In this interview, Adeline Fremland (Tendser) gives an account of her early life as a Jewish Minnesotan. She was born in Mankato, Minnesota to Maurice Tendser and Fanny Silverman, who were Russian immigrants. She discusses how they came through Canada in the late 1800s, living at first in a log cabin, and describes how Maurice peddled merchandis...
Creator:
Fremland, Adeline
Contributor:
Lipschultz, Ellen (Interviewer)
Created:
1978-04-17
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Nathan and Theresa Berman Upper Midwest Jewish Archives.
Joint work with Ida Moltke, Martin Thiim and Thomas Hamelryck (The Bioinformatics Center, University of Copenhagen)So far, the most common approach to modeling local RNA 3-D structure has been to describe the local conformational space as discrete in a non-probabilistic framework. We present an original approach to modeling local RNA 3-D structu...
Creator:
Frellsen, Jes (University of Copenhagen)
Created:
2007-10-29
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Institute for Mathematics and its Applications.
Ms. Friedl begins the interview by touching on her family background and her coming to America. She then talks about her experiences receiving an education at the Schauffer College of Missionary and Social Work. Ms. Friedl talks about briefly returning to Czechoslovakia, her home country, then returning for a second time to the US. She explains ...
Creator:
Freidl, Mana Kejval
Created:
1978-06-19
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
I will consider long time influence of small deterministic and stochastic perturbations of various dynamical systems and stochastic processes. The long time evolution of the perturbed system can be described by a motion in the cone of invariant measures of the non-perturbed system. The set of extreme points of the cone can be often parametrizedb...
Creator:
Freidlin, Mark (University of Maryland)
Created:
2013-01-15
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Institute for Mathematics and its Applications.
The question "Why not Hindenburg again" is ambiguous. The "Stahlhelm" (Steal-Helmet), was a political organization. Announcement of meeting March 11, 1932, 8 o'clock in the evening, Mariendorf, in the "Citizens' Inn".
Creator:
Freiberg, Georg
Created:
1932
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Special Collections and Rare Books.