Population Distribution and Change in Korea 1925-1949<br>Author(s): Glenn T. Trewartha and Wilbur Zelinsky<br>Source: <i>Geographical Review</i>, Vol. 45, No. 1 (Jan., 1955), pp. 1-26<br>Published by: American Geographical Society<br>
<br><br><div class="gmail_quote">On Mon, Oct 25, 2010 at 7:17 PM, Roland Wilson <span dir="ltr"><<a href="mailto:roland_wilson@hotmail.com">roland_wilson@hotmail.com</a>></span> wrote:<br><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin: 0pt 0pt 0pt 0.8ex; border-left: 1px solid rgb(204, 204, 204); padding-left: 1ex;">
<div>
Dear Members,<br>
<br>
I was wondering if anyone would have information on or know where I could find information on the populations of North and South Korea prior to the Korean War? If this was broken down by province, it would even be better, but I realize that I may be asking for too much.<br>
<br>
Thank you.<br>
<br>
Best Regards,<br>
<br>Roland Wilson<br>
<br>
<a href="mailto:roland_wilson@hotmail.com" target="_blank">roland_wilson@hotmail.com</a><br> <br>
> From: <a href="mailto:koreanstudies-request@koreaweb.ws" target="_blank">koreanstudies-request@koreaweb.ws</a><br>> Subject: Koreanstudies Digest, Vol 88, Issue 28<br>> To: <a href="mailto:koreanstudies@koreaweb.ws" target="_blank">koreanstudies@koreaweb.ws</a><br>
> Date: Mon, 25 Oct 2010 12:00:06 -0400<br>> <br>> Send Koreanstudies mailing list submissions to<br>> <a href="mailto:koreanstudies@koreaweb.ws" target="_blank">koreanstudies@koreaweb.ws</a><br>> <br>> To subscribe or unsubscribe via the World Wide Web, visit<br>
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> <br>> When replying, please edit your Subject line so it is more specific<br>> than "Re: Contents of Koreanstudies digest..."<br>> <br>> <br>> <<------------ KoreanStudies mailing list DIGEST ------------>><br>
> <br>> <br>> Today's Topics:<br>> <br>> 1. TECHNICAL note #2 (Frank Hoffmann)<br>> <br>> <br>> ----------------------------------------------------------------------<br>> <br>> Message: 1<br>
> Date: Mon, 25 Oct 2010 07:21:39 -0400<br>> From: Frank Hoffmann <<a href="mailto:hoffmann@koreaweb.ws" target="_blank">hoffmann@koreaweb.ws</a>><br>> To: <a href="mailto:Koreanstudies@koreaweb.ws" target="_blank">Koreanstudies@koreaweb.ws</a><br>
> Subject: [KS] TECHNICAL note #2<br>> Message-ID: <<a href="mailto:20101025072139.4079442vuyxlt54z@koreaweb.ws" target="_blank">20101025072139.4079442vuyxlt54z@koreaweb.ws</a>><br>> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=UTF-8; DelSp="Yes"; format="flowed"<br>
> <br>> Thank you for your assistance to get this solved! I received about 10 <br>> messages, all reporting that Asian characters as well as special <br>> non-ASCII characters for transcrition (?, ?, etc.) are only being <br>
> displayed as questionmarks or square boxes.<br>> <br>> All scholars writing were pointing out that they receive messages in <br>> daily "digest" form--not one by one. That was really the only common <br>
> ground there, as everyone was using different operating systems and <br>> different email applications.<br>> <br>> SOLUTION(s):<br>> <br>> (1) Simply stop using "digest" mode and receive messages one by one.<br>
> Login to the KS List options (your subscriber options):<br>> <a href="http://koreaweb.ws/mailman/listinfo/koreanstudies_koreaweb.ws" target="_blank">http://koreaweb.ws/mailman/listinfo/koreanstudies_koreaweb.ws</a><br>
> Now look for the section marked "Digest Mode" checkbox and disable <br>> that -- so you get messages one by one instead of digest mode.<br>> <br>> If this is really not what you want at all, then please try solution #2:<br>
> <br>> (2) Login to the KS List options (your subscriber options):<br>> <a href="http://koreaweb.ws/mailman/listinfo/koreanstudies_koreaweb.ws" target="_blank">http://koreaweb.ws/mailman/listinfo/koreanstudies_koreaweb.ws</a><br>
> Then look for the section marked "Get MIME or Plain Text Digests?."<br>> Set it to "MIME" to receive digests in MIME format (it is now set to PLAIN).<br>> <br>> After that, you should hopefully be able to read Asian charcters <br>
> **if** you are using a relatively new email program (and NOT a Korean <br>> program encoded for local usage only, not EUC-KR).<br>> <br>> FURTHER EXPMANATION:<br>> "MIME" controls whether a plain text format or one that allows other <br>
> MIME types is the default format being sent out by the list. MIME <br>> stands for "Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions" and is an Internet <br>> standard that extends the format of email to support non-ASCII <br>
> characters, multi-part attachments, and non-text attachments. The list <br>> DEFAULT was set to "PLAIN" and not MIME. So anyone who subscribed AND <br>> choose "digest" format was automatically set to PLAIN. That made sense <br>
> when we first used Mailman sofware in the late 1990s, because many of <br>> the more simple mail applications/programs did not yet understand <br>> MIME. I have now changed this default to MIME (for new subscribers), <br>
> but I have NOT changed the setting for existing list subscribers ... <br>> simply because I am not 100% sure that this is the only cause for the <br>> problem, and because there may be some subscribers who have a reason <br>
> for this setting, and I do not want to just overwrite that.<br>> <br>> A Mailman GUIDE can be found here:<br>> <a href="http://wiki.list.org/display/DOC/Mailman+2.1+Members+Manual" target="_blank">http://wiki.list.org/display/DOC/Mailman+2.1+Members+Manual</a><br>
> Under 8.2 you will find further explanations about MIME.<br>> <br>> Mailman software is not perfect. As you will find out when reading <br>> through some related postings at the developer's Mailman mailing list <br>
> a ton of compromises were made, also because of the many different <br>> local encodings around, but also for historical reasons. Eventually it <br>> will all be UTF-8 (Unicode) though. Mailman is now at version 2.1.4, <br>
> but a beta version 3 is already out. Hopefully that will work better <br>> with Asian scripts.<br>> <br>> <br>> <br>> Thanks.<br>> <br>> Frank<br>> <br>> <br>> <br>> <br>> End of Koreanstudies Digest, Vol 88, Issue 28<br>
> *********************************************<br> </div>
</blockquote></div><br><br clear="all"><br>-- <br>Kirk W. Larsen <br>Department of History<br>2151 JFSB<br>BYU<br>Provo, UT 84602-6707<br>(801) 422-3445<br><br>