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2020-04-01
How Covid-19 Effected Highschool Athletics and the College Recruiting Process
High school sports for many students such as myself were drastically affected because of the Covid-19 Pandemic. As an avid golfer and college golf prospect from Michigan, the pandemic hurt me and my fellow athletes in many different ways. In my Junior year of high school, my golf season was canceled entirely because of the pandemic after being one of the state's higher-ranked teams. This took away the most important season for college golf recruiting as the most important year for junior golfers is your senior year of high school. The pandemic also temporarily closed courses and facilities, meaning that I could not practice my skills to become a better athlete. The pandemic affected all different kinds of athletes, not just golfers like myself. In the end, I was able to battle against the pandemic and persevere as I am now a College Golfer at Elmhurst University in the suburbs of Chicago. -
2020-03-10
How the Covid-19 Pandemic Effected Me
The Covid-19 pandemic affected me in numerous kinds of ways all trending to be negative. Most specifically the pandemic put a damper on my academic experience. When the pandemic spread to Michigan in March of 2020 and was highly infectious, learning in schools became extremely difficult for my classmates and me. Learning became online synchronous and the whole way of learning changed for everyone. For me, it was extremely difficult to adapt to completely online learning and instruction after being in classrooms for fifteen years of my life. After some time I was able to adapt and continue to be successful but for some of my classmates, the freedoms of online learning took a toll on their academic success. Luckily I stayed focused and put the task at hand to be the best student that I could possibly be. The rest of my high school experience was overwhelming and difficult as well due to the pandemic as the pandemic really never reduced during my time in high school. Regardless of the obstacles that I was faced with, I was able to persevere and place in the top thirty of my graduating class. -
12/12/2020
Shawn Berg Oral History, 2020/12/10
Shawn Berg was born in Milwaukee Wisconsin, and raised in La Crosse Wisconsin. Recently he moved to Altoona Wisconsin to begin his job as a service manager at Texas Roadhouse in Eau Claire. In this interview, Shawn discusses how COVID – 19 has affected his life personally along with how it has effected the local Texas Roadhouse regarding their employees as well as their guests that come in. Not only does he discuss the consequences for the employees, but he also talks about how the guests have reacted to the mask mandate and how the restaurant has handled it all. -
11/10/2020
Kenneth and Wendy Moran Oral History, 2020/11/10
C19OH -
2020-05-27
Osvaldo Perez, Jr. Oral History, 2020/05/27
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2021-11-03
#Coveryourfangs Interview with Dr. Mireles
This is an audio interview with Dr. Matthew Mireles, the St Marys Music Department Chair. It goes into the challenges he faced managing the music department, what he was feeling throughout COVID. It also goes into what his priorities were after the initial lockdowns and what his main goals were when it came to getting the band program back to normal. -
2020-03-24
Closing My Street Library (HIST30060)
(HIST30060) This is a photo of the closed sign my Mum and I put on our street library after we found out about the pandemic in 2020. It reads: Dear Street Library Patrons, Our library will be closed as of Tuesday 24 March until further notice due to scientific findings that the coronavirus was detected for up to 24 hours on cardboard. Our community safety is my priority <3 I look forward to re-opening soon! We made the street library in 2019 so the community could share our love of books. People could take a book, read it and, if they wanted to, put their favourite book back in. It made us sad to close the street library but after the lockdown was over we started it back up again! -
2021-09-21
COVID cases 2021-2022 School Year
This article shows the amount of COVID cases at the beginning of the 2021-2022 school year compared to the number of cases from the 2020-2021 school year in Texas. Texas Governor Greg Abbott ended the mask mandate in March 2021, although many school continued their use until the end of the 2020-2021 school year. A May 2021 executive order issued by Abbott banned local governments from requiring mask wearing. Thus, many Texas schools did not require masks to be worn on campuses. The article provides data that there are more COVID 19 cases in the first two months of the 2021-2022 school year than there were the entire previous school year. -
2020-04-17
Swimming as an Essential Activity
