
Cherubi Batzel
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240 upvotes
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This lazy panda forgot to write something about itself.

Cherubi Batzel • commented on 15 posts 3 months ago

These 54 Eerie Photos By Aakaash Bali Bring Nostalgic Comfort To Some Or A Sense Of Unease To Others
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Cherubi Batzel • upvoted 11 items 3 months ago

Hey Pandas, What Are Some Of Your Weird Habits?
I love to cosplay. my family thinks it's weird but they got used to me coming out of my room with a face of makeup on or in a costume. I've been doing it a lot and my makeup skills are getting really good and I am working on a new cosplay from MHA. I spend a lot of money on my cosplays and I am really excited to get the new one. My new cosplay is for Deku and my friend is getting a shigaraki cosplay and we are gonna chill at the mall after covid.
Women-Overlooked-History
Henrietta Lacks. She saved millions of lives and made a critical contribution to the world of medicine, but unless you're in the medical field — you've probably never even heard her name. Henrietta Lacks was a young, black, mother of five when she died in 1951 after being diagnosed with an aggressive cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins. Doctor George Gey was working at Hopkins at the time, trying to culture cells in the laboratory. Lacks' cells were among dozens sent to his lab, but they were the first to ever survive and grow. Her cells, a unique and aggressive type, were later described as one in three billion. Scientists called these resilient cells "HeLa" — taking first two letters of "Henrietta" and "Lacks." HeLa cells were used to test the polio vaccine, develop in vitro fertilization, and several chemotherapy drugs among hundreds of medical advances. Grown and sold around the world, Lacks' legacy lived on in her cells: they have traveled to space, they have been embedded in a nuclear bomb. But for decades, the Lacks family had no idea.Show All 11 Upvotes

Cherubi Batzel • commented on 9 posts 4 months ago
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Cherubi Batzel • upvoted 5 items 4 months ago
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Cherubi Batzel • commented on 15 posts 3 months ago

These 54 Eerie Photos By Aakaash Bali Bring Nostalgic Comfort To Some Or A Sense Of Unease To Others

Cherubi Batzel • commented on 5 posts 4 months ago

Cherubi Batzel • upvoted 11 items 3 months ago

Hey Pandas, What Are Some Of Your Weird Habits?
I love to cosplay. my family thinks it's weird but they got used to me coming out of my room with a face of makeup on or in a costume. I've been doing it a lot and my makeup skills are getting really good and I am working on a new cosplay from MHA. I spend a lot of money on my cosplays and I am really excited to get the new one. My new cosplay is for Deku and my friend is getting a shigaraki cosplay and we are gonna chill at the mall after covid.
Women-Overlooked-History
Henrietta Lacks. She saved millions of lives and made a critical contribution to the world of medicine, but unless you're in the medical field — you've probably never even heard her name. Henrietta Lacks was a young, black, mother of five when she died in 1951 after being diagnosed with an aggressive cervical cancer at Johns Hopkins. Doctor George Gey was working at Hopkins at the time, trying to culture cells in the laboratory. Lacks' cells were among dozens sent to his lab, but they were the first to ever survive and grow. Her cells, a unique and aggressive type, were later described as one in three billion. Scientists called these resilient cells "HeLa" — taking first two letters of "Henrietta" and "Lacks." HeLa cells were used to test the polio vaccine, develop in vitro fertilization, and several chemotherapy drugs among hundreds of medical advances. Grown and sold around the world, Lacks' legacy lived on in her cells: they have traveled to space, they have been embedded in a nuclear bomb. But for decades, the Lacks family had no idea.
Cherubi Batzel • upvoted 9 items 4 months ago
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