Your question needs to tell which war you're asking about.
Yes they were because if they were found they would be brought back and killed in front of there regiment as a warning to others
Yes. My great uncle had pictures of soldiers kicking heads like soccer balls. He even brought back a katana from a dead jap.=
No, families did not have to pay for a family member who had been KIA to be brought back to the US to rest. Richard V. Horrell WW 2 Connections.com
Yes, they did try to bring back dead soldiers, improve soldiers resistance against cold, and try to chemically and genetically engineer Nazi soldiers. Many disgusting experiments were tested on people in concentration camps before it was used on nazi soldiers. If a nazi had lost a leg, or an arm, someone from a concentration camp would have there leg or arm chopped off, and transplanted to the soldier. They did not bring anyone back to life who had been dead for over 24 hours, and there are no reports of anyone actually being brought back to life.
Some SKS rifles were brought back... most of them were manufactured in East Germany or China, as the Vietnamese made SKS rifles were and are extremely rare. They were either captured or sold/traded for favours to other soldiers in-country.
The influenza viruses are identified by and given names that correspond with the proteins on the capsid of the virus (outside coating of the virus). For example, the two proteins on the H1N1/09 virus are Hemagglutinin and Neuraminidase, therefore the virus is called H1N1.The name of any mutations of the H1N1/09 influenza virus, would follow this same naming convention and it would be called by the name that is descriptive of the particular proteins it has on the capsid after the mutation.See the related question below for more information on the naming of influenza viruses.
It was brought originally by immigrants from Okinawa. Soldiers stationed in Japan and Okinawa also brought it back.
The doctor's office will take a swab of the back of your throat, or the lining of your nose or mouth. The swab is then run through a testing kit which looks for certain proteins associated with the influenza virus. If it comes back positive, you'll know because the nurse will come back wearing a face mask in most cases. The test is pretty quick and simple to run.
The doctor's office will take a swab of the back of your throat, or the lining of your nose or mouth. The swab is then run through a testing kit which looks for certain proteins associated with the influenza virus. If it comes back positive, you'll know because the nurse will come back wearing a face mask in most cases. The test is pretty quick and simple to run.
She did, you can google it.
During the same time as WW1 there was a pandemic of influenza that killed millions of people world wide. It is commonly called the Spanish Flu.
Yes they were because if they were found they would be brought back and killed in front of there regiment as a warning to others
Yes. My great uncle had pictures of soldiers kicking heads like soccer balls. He even brought back a katana from a dead jap.=
pasta in general:Sometime before the 13th century when Marco Polo wrote about noodles in china. According to the Food and Culture Encyclopedia, the Romans had noodles definitely by the 4th century. It is assumed that the Roman soldiers brought it with them to England when they invaded.
Yes, influenza is considered armed and dangerous because this viral and contagious disease kills many people each year. It had been especially dangerous years back when there was no stable vaccine to eliminate the virus.
no
Toward the end of World War II, U.S. soldiers discovered the German Magnetophones and brought them back to the United States