While Florida is not predicted to peak until the first week of May, some cities are reopening closed beaches now, in mid-April. This hit the national news with much controversy, spawning the hashtag #floridamorons on social media. The day before I saw this article, I spoke with my parents who are at the New Jersey shore. They told me one man there was ticketed for walking his dog on the beach and a couple was ticketed and threatened with jail time for being on the beach. -
2020-07-27
The Social Lounge Bar
Located in Saint Augustine, FL. Business closed due to the Covid-19 pandemic 2020 The Social Lounge was forced to close forced to close amid the pandemic. As of June 2020, they were unable to open due to state and city mandates. Owners Scott and Coleen Moulton commented: "We hope to open as soon as possible, and when we do we want to make sure it is a safe environment for our staff and customers." -
2020-03-23
A day in my life during a pandemic
So when this whole thing started people knew what it was but no one really thought of it. Nothing really changed besides that people started to use sanitizer and things like that to stay clean. After a while there were rumors that things were going to close down. Then those rumors became true, school started to go online and everything started to close down. People were buying toilet paper and necessities and it was hard to find those things in any stores, masks were mandated and everything was closed and we were on a mandatory lockdown. I am a person that loves going to restaurants and taking out food just wasn't good, so i was trying to make food a lot at my house and I have almost burnt down my house multiple times. Life was really boring and you couldn’t see friends or family. U would facetime with relatives and friends all the time because of this. That is basically what happened from my perspective of the pandemic. -
2020-12-11
COVID AROUND THE CORNER
It was in February of 2020 and that's when things started to change. It was a morning, I don't remember the exact day, but I was watching the news and I heard that resturants, stores, and almost everything was closing in China due to a virus that was rapidly spreading. It was chaos, airports were closing and no one was allowed into the USA from China. Later on in March, the virus started spreading here in the USA too. Schools had informed us that we would close for a week and then we'd most likely return after that. Meanwhile, grocery store shelves were close to empty and toilet paper was gone, no one could find any. Then, my parents got a call from my school saying that we weren't going to go back to school for a month or so, but eventually we never returned for the rest of the year. It was a hard ajustment. Currently, it is December of 2020 and we still don't know when we will go back to school or even when this virus will be gone for good. -
2020-06-24
"How Lesbian Bars Are Surviving a Pandemic"
From the article: "As the pandemic stretches onward, America’s few remaining lesbian bars are hanging on for dear life, and waiting for their moment. While there is no official Queer Bar Registry, current estimates put the number of lesbian bars in the United States at a vanishingly small 16. In the 1980s, there were hundreds, according to a study which has confirmed the gut feeling in queer America that the gay bar is in decline, and lesbian bars are the most endangered. Without major community and even government support, COVID-19 could reduce those numbers further — or cause a full-on extinction. Many of the bar owners I spoke to are getting by trading off bills, hoping for landlord understanding, and maxing out their credit cards; some aren’t sure if they can last past June or July if they remain closed. But still, they are holding out hope." -
2020-03-13
New Bedford Whaling Museum Announces Closure in Response to Coronavirus Concern
The New Bedford Whaling Museum announces closure due to COVID19 pandemic. -
2020-06-25
The pandemic is threatening to close the iconic LGBTQ landmark Stonewall Inn for good
From the article: "It's not going to close tomorrow or the next day, co-owner Stacy Lentz told CNN, but the Stonewall Inn's future is in jeopardy. Payments for the bar's insurance and rent, in addition to normal operating costs, continue to mount even though coronavirus has closed their doors." -
2020-06-17
Covid-19 in Bhutan
experience of E-learning -
2020-03-17
Plague Journal, Day 4: Existential Collapse
I'm a Brooklyn journalist starting a Covid-19 journal, after beginning physical separation on Friday. In today's entry, a social media acquaintance warns of psychological weirdness in the near-future; Trumpian statements send the stock market plummeting; and I take a walk around Bed-Stuy to wash my eyes, clear my circuits. -
2020-05-20
Online Extra: COVID-19 leads to closure of the Stud, SF's oldest LGBT bar
Due to the economic hardship of COVID-19, San Francisco's oldest gay bar is closing. -
2020-04-01
Self checkout closures at CVS - Quincy, MA
Photograph of a self checkout machine at CVS, indicating that it is out of service due to spacing of less than 6 feet between machines, as required by the Covid19 restriction. -
2020-05-01
Few lesbian bars remain in the U.S. Will they survive COVID-19?
