"White, James - Sector General 03 - Major Operation.PDB" - читать интересную книгу автора (White James)MAJOR OPERATION by James White
scanned by lzmini Jan 2003 Copywrite 1971 Other BOOKS BY JAMES WHITE The Secret Visitor (1957) Second Ending (1962) Deadly Litter (1964) Escape Orbit (1965) The Watch Below (1966) All Judgment Fled (1968) The Aliens Among Us (1969) Tomorrow Is Too Far (1971) Dark Inferno (1972) The Dream Millennium (1974) Monsters and Medics (1977) Underkill (1979) Future Past (1982) Federation World (1988) The Silent Stars Go By (1991) The White Papers (1996) Gene Rodden berry's Earth: THE SECTOR GENERAL SERIES Hospital Station (1962) Star Surgeon (1963) Major Operation (1971) Ambulance Ship (1979) Sector General (1983) Star Healer (1985) Code Blue-Emergency (1987) The Genocidal Healer (1992) The Galactic Gourmet (Tor, 1996) Final Diagnosis (Tor, 1997) Mind Changer (br, 1998) Double Contact (br, 1999) INVADER Far out on the Galactic Rim, where star systems were widely scattered and the darkness nearly absolute, the tremendous structure which was Sector Twelve General Hospital hung in space. Inside its three hundred and eighty-four levels were reproduced the environments of all the intelligent life-forms known to the Galactic Federation, a biological spectrum ranging from the ultra frigid methane species through the more normal oxygen- and chlorine-breathing types up to the exotic beings who existed by the direct conversion of hard radiation. In addition to the patients, whose number and physiological classification was a constant variable, there was a medical and maintenance staff who were composed of sixty-odd differing life-forms with sixty different sets of mannerisms, body odors and ways of looking at life. The staff of Sector General was an extremely able, dedicated, but not always serious group of people who were fanatically tolerant of all forms of intelligent life-had this not been so they could never have served in such a multienvironment hospital in the first place. They prided themselves that no case was too big, too small or too hopeless, and their facilities and professional reputation were second to none. It was unthinkable that one of their number should be guilty of nearly killing a patient through sheer carelessness. "Obviously the thought isn't unthinkable," O'Mara, the Chief Psychologist, said dryly. "I'm thinking it, reluctantly, and you are also thinking it-if only momentarily. Far worse, Mannon himself is convinced of his own guilt. This leaves me with no choice but to-" "No!" said Conway, strong emotion overriding his usual respect for authority. "Mannon is one of the best Seniors we have-you know that! |
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