- published: 24 Jan 2015
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Nien Cheng (traditional Chinese: 鄭念; simplified Chinese: 郑念; pinyin: Zhèng Niàn) (born in Beijing on January 28, 1915; died November 2, 2009 in Washington, D.C.) was a Chinese author who recounted her harrowing experiences of the Cultural Revolution in her memoir Life and Death in Shanghai. In 1966, she became a target of attack by Red Guards due to her former management of a foreign firm in Shanghai, Shell. Maoist revolutionaries used this fact to claim that Cheng was a British spy in order to strike at Communist Party moderates for allowing the firm to operate in China after 1949.
Her book documents her account of her imprisonment. Cheng endured six-and-a-half years of squalid and inhumane conditions in prison, while refusing to give any false confession. Cheng used Mao's teachings successfully against her interrogators, frequently turning the tide of the struggle sessions against the interrogators. In 1973 Cheng was eventually paroled under on the basis that her attitude had shown improvement. However, Cheng resisted leaving prison without receiving acknowledgment from her captors that she had been unjustly imprisoned.
Hung Cheng is a professor of Applied Mathematics in the theoretical physics group of the Department of Mathematics at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).
He received the B.Sc and the Ph.D. degrees from California Institute of Technology, in 1959 and 61. He had post-doctorate research appointments at Caltech, Princeton University and Harvard University before joining the MIT faculty in applied mathematics in 1965. In 1978, Professor Cheng was elected Member of Taiwan's Academia Sinica.
He has also served as the Chairman of the Applied Mathematics Committee at the MIT Department of Mathematics. He is on the Editorial Board of the Journal Studies in Applied Mathematics
He is cited in the reference book American Men and Women of Science.
His recent research interests have been directed to the mathematical physics of dark matter and dark energy.
JJ Lin (traditional Chinese: 林俊傑; simplified Chinese: 林俊杰; pinyin: Lin Jun Jie) is a Singaporean Mandopop Singer-songwriter, Composer and Actor based in Taiwan. JJ Lin was managed by Ocean Butterflies from 2003 to 2011 . JJ is presently managed by Warner Music Taiwan. Lin won Best New Artist for his work on his debut album Music Voyager at the 15th Golden Melody Awards in 2004.
Lin was born in Singapore and graduated from Anglo-Chinese School and Saint Andrew's Junior College before joining the Singapore Armed Forces.
He is of overseas Chinese descent. In addition to English, Mandarin and Hokkien, he is also able to speak Cantonese and has released several cover versions of his songs in Cantonese. He came to musical prominence and success in the Greater China region. In Taiwan, he was awarded the "Best New Artist" award in the Taiwan Golden Melody Awards.
Signed to Ocean Butterflies, he has written songs for various artists, notably "Remember" (記得 Jì Dé) for Taiwanese singer A-Mei, fellow label mate A-Do's "Let Go" (放手 Fàng Shǒu), Harlem Yu's "What's Wrong With You?" (幹嘛你看不爽我 Gàn Má Nǐ Kàn Bù Shuǎng Wǒ), Comic Boyz's "Heart of Superman" (超人心 Chāo Rén Xīn) and other songs. He writes all the melodies for all of his albums.
WORLD EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW with Famous Author NIEN CHENG
Life and Death in Shanghai by NIEN CHENG
Corey Hart - Ballade For Nien Cheng (1990)
Ballade for Nien Cheng- Corey Hart, Bell Centre June 3, 2014
Ballade For Nien Cheng - Corey Hart - Bell Centre - June 2014
COREY HART Ballade for Nien Cheng 03/06/2014 Montreal
Corey Hart - Ballade For Nien Cheng Lyrics
10 Yen Nien CHEN, Cheng Feng LIN, Keng Ren LIN, Yi Hung HO, Chih Han CHANG 01
10 Yen Nien CHEN, Cheng Feng LIN, Keng Ren LIN, Yi Hung HO, Chih Han CHANG 02
S.H.E [ 你曾是少年 Wings of my words ] Official Music Video (「少年班」電影主題曲)
[Vietsub] Bạn từng là thiếu niên (你曾是少年) - S.H.E
Si tu savais
tất niên cty shyang hung cheng.Trò chơj pá đạo
Ma Nien 2014 - Ma Dao Gong Cheng Bu Bu Gao Sheng