This NBC News article details the devastating impact of COVID-19 on already beleaguered lesbian bars. -
2020-04-08
Indigenous Peoples of the Philippines: Particular Challenges In Facing COVID-19
“Indigenous Peoples are no strangers to disease and disaster. Through generations, Indigenous Peoples have established responses and coping mechanisms – grounded in traditional knowledge, customs and practices – to different circumstances affecting their communities. These are all founded on one fundamental principle: to ensure that the community survives. A common response across Indigenous communities is that of closing-off the community to all – this means no one can enter the community until deemed safe. Such community closures are done for different reasons. In the Cordillera, Philippines such practice is regularly observed during the agricultural cycle. Before or after the fields are ready for planting and harvesting, the community declares ubaya/tengaw which basically means everyone stays at home, no hard labor is to be done by anyone. This is a time for the community and the earth to rest and typically lasts a day or two.” #IndigenousStories -
2020-04-20
Playhouse at Morse-Kelly playground, Somerville, MA
The playhouse is wrapped in plastic netting to make sure that no one visits it. -
2020-04-09
Drive-thru Testing to Continue, Jefferson Parish, LA
Drive-thru testing for COVID-19 will continue as long as supplies keep coming in. Due to a lack of federal funding, testing sites in neighboring Orleans Parish are closing. -
2020-03-12
Toshia Brownstein
This image shows a grocery shopping line wrapping around the aisles of the store. When the epidemic first started hitting, many people ran to the store to stock up on as much food, water, and toilet paper as they could possibly get their hands on, like it was the end of the world and the store was going to run out of supply. -
2020
Outbreak of corona virus in Las Cruces, NM
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2020-03-18
Goodbye Dorm: Sudden Endings for College Students
Last week, on March 11th, NYU went online, and as it sent its students away on spring break telling them they'd return to online instruction. But, things have shifted so rapidly. On Monday NYU announced that students had to vacate the dorms. Families scrambled, including ours, to help our students cope and to handle the most mundane. Today, quite unexpectedly, my daughter says goodbye to her home and her first year of college. Not the way we expected the semester to go. Poignant. Painful. For all of us. -
2020-03-17
Great Lakes Coffee Covid-19 Response
Email notification from Great Lakes Coffee, an independent cafe in Detroit, Michigan, informing patrons of cafe closures and carry-out options. This is one of many local restaurants offering new carry-out solutions to restaurant closures announced on 16 March 2020. -
2020-03-17
Detroit Symphony Orchestra Concerts Cancelled
Email notification from the Detroit Symphony Orchestra alerting patrons to the cancellation and/or postponement of all concerts. -
2020-03-16
City of LA Closures (16 March 2020)
City of LA's closure of all gathering places, restaurants (except for take out), entertainment venues--not yet "sheltering in place" but a shut-down that makes clear the new social organizations of daily life. -
2020-03-15
Words from a superintendent on CoVid-19 echo throughout social media
Response of community leaders across the US -
2020-03-15
Arizona schools closed: Gov. Doug Ducey announces statewide closure of schools over coronavirus
Governor Ducey says he and Superintendent Hoffman will work with education leaders and public health officials to reassess the need for school closures and provide additional guidance through March 27. -
03/15/2020
Critics go after NYC Mayor De Blasio for refusing to close public schools amid CoVid-19 outbreak
De Blasio has refused to close public schools despite the urging from public health officials -
2020-03-14
Colorado Governor Closes Ski Resorts
Due to infections from visitors in ski communities and the potential stress on small ski-community resources, Colorado governor temporarily closes all Colorado ski resorts.