The building committee for the Pennsylvania Grand Lodge poses for a photograph on October 27, 1947. Eugene Alessandroni sits at the head of the table, left.
Creator:
Schick, Jules
Created:
1947
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
Members of the Sons of Italy and two March-of-Dimes participants hold up posters advertising the Philadelphia March-of-Dimes. The posters read: "Do you Care Enough to Walk for those who Can't? March of Dimes 20 Mile Walk-A-Thon. Sponsored by Sons of Italy."
Creator:
Schick, Jules
Created:
1976
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
A plaque is presented to a representative from the St. Hubert's Catholic School for Girls. The plaque reads: "Presented to the Students and Faculty of St. Hubert's Catholic High School for Girls. In Recognition of Their Outstanding Performance in the 1976 March of Dimes Walkathon. Sponsored by the Sons of Italy."
Creator:
Schick, Jules
Created:
1976
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
Members of the Pennsylvania branch of OSIA commemorate the new Christopher Columbus statue in Philadelphia. The lettering on the statue reads: "Presented to the City of Philadelphia by the Italian Citizens."
Creator:
Schick, Jules
Created:
1950 - 1959
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Immigration History Research Center Archives.
Hodge theory is a beautiful synthesis of geometry, topology, and analysis which has been developed in the setting of Riemannian manifolds. However, many spaces important in applications do not fit this framework. This motivates us to develop a version of Hodge theory on metric spaces with a probability measure.The goal here is to obtain a theory...
Creator:
Schick, Thomas (Georg-August-Universität zu Göttingen)
Created:
2013-10-29
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Institute for Mathematics and its Applications.
There is a several decade history demonstrating that electrical polarization of neurons can modulate neuronal firing, and that such polarization can suppress (or excite) spiking activity and seizures. In recent years, we uncovered a unification in the computational biophysics of spikes, seizures, and spreading depression (Wei et al J Neurosci 34...
Creator:
Schiff, Steven (The Pennsylvania State University)
Created:
2018-02-12
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Institute for Mathematics and its Applications.