Search results
Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
Graduated from a chiropractic college or university that meets the requirements set forth in New Jersey S.A. 45:9-4 1 .5 during the applicant's entire course of study; Have passed the National Board of Chiropractic Examiners Examination pursuant to New Jersey A.C. 13:44E-2.13; Have passed the New Jersey Chiropractic Jurisprudence Examination.
Before adopting the term "chiropractic" in about 1896, his advertising used the term "magnetic". In 1891–92, a city business directory stated: "Dr. Palmer can cure with his Magnetic Hands Diseases of the Head, Throat, Heart, Lungs, Stomach, Liver, Spleen, Kidneys, Nerves, and Muscles, ten times quicker than any one can with medicines." [29]
Dr Jason Diamond Reviews; Manaligod, J., Free Radical Damage: A Possible Mechanism of Laryngeal Aging, ENT Journal 2002; 81: 531 – 31. PMID 12199170 "A Single Dose, Open Label Three Way Crossover, Randomized Pilot Bioavailability Study of Midozolam. Comparing Intranasal Administration to Intramuscular Administration in Healthy Human Volunteers."
Get AOL Mail for FREE! Manage your email like never before with travel, photo & document views. Personalize your inbox with themes & tabs. You've Got Mail!
Jason Bordoff, energy policy expert [288] Jennifer Finney Boylan, writer, Professor of English and Anna Quindlen Writer-in-Residence at Barnard College [289] Holly Brewer, legal historian, Burke Professor of American History and Associate Professor of History at the University of Maryland, College Park [10]
The Religion of Chiropractic: Populist Healing from the American Heartland (U of North Carolina Press, 2017). xiv, 351 pp. Moore, J. Stuart. Chiropractic in America: the history of a medical alternative (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993). Peterson, Dennis, and Glenda Wiese. Chiropractic: An illustrated history (Mosby Incorporated, 1995).
Morristown National Historical Park – At junction of U.S. 202 and NJ 24 (added 1966) [127] Morristown School – Junction of Whippany Road and Hanover Avenue, Morris Township (added 1996) [128] Mount Kemble Home – 1 Mt. Kemble Avenue (added 1986) [129] Thomas Nast Home – MacCulloch Avenue and Miller Road (added 1966) [130]
Mid-19th-century engraving of the Phoenix Iron Works. The Phoenix Iron Works (1855: Phoenix Iron Company; 1949: Phoenix Iron & Steel Company; 1955: Phoenix Steel Corporation), [1] located in Phoenixville, Pennsylvania, was a manufacturer of iron and related products during the 19th century and early 20th century.