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Organized society depends on communication of all kinds, including
the ability to communicate at a distance, instantaneously. With the
development of solid state electronics and its application to
digital processing, telecommunication has become extremely
important to large segments of American business. The in troduction
of competition to serve these voice, data, and video needs has ex
panded the number of service options available, and some of them
are finding their way into the residential sector. From a
relatively stable, mature industry, telecommunication has rapidly
become a technology-driven marketplace in which a host of companies
are competing for customer attention with new services and
equipment. Heretofore, books on telecommunications have addressed
facilities and how they work. In this book, I am seeking to provide
a much broader perspective which includes information on the
motives driving the business itself, on new media and services, and
on advancing technologies, as well as on digital facilities and
their integration into the environment of future businesses and
households. Covering so wide a set of topics presents many
problems, not the least of which is that the character of the
information is different in each chapter, and the material will be
read by persons skilled in disparate fields. It is possible to read
each chapter by itself-although a reading of all of them is needed
to understand the new dimensions being introduced into the
telecommunication experience."
Most often when the subject of antimicrobial resistance is
discussed, the organizational emphasis is on individual
antimicrobial agents or groups of agents. Thus we tend to see
discussion of resistance to f3-lactams, tetracyclines, amino
glycosides etc. In this book many of the authors were asked to
emphasize the mechanism of resistance in their discussion and from
that to show how susceptibility to various agents was affected. In
part this was done to help emphasize the enormous contribution that
the study of antimicrobial resistance has made to our understanding
of fundamental physiologic and genetic processes in bacteria. When
one looks back over the study of antimicrobial resistance, it is
clear that it has been the birthplace of many fundamental advances
in molecular biology and of an appreciation of the role of many key
functions in the life of a bacterium. In addition, and hopefully to
an increasing extent in the future, such study has also contributed
to advances in antimicrobial chemotherapy. Through out the book
resistance mechanisms have been placed in perspective as to their
significance as causes of resistance to key drugs or groups of
drugs. Some are of much greater significance than others in terms
of the prevalence or the degree of resistance produced. Whatever
their numerical significance, however, each of the mechanisms,
without question, throws light on fundamental cellular processes
and the way in which they interact with antimicrobial agents."
This scarce antiquarian book is a selection from Kessinger
Publishing's Legacy Reprint Series. Due to its age, it may contain
imperfections such as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed
pages. Because we believe this work is culturally important, we
have made it available as part of our commitment to protecting,
preserving, and promoting the world's literature. Kessinger
Publishing is the place to find hundreds of thousands of rare and
hard-to-find books with something of interest for everyone
This is the first scholarly biography of Edward Philip George
Seaga, retired prime minister of Jamaica (1980-1989) and former
leader of the Jamaica Labour Party (1974-2005). Patrick Bryan
examines Seaga in light of the twentieth-century history of
Jamaica, which experienced the challenges of race, colour, economic
dependence, the transition from the British colonial period to
independence in 1962, and the challenges of creating a Jamaican
national state and separate cultural identity. Although the study
focuses on Edward Seaga, the historical forces that shaped
Jamaica's history are central, in particular the way in which he
confronted these forces. In placing Seaga in historical
perspective, this work strikes a seasoned and balanced analysis of
the man and is neither an apologia nor iconoclastic. Based on a
variety of primary sources, government records, interviews and
secondary sources, the author paints a compelling portrait of a
complex man, a contradictory mixture of idealism and pragmatism,
but, above all, a Jamaican nationalist who had a profound impact on
Jamaican politics, tourism, culture and finance.
One chess game leads to a gigantic mess as Jonathan's pieces
disappear one by one. Kyle and Lilly help search for clues to the
missing pieces, only to run into more trouble along the way when
Lilly is kidnapped and a mysterious girl rescues her before
vanishing into a whole new puzzle. Who knows what Jonathan will run
into next as he strives to find out who is trying to put an end to
chess?
This book is a facsimile reprint and may contain imperfections such
as marks, notations, marginalia and flawed pages.
John Bryan's substantive revision to his original magnum opus
published in 1989 -- selected by the American Horticultural Society
as one of the 75 great American gardening books-- provides expanded
coverage of some 230 genera and a staggering number of species,
varieties, and cultivars. Genera are treated with detail
appropriate to their importance, with information on history,
classification, culture, propagation, pests and diseases, uses, and
species and cultivars. Detailed encyclopedic plant listings are
complemented by an equally comprehensive pictorial presentation.
Not only are there more than 1100 color photographs -- many showing
the plants in their natural habitats -- but there are also 43 color
reproductions of botanical illustrations from 19th-century issues
of "Curtis's Botanical Magazine" and other publications, taken from
the author's extensive collection.
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