User:Dckewon5131/정용신

Jeong Yong-shin (August 18, 1907) was born in 1907. He was a bureaucrat during the Japanese colonial period, and his hometown was Gyeongseong-bu Pil-dong.

Life
In March 1931, he graduated from the Department of Law and Literature at Gyeongseong Imperial University, and worked as a subordinate of the tax department of the Gyeongsangnam-do Ministry of Finance from 1931 to 1932, and as a local department of the Gyeongsangnam-do Ministry of Interior from 1933 to 1935. In October 1933, he passed the Administration Department of the Higher Civil Service Examination, and on July 10, 1935, he was appointed as the Deputy Post Officer of the Joseon Governor-General.

On May 21, 1936, he was appointed as a provincial director and industrial director of Pyeonganbuk-do, and served as an administrator of the Pyeonganbuk Industrial Promotion Center (appointed April 1, 1937), a secretary of the Food and Industry Bureau of the Joseon Government (appointed February 3, 1940), and a director of the Joseon Government Affairs Bureau (appointed November 19, 1941). When he served as a provincial director in Pyeonganbuk-do, he worked on the manufacture and release of military supplies, expanding productivity, resource development, and price adjustment, and received a Hun6th certificate from the Japanese government on April 29, 1940.

On November 1, 1942, he was appointed secretary of the Joseon Governor-General and Director of the National Tax Investigation Division of the General Administration Bureau, and on December 1, 1943, he was appointed secretary of the Agricultural and Commercial Bureau of the Joseon Governor-General, on November 13, 1944, he was appointed as a participating officer and provincial official in Gyeongsangbuk-do, a director of agriculture and commerce in Gyeongsangbuk-do, and a supervisor of the Gyeongsangbuk-do branch of the Joseon Food Youngdan. In 1943, while serving as secretary-general of the Hakdo Sunbaedan, he wrote an article praising the special supporting soldier system and urging support for the Hakdo soldier in the Maeil Sinbo, and was ranked third and sixth in the high official until liberation in 1945.

pro-Japanese group It was included in the 708-member list of Joseon Governor-General, the provincial participation officer, the bureaucracy section of the National Institute's list of pro-Japanese dictionaries, and the 705-member list of pro-general national activities announced by the Committee.