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Inventing the Legionnaires' Bacterium

it's a story where suspense takes great power.

Courage Amongst Adversity

Basic Concepts in Embryology: A Student's Survival Guide

Good introduction to immunology for those with limited time.

Fun & exciting: homeschooled girls solve a big problem!

All bases were covered from quiver to quiver!Bless Your Spirit!
Rev. Matt Yarbrough, Jr.


Concise review

Not a keeper but still an enjoyable read!

"...a really fun time."He's also the epitome of the picaresque redneck in pursuit of babes, booze and bucks, a pursuit that inevitably ends up in a disaster for himself, someone else or both of the above.
Mr. Stinemetz created Bubba in 1988 when he was the sailing columnist for the Sarasota Herald-Tribune. For reasons anyone lucky enough to acquire a copy of BUBBA WHARTZ STORIES will quickly discover, his creation became immensely popular with the local sailing crowd.
Bubba Whartz is "a sailor who marches to the beat of a different drummer," and the adventures in this slim volume prove that beyond doubt. Whether he's getting even with annoying jet-skiers, trashing the annual Sarasota Christmas Boat Parade or developing yet another product that will make him a millionaire, Bubba's adventures with his unique watercraft, the Right Guard, are delightfully entertaining. His encounters with officialdom, often fueled by large quantities of recreational beverages, and his utter disregard for social conventions not infrequently provide a kind of sneaky satisfaction for those of us less free-living folks.
You don't have to be a sailing enthusiast to appreciate Bubba. Just pop on your Peterbilt cap, hunker down with a cold one and set your course to have a really fun time.
This more recent book explores the investigation of the cause of Legionnaires' disease by the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta immediately following the Legionnaires' disease outbreak at the Bellevue Stratford Hotel in Philadelphia in 1976.
It gives a blow by blow decription of the people involved and, more importantly, the political factors that led to the CDC looking for a virus or bacterium as the cause, rather than any other likely factor such as food contamination or any other toxic substance.
The main conclusion I drew from the book, not necessarily shared by the author, came from the last few pages where the scientists finally found some signs of a microorganism which they named legionella. It was not found in large enough amounts to cause disease, nor was it found in the relevant tissues of all the victims who died (such as the saliva or mucus). This shows that it could not have been the main factor in the deaths of the Legionnaires. Since that time legionella has wrongly been singled out as the only cause of the disease. It thus adds to the long string of false assumptions made by the medical profession that lead to the situation where only 15% of medical interventions are based on solid evidence. The HIV as the cause of AIDS is a similarly wrongly accused innocent victim as described in Peter Duesberg's excellent book "Inventing the AIDS Virus"