Yes, Anne Frank did mention dealing with lice in her diary while she was in hiding during World War II. She wrote about how she and the others in hiding had to deal with the issue and the challenges it presented.
Anne Frank suffered from typhus, a bacterial infection spread by body lice. She contracted the disease while in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp during World War II.
Anne Frank and her sister Margot died in March 1945 in the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp from typhus, a disease spread by lice. Their deaths occurred just before the camp was liberated by Allied forces.
Anne Frank's three nicknames were "Anne," "Annelies," and "Annelein."
The people in Anne Frank's family were; Margot Frank - Anne's sister Edith Frank - Anne's mother Otto Frank - Anne's father. The family pet name for Otto was 'Pim'.
'The Diary of Anne Frank' was written by Anne Frank, a Jewish girl who kept a diary while hiding from the Nazis during the Second World War. Her diary has become a widely read account of life during the Holocaust.
Anne Frank hated the camps. She started talking to people annd some that surviced said they could tell she had typhus. She had thrown away all her clothes because she was scared that there were lice and disease in them. -briana miller,13,ca
Margot Frank was Anne Frank's sister. She died of typhus in a concentration camp within days of Anne's death.
Anne Frank
Anne Frank is a/an Diarist
Anne Frank's full name was Anneliese Marie Frank. Her older sister's name was Margot Frank. Edith and Otto Frank were her parents.
Otto Frank was Anne's father.
The name of Anne Frank's father is Otto Frank.