Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Paul Ehrlich (German: [ˈpaʊl ˈʔeːɐ̯lɪç] ⓘ; 14 March 1854 – 20 August 1915) was a Nobel Prize-winning German physician and scientist who worked in the fields of hematology, immunology and antimicrobial chemotherapy.
Keywords: ehrlich, paul {1854-1915}; pho 14056; Portraits Credit line This file comes from Wellcome Images , a website operated by Wellcome Trust, a global charitable foundation based in the United Kingdom.
Paul R. Ehrlich and the prophets of doom A look at Ehrlich's treatment of exponential growth. Paul Ehrlich, a prophet of global population doom who is gloomier than ever. The Guardian. October 2011. Paul R. Ehrlich Papers (finding aid to an archival collection at Stanford University's University Archives, most not available online)
Peter Yarrow’s cause of death has been revealed. The Peter, Paul and Mary musician died of bladder cancer, with which he was diagnosed in 2021. Yarrow, 86, died at his home in New York City on ...
The magic bullet is a scientific concept developed by the German Nobel laureate Paul Ehrlich in 1907. [1] While working at the Institute of Experimental Therapy (Institut für experimentelle Therapie), Ehrlich formed an idea that it could be possible to kill specific microbes (such as bacteria), which cause diseases in the body, without harming the body itself.
A former Playboy model killed herself and her 7-year-old son after jumping from a hotel in Midtown New York City on Friday morning. The New York Post reports that 47-year-old Stephanie Adams ...
British television star Paul Danan, who starred in the U.K. soap Hollyoaks and went on to appear on reality TV shows Celebrity Love Island and Celebrity Big Brother, has died at the age of 46.
The side-chain theory (German, Seitenkettentheorie) is a theory proposed by Paul Ehrlich (1854–1915) to explain the immune response in living cells.Ehrlich theorized from very early in his career that chemical structure could be used to explain why the immune response occurred in reaction to infection.