August 2018 3 10 Report
Jamie's Charity Challenge Edinburgh student, Jamie Haynes, is planning to achieve his lifetime ambition. Next month he's flying to Nepal with five friends to begin a three-week trek of the Himalayas. Jamie,20, is aiming to raise money for young disabled people at the same time. His younger sister, Jackie, who is paralyzed and in a wheelchair, is the inspiration for Jamie's trip. There's a charity called Go Getters. It helps young people who are seriously ill or who are disabled, like my sister. I always enjoy traveling abroad, especially on unusual adventures, so it's a great way to combine a holiday with helping people,'says Jamie, a Sociology student at Edinburgh University. Jamie is raising Ł5,000 before he goes. A small part of the money pays for his flight and the rest goes to Go-Getters, which organizes holidays and other leisure activities for young disabled people. The charity hopes to uses the money to buy a new minibus, specialty designed for people in wheelchairs. Jamie is amazed by the response of other students to his unusual idea. 'They all want to help me. It's fantastic! Next week all the other students in may group are going to pay us to keep quiet! Some of the lecturers are going to do it as well- for some of them it's going to very difficult!' At the moment, Jamie is training for the trip. He goes to the gym every morning, goes running every evening and goes swimming four times a week. Jamie is also following a special high-protein diet of fish, fruit and eggs. 'We're going to walk trough the high Himalayas for about seven hours every day for almost three weeks, so we need to be very fit! We're all really excited about it, but I also feel nervous. It's certainly a big challenge for all of us.' And what does Jackie think of Jamie's plans? 'It's a great idea but a little bit crazy too! I'm so proud that Jamie and his friends want to help!' Anybody who is interested in sponsoring Jamie's trip should contact the Gazette.
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Przetłumaczyc ten tekst. Penicillin - The Miracle Drug In 1928, Alexander Fleming, a Scottish doctor and scientist, was working at a hospital in London. He was trying to find ways to fight bacteria. At that time many people died because of bacterial infections; sometimes from very small cuts. Fleming was studying a dangerous bacteria called staphylococci. He was in a hurry because he was going to go on holiday, so he forgot to wash all his equipment in the laboratory before he left. There was one dish in which staphylococci was growing. When Fleming came back from holiday a few weeks later, he noticed that there was something in the dish. He didn't know what the thing was, but he saw that it was stopping the harmful staphylococci bacteria from growing. Fleming called it penicillin. He knew that penicillin could be an important discovery, and so he did some experiments with it. However, Fleming was not a chemist and he found it difficult to make pure penicillin. He asked some scientific colleagues to help him, but nobody seemed interested in producing penicillin. Fleming had to wait more than ten years before two brilliant scientists, Howard Florey and Ernst Chain finally found an easy way to produce the drug. By May 1940, Florey's research team had enough penicillin to experiment with animals for the first time. In a simple experiment they gave a dangerous bacteria to eight mice. One hour later, they gave penicillin to only four of the mice. After a few hours the four mice with penicillin were fine, but the other four were all dead! When Florey heard of the result the next day he said, 'It looks like a miracle!' During World War II penicillin saved many lives, and in 1945 Fleming, Florey and Chain won the Nobel Prize for medicine.
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Jamie's Charity Challenge Edinburgh student, Jamie Haynes, is planning to achieve his lifetime ambition. Next month he's flying to Nepal with five friends to begin a three-week trek of the Himalayas. Jamie,20, is aiming to raise money for young disabled people at the same time. His younger sister, Jackie, who is paralyzed and in a wheelchair, is the inspiration for Jamie's trip. There's a charity called Go Getters. It helps young people who are seriously ill or who are disabled, like my sister. I always enjoy traveling abroad, especially on unusual adventures, so it's a great way to combine a holiday with helping people,'says Jamie, a Sociology student at Edinburgh University. Jamie is raising Ł5,000 before he goes. A small part of the money pays for his flight and the rest goes to Go-Getters, which organizes holidays and other leisure activities for young disabled people. The charity hopes to uses the money to buy a new minibus, specialty designed for people in wheelchairs. Jamie is amazed by the response of other students to his unusual idea. 'They all want to help me. It's fantastic! Next week all the other students in may group are going to pay us to keep quiet! Some of the lecturers are going to do it as well- for some of them it's going to very difficult!' At the moment, Jamie is training for the trip. He goes to the gym every morning, goes running every evening and goes swimming four times a week. Jamie is also following a special high-protein diet of fish, fruit and eggs. 'We're going to walk trough the high Himalayas for about seven hours every day for almost three weeks, so we need to be very fit! We're all really excited about it, but I also feel nervous. It's certainly a big challenge for all of us.' And what does Jackie think of Jamie's plans? 'It's a great idea but a little bit crazy too! I'm so proud that Jamie and his friends want to help!' Anybody who is interested in sponsoring Jamie's trip should contact the Gazette. Proszę mi napisać jak to się czyta dokładnie po angielsku
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Jamie's Charity Challenge Edinburgh student, Jamie Haynes, is planning to achieve his lifetime ambition. Next month he's flying to Nepal with five friends to begin a three-week trek of the Himalayas. Jamie,20, is aiming to raise money for young disabled people at the same time. His younger sister, Jackie, who is paralyzed and in a wheelchair, is the inspiration for Jamie's trip. There's a charity called Go Getters. It helps young people who are seriously ill or who are disabled, like my sister. I always enjoy traveling abroad, especially on unusual adventures, so it's a great way to combine a holiday with helping people,'says Jamie, a Sociology student at Edinburgh University. Jamie is raising Ł5,000 before he goes. A small part of the money pays for his flight and the rest goes to Go-Getters, which organizes holidays and other leisure activities for young disabled people. The charity hopes to uses the money to buy a new minibus, specialty designed for people in wheelchairs. Jamie is amazed by the response of other students to his unusual idea. 'They all want to help me. It's fantastic! Next week all the other students in may group are going to pay us to keep quiet! Some of the lecturers are going to do it as well- for some of them it's going to very difficult!' At the moment, Jamie is training for the trip. He goes to the gym every morning, goes running every evening and goes swimming four times a week. Jamie is also following a special high-protein diet of fish, fruit and eggs. 'We're going to walk trough the high Himalayas for about seven hours every day for almost three weeks, so we need to be very fit! We're all really excited about it, but I also feel nervous. It's certainly a big challenge for all of us.' And what does Jackie think of Jamie's plans? 'It's a great idea but a little bit crazy too! I'm so proud that Jamie and his friends want to help!' Anybody who is interested in sponsoring Jamie's trip should contact the Gazette. Proszę przetłumaczcie mi ten tekst na POlski
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