The Pioneer PT Prototype


Book Description

In The Pioneer PT Prototype, James Dulkerian, provides the Ultimate Guide to Building Your Mobile Health & Wellness Studio. Many of you have had a similar idea, need a change in your career, and want better for your clients. Now, this is all possible with a blueprint to getting it done! You will hear the story of a passionate clinician who had a dream that inspired him to think outside the box, and create an entirely new business model with care that is convenient, personalized, and preventative. He envisioned care that would no longer be reactive "sick-care," but something so much more. Time to say no to the status quo and take control of your life so that you too can find success treating your own rockstar clients!In this book you will have access to:-The tools and materials needed for the the job-A step by step guide to building your own mobile health and wellness studio -The mindset needed to make it happen







Scientific and Technical Aerospace Reports


Book Description

Lists citations with abstracts for aerospace related reports obtained from world wide sources and announces documents that have recently been entered into the NASA Scientific and Technical Information Database.




Canadiana


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World Crops


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Centennial History of Columbus and Franklin County


Book Description

Columbus is the state capital and the most populous city of the U.S. state of Ohio, as well as the county seat of Franklin County. Named for explorer Christopher Columbus, the city was founded in 1812 at the confluence of the Scioto and Olentangy rivers, and assumed the functions of state capital in 1816. This is a full account of the history of this beautiful towns, of Franklin county and its various townships and includes a huge and thoroughly investigated biographical section.







A Peripheral Weapon?


Book Description

The tank was arguably the most important technological innovation that developed during World War I; however, without the support of the British Army and the allocation of important wartime resources, it would have remained merely a peripheral weapon. For far too long, the depiction of the British War Office and GHQ, France, as anti-technological and cavalry-oriented has persisted. While some historians have recently challenged this view, much of the traditional versus progressive school of thought, in regard to the production and employment of the tank, still survives. By posing the question: was the tank a peripheral weapon? this work reveals the vital role of the War Office in the production and employment of this stunning new weapon. The War Office was behind the creation of the original Tank Committee, the New or Advisory Tank Committee, the Tank Directorate and the Tank Board. It was these bodies, particularly the Tank Board, established in 1918, that facilitated the crucially important liaison between the users of tanks in France and the producers at the Ministry of Munitions. Without War Office involvement in this way, without its continued orders for more and better tanks, and without the consistently high priority status accorded to tank production by General Haig, it is inconceivable that the tank would have reached the level of technical sophistication, and therefore usefulness, that it had by late 1918.