Resource, Infrastructure, Capital.
Using the questionnaire and interview with members in the cluster. The results of research: (1)There is a orientation of TFT-LCD industrial cluster in the Southern Science Park and show a vertical industrial cluster than horizontal cluster. (2)Material and Key part of equipment is complete and available, but there is only one application firm that produces large TFT-LCD. (3) TFT-LCD industry is important in the district and creating economic development. (4)It is difficult to find many talents about TFT-LCD industry and High Quality Human Resource is positive effect to this cluster.(5)As a result of TFT-LCD industry is at initial stage, they have less demand of Technology and Knowledge Resource, but it is increasing in the future.(6)The films are satisfied of water and electricity system, but they think that the staff cloud not get better quality of life in the district.(7) As a result of using capital without borders and Taiwan¡¦s government take TFT-LCD industry seriously, the films get capital smoothly.
Key words¡GSouthern Science Park ¡BThin-Film Transistor Liquid-Crystal
Display ,TFT-LCD¡BIndustrial Cluster¡BLocation Quotient.
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Effects of Lateral Transport and Submarine Hydrothermal Plume on Manganese Distributions in the Continental Slope of Southern Okinawa TroughLu, Ai-Lin 24 July 2001 (has links)
Abstract
This study elucidates the processes that may determine the distributions of Mn and other trace metals on the slope of the southern Okinawa Trough. In addition to salinity and temperature, large-volume seawater samples were collected for analyzing dissolved manganese (DMn), particulate manganese (PMn), suspended, particulate organic carbon (POC), pH and dissolved CO2 (TCO2 ) during June-July of 1998, 1999 and 2000. Concentrations of DMn and PMn in a transect decrease generally seaward from the shelf break. However, anomalous distributions of DMn and PMn occur usually between 600 m and 900 m in many deep profiles.
Such distribution patterns are probably influenced by the lateral transport of metals released from slope sediments or from the plumes of submarine venting systems. For example, dissolved manganese generally decreases with depth in the oxygenated condition, but in the study area unusual high DMn concentrations were observed commonly at depth 400 m, 600 m, 800 m and 1200 m. The unusual Mn signals become weak, in general, from the South Mien-Hua Canyon to the North Mien-Hua Canyon. The higher concentration of PMn sometimes was observed in deep stations than in shallow stations at the same depth implying that processes other than lateral transport may account for the distributions. Images obtained from EK-500 showed that submarine venting systems exist in anomalous Mn distribution areas. Anomalous distributions of PMn and Kd match DMn unusual distributions very well. Besides, the distribution of TSM is closely related to PMn distributions (R=0.433, p=0.01). Although the distribution of pH data appears to be normal, total alkalinity and total CO2 display anomalous distributions coincidently with those Mn unusual distributions. Meanwhile, the ratio (PMn/PAl) is higher for those unusual Mn distributions, and this is likely the effect of submarine venting.
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Distribution, condition, and growth of newly settled southern flounder (Paralichthys lethostigma) in the Galveston Bay Estuary, TXGlass, Lindsay Ann 16 August 2006 (has links)
Several flatfish species including southern flounder (Paralichthys lethostigma)
recruit to estuaries during early life. Therefore, the evaluation of estuarine sites and
habitats that serve as nurseries is critical to conservation and management efforts. I used
biochemical condition and growth measurements in conjunction with catch-density data
to evaluate settlement sites used by southern flounder in the Galveston Bay Estuary
(GBE). In 2005, beam-trawl collections were made in three major sections of the GBE
(East Bay, West Bay, Galveston Bay), and three sites were sampled in each bay. Within
each sampling site, replicate collections were taken from 1) the marsh edge, 2) an
intermediate zone, and 3) the open bay. The average size of southern flounder collected
was between 12 and 19 mm standard length, and peak densities occurred in January and
February. Catch data indicated that numeric densities of southern flounder were
significantly greater in East Bay (2.75 per 100 m2) than in West Bay (0.45 per 100 m2) or
in Galveston Bay (0.91 per 100 m2). Habitat-specific variation in density was not found.
Otolith-based estimates of age indicated that the majority of southern flounder collected
were 35-45 days old and derived from early December to early January hatch-dates.
Growth rate differences were negligible across bays and habitats, with the average
growth rate being 0.40 mm/day (range 0.21-0.76 mm/day). RNA:DNA ratios indicated
that newly settled southern flounder in the GBE were in relatively high condition. Habitat-specific differences in RNA:DNA ratios were not observed; however, ratios were
significantly lower in West Bay (average 8.0) than in East Bay (average 9.5) or in
Galveston Bay (average 9.8), suggesting the condition of new recruits may vary across
the GBE. Findings from this study indicate that southern flounder use a variety of
habitats within the GBE during early life, and survival and recruitment success appear
favorable regardless of settlement site. As a result, recruitment success of southern
flounder may be less a function of the quality of nursery sites/habitats within the GBE
than of other factors (e.g., larval supply to the estuary).
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Snaps Of EdenHudson, Michael J 01 May 2010 (has links)
The following poems are and attempt at reclamation and reconciliation. The first section wades through the delicate subject of personal history and is an attempt to show truth as a means of both self and communal healing. The second is plaintive, a brief effort to interlope into and understand worlds outside (but not foreign) to my own. The third is a poetic essay detailing the journey of a young woman facing the horrors of an undeclared, and seemingly eternal war. The fourth and final sections serve as a means of exploration of the self and place; tackling issues of sex, the physical body, and sexuality.
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Revising the View of the Southern Father: Fighting the Father-Force in the Works of Shirley Ann Grau, Gail Godwin, and Alice WalkerTaylor, Barbara C. 08 August 2011 (has links)
This study examines the cultural and historical constructs of the patriarchal father, the dutiful daughter, and the “Cult of Southern Womanhood” that have impacted the depiction of the relationship between fathers and daughters in the works of southern writers Shirley Ann Grau, Gail Godwin, and Alice Walker. The authors illustrate fathers who influence their daughters by supplying their needs and supporting their desires, but also of fathers who have hindered the emotional growth of their daughters.
The term father-force describes the characters’ understanding and revision of the power of the fathers over their lives. Evidence includes the primary works by the writers themselves, criticism of these writers from other sources, and their own words about their works. New Historicism theory supports the position that Grau, Godwin, and Walker use the historical context of the 1960s to help shape and articulate some of the more contemporary issues, anxieties, and struggles, reflected in the literature.
The impact of father-daughter relationships in southern novels is an important aspect in the understanding of Grau, Godwin, and Walker’s contributions to American literature. These writers try to discover acceptable methods of dealing with their characters’ relationships with their fathers within the requirements of a society that has established clear roles for both father and daughter. The three writers emphasize good and bad examples of the cultural contexts being explored, and their writings show a historical perspective of the changes that have occurred in the South in father-daughter relationships from 1950 until the present time. The authors show their characters often becoming successful in the real world outside the home in an effort to gain their fathers’ recognition of their accomplishments, his acceptance of their individuality and differences from him, and his approval of their methods of gaining success. Strong feminists characteristics are displayed in the writings of the three authors. Grau, Godwin, and Walker share the characteristics of female characters that connect with their fathers through race, the burden of the past, gender, class and religious expectations. / Dr. Ronald R. Emerick
Dr. Karen A. Dandurand
Dr. Kelly L. Heider
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