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    Misako "Misa" Masuda

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    It is with heavy hearts that Terrie and Marie Masuda, and Sven Seltmann announce the sudden passing of their beloved daughter, sister and wife, Misako "Misa" Masuda

    Misako "Misa" Masuda

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    Born on January 8, 1982, Misako "Misa" Masuda passed away peacefully on January 20, 2022. Misa was a valued member of the Palo Alto Buddhist Temple and active in the temple choir. The family held a small private service on February 5, 2022 at the Palo Alto Buddhist Temple

    The opportunity society: time for a life worth living. by Yoneji Masuda

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    tag=1 data=The opportunity society: time for a life worth living. by Yoneji Masuda tag=2 data=Masuda, Yoneji tag=3 data=The Futurist, tag=6 data=September/October 1990 tag=7 data=8-11. tag=8 data=SOCIAL CONDITIONS tag=10 data=Time will become more important to people seeking a meaningful life. More time means more opportunities to explore new personal and social vistas. Provided by MICAH, Canberra. tag=11 data=1991/3/1 tag=12 data=91/0015 tag=13 data=CABTime will become more important to people seeking a meaningful life. More time means more opportunities to explore new personal and social vistas. Provided by MICAH, Canberra

    Tokuo and Yusuke Masuda, studio portrait, 1901

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    Caption on mount: Yegi-Honten. Kanda, Tokyo Translation of Japanese writing on back: "To: Mr. Hirakawa, from: Masuda, Yusuke, Masuda, Toku PH Coll 207.

    Examining Cultural Drifts in Artworks through History and Development: Cultural Comparisons between Japanese and Western Landscape Paintings and Drawings.

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    Nand, K., Masuda, T., Senzaki, S., & Ishii, K. (2014). Examining cultural drifts in artworks through development and history: Cultural comparisons between Japanese and Western landscape paintings and drawings. Frontiers in Psychology: Cultural Psychology, 5, 1041. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2014.0104

    His Death : the Deification of a Policeman Named Masuda

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    In 1895, there was a cholera epidemic in Japan. Masuda Keitaro, a policeman, died of the epidemic as he instructed people about hygiene and nursing patients in Takakushi, Saga. He is said to have said, "I will take away the cholera of this area when I die." After he died, people in Takakushi considered Masuda a deity and made a monument in stone to him. Later, people regarded him as a god of disease, and worshippers praying for their recovery from illness increased in number. The monument became Masuda Shrine. Early in the Showa era, people in police and education circles began admiring Masuda for his self-sacrificing behavior. A nationalistic thought movement, "Nihonseishin ron" (the Japanese Spirit argument), was behind these admiring movements. After the war, a doctor, Uchida Mamoru, interpreted Masuda\u27s behavior as philanthropy. The policy "Shinto Shirei" of GHQ lay behind this thought. In this process of Masuda worship the acceptance of the death by the living changed from the second personal death "thy death" to the third personal death "his death". It is possible to interpret Masuda worship by examining this shift

    Plectranthias altipinnatus Katayama & Masuda 1980

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    Plectranthias altipinnatus Katayama & Masuda, 1980 Holotype: ZUMT 54242, 42 mm SL, male. Type locality: off Futo, Izu Peninsula, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan, depth 40 meters. Illustrations: Katayama & Masuda, 1980b:186, fig. 1; Kuiter, 2004:109, fig. A (lower half of p.). D: X, 18. A: III, 7. P: 13. C: 15. V: 26 (10 + 16). S: 3. GR: 17 (5 + 12). LL: 27 or 28. Distribution: western North Pacific: off Japan.Published as part of William D. Anderson, Jr., 2018, Annotated checklist of anthiadine fishes (Percoidei: Serranidae), pp. 1-62 in Zootaxa 4475 (1) on page 25, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.4475.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/145328

    65. Masuda Takashi (1848-1938)

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    Iwao Seiichi, Iyanaga Teizō, Ishii Susumu, Yoshida Shōichirō, Fujimura Jun'ichirō, Fujimura Michio, Yoshikawa Itsuji, Akiyama Terukazu, Iyanaga Shōkichi, Matsubara Hideichi. 65. Masuda Takashi (1848-1938). In: Dictionnaire historique du Japon, volume 14, 1988. Lettres L et M (1) p. 38

    65. Masuda Takashi (1848-1938)

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    Iwao Seiichi, Iyanaga Teizō, Ishii Susumu, Yoshida Shōichirō, Fujimura Jun'ichirō, Fujimura Michio, Yoshikawa Itsuji, Akiyama Terukazu, Iyanaga Shōkichi, Matsubara Hideichi. 65. Masuda Takashi (1848-1938). In: Dictionnaire historique du Japon, volume 14, 1988. Lettres L et M (1) p. 38

    Alysson cameroni Yasumatsu et Masuda 1932

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    Alysson cameroni Yasumatsu et Masuda 1932 (Fig. 3, 6) Alysson cameroni Yasumatsu & Masuda 1932: 53, ♀, ♂. Holotype: ♂, Japan, Yamanashi Prefecture, Mt. Mitsustôge near Kai (ELKU), examined. Alysson cameroni: Tsuneki 1965: 26; 1968: 6; Bohart & Menke 1976: 458; Kazenas 1980: 85; Nemkov et al. 1995: 455; Terayama 2006: 2, 4; Nemkov 2008: 23; 2009: 127; 2012 a: 119; 2012 b: 445. Material examined. Нolotype of A. cameroni Yasumatsu et Masuda—♂, Japan: Honshu, Yamanashi Prefecture, Mt. Mitsustôge near Kai, 22.VIII 1931 (Masuda) (ELKU). Russia: 1 ♂, Primorskii Krai, Ilistaya River, Nikolaevka, 2.VII 1986 (Lelej) (IBSS); 7 ♂, Primorskii krai, Iman River, Dersu, 20–23.VIII 1991 (Sidorenko) (IBSS). Japan: 1 ♂, Hokkaido, Hokkaido Prefecture, Sounkyo, 8–9.VIII 1958 (Tsuneki) (CAS); 1 ♀, Honshu, Fukui Prefecture, Hatogayu, 2.IX 1962 (Tsuneki) (CAS). Distribution. Russia (Amurskaya Oblast, Primorskii Krai), Japan (Hokkaido, Honshu).Published as part of Nemkov, Pavel G., 2014, The digger wasps of the genus Alysson Panzer (Hymenoptera: Crabronidae: Bembicinae) of Russia and adjacent territories, with a key to species and new synonymies, pp. 276-286 in Zootaxa 3838 (3) on pages 278-279, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3838.3.2, http://zenodo.org/record/22596
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