<h3>
EXPLANATION : In Texas, thousands of local governments called special purpose districts provide a variety of services including water conservation, toll roads, hospitals, libraries, utilities and fire control efforts.</h3>
<h2>ANSWER : D IS THE ANWSER</h2>
<h2>follow me on you tube</h2>
<h2> CartoonView Maker im ond discord</h2>
Hey there!
I believe these are the followings:
The defendant pleads guilty to the charges at his arraignment.
<span>The teacher testified that Goode would not break the law. </span>
<span>The police officer could not find any evidence against Goode. </span>
<span>The neighbor said that Goode sold him stolen video games.
</span>
The statement that is true about the case of State v. Justin B. Goode is that the teacher testified that Goode would not break the law
Hope this helps!:)
To be a teenager now-a-days, you have to know all of the "Trends" you have to be on every "Social media" you have to be "popular" to be accepted, Things are way different then it was before our time.
Staph, as well as other pathogens, may change genetically by means of plasmids. Plasmids are DNA molecules which carries a rich diversity of genes that benefit the host cell. In this specific case, the host cell is the Staph bacteium. Among other things, plasmids carry antibiotic resistance genes.
<span>To illustrate how an ordinary Staph aureus bacterium can evolve into a methicillin-resistant bacterium, let's use the patient who doesn't finish an antibiotic prescription of penicillin. The Staph is weakened but not killed. Bacterial plasmids work quickly to produce genes that make the bacteria resistant to the drug. These parent bacteria replicate and pass on the plasmids, along with the DNA they contain, to the "daughter" cells. Voila! Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus! With the new DNA in place, each subsequent generation of Staph will also be resistant. But do not think for one moment that MRSA is otherwise somehow different from Staphylococcus aureus. MRSA IS Staph. Staph with an added feature. </span>