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  1. Oct 10, 2023 · Most people know the story of penicillin. Or they think they do. It involves microbiologist Alexander Fleming and his accidental discovery of one of the most important drugs in history. However, that’s not the whole story. In order to create penicillin, Fleming needed mold.

  2. Nov 1, 1995 · Hardcover – November 1, 1995. by Tom Alexander Sr. (Author), Tom Alexander (Editor), Jane Alexander (Editor) 4.8 7 ratings. See all formats and editions. Mountain Fever chronicles one man's love affair with a region, its unique and vanishing human culture, and its verdant natural history.

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    • Tom Alexander Sr.
  3. Miller's novella "Let My People Go" was the cover story in the third issue of If in July 1952. Walter Michael Miller Jr. (January 23, 1923 – January 9, 1996) was an American science fiction writer. His fix-up novel, A Canticle for Leibowitz (1959), the only novel published in his lifetime, won the 1961 Hugo Award for Best Novel.

    • Science fiction
    • Hugo Award (1955 · 1961)
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  5. with mountain fever "' On the following day, they "overtook a train of 10 wagons in which 14 men were tormented by mountain fever."8 Mary Ackley wrote in her drary in 1852, "Brother Jim four years old had moun- tain fever. . . . When he recovered his hair all fell out"9 Dr. John Hudson Wayman, a physician traveling to

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  6. Dec 30, 2004 · He called the active agent penicillin—an innovation that changed forever the treatment of bacterial infections such as pneumonia, syphilis, diphtheria, scarlet fever, and previously fatal wound and childbirth infections. It made Fleming asmuch a household name as Albert Einstein.

    • Sabina Dosani
    • 2005
  7. Born on 6 August 1881 at Lochfield farm near Darvel, in Ayrshire, Scotland, Alexander Fleming was the third of four children of farmer Hugh Fleming (1816–1888) and Grace Stirling Morton (1848–1928), the daughter of a neighbouring farmer. Hugh Fleming had four surviving children from his first marriage. He was 59 at the time of his second ...

  8. Thomas W. Alexander, Sr. (19001972) was a forester, outdoorsman, farmer, raconteur, writer, and resort owner who is prominently identified with the Great Smoky Mountains. Beginning with a humble fishing camp, he and his wife went on to found Cataloochee Ranch.

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