This document is the "Responses" spreadsheet generated by the Twin Ports Mask Brigade Google form titled "Twin Ports Mask Brigade VOLUNTEERS - I WANT TO VOLUNTEER." It documents submissions by individuals to that online form. The Google form was used by the Twin Ports Mask Brigade to collect information from people who wanted to volunteer with t...
Creator:
Twin Ports Mask Brigade
Created:
2020-03 - 2020-05
Contributed By:
Archives and Special Collections, Kathryn A. Martin Library, University of Minnesota Duluth
The content of the Twin Ports Mask Brigade website shortly before it was taken down. This content was downloaded on March 4, 2021, and the website was retired on March 31, 2021. Included are: a graphic of four emoji faces of various skin tones, all wearing white face masks, and the words "THANK YOU!" above them in black text; a message from the ...
Creator:
Twin Ports Mask Brigade
Created:
2021-03-04
Contributed By:
Archives and Special Collections, Kathryn A. Martin Library, University of Minnesota Duluth
Pencil sketch of a section of twisted cedar; top and roots of tree not included in sketch. Reverse side of paper has a sketch difficult to parse, perhaps indicating water, with sections labeled with D's and L's.
Pencil sketch of a section of twisted cedar; top and roots of tree not included in sketch. Reverse side of paper has a sketch difficult to parse, perhaps indicating water, with sections labeled with D's and L's.
Digital image created for an online gaming group. The image shows a blue and gold icon with the words "Twisted Tree Line House" with the word "Line" crossed out. This item is related to "Interview with Brittany V. Hecker."
Creator:
Hecker, Brittany V.
Created:
2020
Contributed By:
Archives and Special Collections, Kathryn A. Martin Library, University of Minnesota Duluth
Exact same openings as in Twin Cities Scenic Company collection M141. This is a possible backdrop for the The M.O.V.P.E.R. Grotto's Haunted Forest and demon infested borderland from Act II, scene i.
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota Libraries, Performing Arts Archives.
A central problem of materials science is to determine atomic structure from macroscopic measurements. Von Laue developed a theoretical method that was put into practice and popularized by Bragg, based on the scattering of plane waves by a crystal lattice. Recently, new structures have emerged like buckyballs (Nobel Prize, Chemistry, 1996) and g...
Creator:
James, Richard D. (University of Minnesota, Twin Cities)
Created:
2014-05-23
Contributed By:
University of Minnesota, Institute for Mathematics and its Applications.