Bite
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Initial release | May 29, 2015 |
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Directors | Chad Archibald |
Languages | English Language |
Story by | Chad Archibald |
Producers | Chad Archibald |
Cody Calahan | |
Christopher Giroux | |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 2393846 |
About Bite
A seemingly harmless bite transforms a young woman (Elma Begovic) into an insect-like creature that needs human flesh for her eggs.
Bank says no real risk in ringing for financial help
... " I m not the kind of person who finds it easy to ask for help but I d urge anyone to do it, don t shy away from it - Bite the bullet, " he said...
Record Christmas for Sainsbury's despite rising costs
... Last week the supermarket announced it would for 127,000 of its workers as cost-of-living pressures Bite...
The allotment firms helping to trim long waiting lists
... " When it matures into a perfect carrot and you take your first Bite - it s magic...
Coronavirus: The city with the biggest economic hit
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Dr. William Frankland, Allergy-scientists pioneer dies at the age of 108
... He said: I have come close to death so many times from the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic -, three-and-experience a-half years as a Japanese prisoner of war, anaphylaxis after a tropical insect Bite – but somehow I ve always managed to miss it, and that s why I m still here...
Stormzy, Wiley and the 'true spirit' of the grime
...no one expects to Bite Stormzy - but after months, egged on by Wiley on Twitter, and then, on the receiving end of a diss track it was finally over...
The sea-cooled eco-resort that's nearly mosquito-free
... Led by Dr Hervé Bossin of the Institut Louis Malardé, the programme breeds and releases non-biting male mosquitoes infected with Wolbachia bacteria that makes wild females - who do Bite - sterile...
Venezuela crisis: Juan Guaidó backed by Lima Group
... According to United Nations figures, three million Venezuelans have left the country since 2014 when the economic crisis started to Bite...
Dr. William Frankland, Allergy-scientists pioneer dies at the age of 108
Dr. William Frankland, a British immunologist, who died in The World transformed the understanding of allergies, at the age of 108.
His pioneering work to help the development of the idea of a pollen, Hay Fever Allergy.
Dr. Frankland, whose medical career spanned 70 years, was known as "The Grandfather of Allergy".
As a British Army doctor during the second World War , he spent three-and-a-half years in a Japanese prisoner of war camp.
the historian Dan Snow , he would never forget meeting Dr. Franklin, which he called "one of The Greatest Britons".
Prof Adam Fox , President of The British society for Allergy and Clinical immunology, said he was "a tremendous inspiration for many", and added that he would be missed "painful, But very fondly remembered".
Dr. Frankland, known as Bill, has said in an interview before his 108th birthday on April 19. March, namely, his longevity was down to luck.
He Said : "I have come close to death so many times from the 1918 Spanish Flu pandemic -, three-and-experience a-half years as a Japanese prisoner of war, anaphylaxis after a tropical insect Bite – But somehow I've always managed to miss it, and that's why I'm Still Here . "
He also revealed that his birthday were affected to celebrate, the had by the Corona-Virus outbreak, as his care home opened its doors to visitors.
"My birthday this year will be quite different," He Said . "I have a Special Request , have to visit two of my children for a short time, But you need to keep you at a safe distance. "
Dr. Frankland, who was made an MBE in 2015 for his contributions to Allergy research, leaves behind four children. His wife Pauline died in 2002.
Born In Battle , Sussex, in 1912, Dr. Franklin grew up in the Lake District . He studied medicine at the University of Oxford and worked at the St Mary's hospital in Paddington, London, before the second World War intervened.
He signed to The Royal Army Medical Corps (RAMC), But spent more than three of the Six Years he spent in the army as a prisoner of war in Singapore.
During his 70-year career in medicine, mainly based at St Mary's Hospital, he worked for Sir Alexander Fleming , the discoverer of penicillin.
His career in immunology began in the 1950s at St Mary's, where he worked with patients who suffered from seasonal Hay Fever .
He sent a pollen-to identify the case on The Roof of the clinic, the different types of pollen in the air, and together with his team created a pollen count system, led daily pollen reports in the Media .
medicine, allergies
Source of news: bbc.com