249,182 research outputs found

    Evan S. Tyler Papers, 1877-1919

    Get PDF
    Fargo real estate agent responsible for the Park Board acquiring Oak Grove Park and the establishment of Island Park

    The COVID-19 Pandemic and Japan’s Anxiety-Suppression Society: Anxiety, Self-Restraint, and Solidarity in a Disaster Community

    Get PDF
    In this article, I analyze the Japanese government’s response and public discourse during the early part of the COVID-19 pandemic, a period covering the onset of the pandemic, the declaration of a state of emergency, and the decline in the second wave of infections by mid-October 2020. Assessing that the virus was highly contagious but not particularly fatal, the Japanese government adopted a policy focusing on the prevention of large-scale clusters of infections and treatment of severe cases, calling for the public to practice of “self-restraint” in avoiding the “three C’s” of closed spaces, concentrations of people, and close contact. The goal of this measure was to minimize the pandemic’s socioeconomic impact and sustain the health care system. It was successful in terms of infection and fatality rates. Particularly after the state of emergency was lifted on April 7, Japan began to garner global attention as a model for containing the pandemic without coercion. Behind Prime Minister Abe’s resignation, however, lay the “failure” of Japan’s COVID-19 response. The Japanese people lost faith in the government’s response owing to its perceived harm to publicness, as symbolized in the “Abe-no-mask” incident. Japanese society is a “disaster community,” sharing in the anxiety over the experiences and memories of disasters occurring over the past twenty-five years, including the Great Hanshin-Awaji Earthquake in 1995 and Great East Japan Earthquake in 2011. Japan has thus experienced COVID-19 as a part of a greater, more complex chain of disasters. The response to COVID-19 in the form of the request for self-restraint was also rooted in such communal solidarity. Controversy over PCR testing policies or “optimistic” government perceptions pertaining to COVID-19 evince the present state of the disaster-nation that is Japan as it endeavors to suppress anxiety and maintain daily life as usual. I conceptualize Japanese society in this situation as an “anxiety-suppression society.

    Records of \u3ci\u3eDufourea Maura\u3c/i\u3e (Hymenoptera: Halictidae) From Isle Royale National Park, Michigan

    Get PDF
    Dufourea maura is recorded from Isle Royale National Park, Michigan. This is the first report of this western North American species east of the Great Plains states

    Front Park\u27s Past and Future

    Get PDF
    Front Park is a 26-acre urban park in Buffalo, New York. The park entrance is located on Porter Avenue. The park is bounded on the west by interstate 190, on the north by the Peace Bridge truck plaza and on the north by Busti Avenue and the adjacent Columbus Park-Prospect Hill neighborhood. Front Park is part of Buffalo’s Olmsted park system. The park system takes its name from its most prominent original designer, Frederick Law Olmsted Sr., a nationally renowned landscape architect who along with his partner, Calvert Vaux, designed parks and park systems across the country, including New York City’s Central Park. Olmsted’s work in New York City garnered the attention of prominent Buffalonians, who hired him to design a park system in 1868. Buffalo’s Olmsted park system was designed over a nearly 50-year period, from 1869 to 1915

    American Image of President Park Chung-hee of the Republic of Korea: Park Chung-heeas Death and American Newspapers

    Get PDF
    South Korea s President Park Chung-hee was still a controversial figure in Korean history He was a man who achieved the economic miracle of South Korea while adopting repressive measures to suspend the democracy and human Korea The nostalgia of Park s era also remains Park receives fairly good evaluations from the world American newspapers at the death of Park Chung-hee provided the objective views on Park Chung-hee Throughout the newspapers editorials Park was the man who brought the economic miracle of South Korea and a good ally for the U S at the time of Cold War On the other hand he was another dictator who enjoyed autocratic rule under the U S protection The American views provide the foundation to evaluate Park Chung-hee of toda

    Relevance, Resonance, and Historiography: Interpreting the Lives and Experiences of Civil War Soldiers

    Full text link
    Carmichael shares his experiences of portraying Corporal Bobby Fields at Appomattox Court House National Historical Park in the summer of 1985. He uses Fields as a conduit to explore the scholarship pertaining to the common soldier of the Civil War and how material culture can provide a new window into understanding of making the battlefield come alive for visitors
    • 

    corecore