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OverviewWhat if there were a vaccine developed 30 years ago that cured all types of cancer? And what if that same vaccine were still available today for you or a loved one and is being used by hundreds of physicians around the country? Well, it's absolutely true and this book, THE WOMAN WHO CURED CANCER, explains how it works and where to get it! The story starts with Dr. Virginia Livingston-Wheeler, M.D. (1906-1990) being graduated from New York University-Bellevue Medical College in 1936 as one of four women in her class and became the first woman resident in New York City, specializing in internal medicine. She practiced medicine in New York, New Jersey and California, where she discovered and published research on what she called the Cancer Microbe. In her clinic in San Diego, she pioneered innovative treatments based on her research, including development of a cancer-curing vaccine that's still available today. This important book could very well save your life or the life of someone you love. Richard A Kunin, M.D., founder and past President of the Orthomolecular Medical Society, says This book is even more relevant today than when Dr. Virginia Livingston-Wheeler first told her remarkable story a generation ago. I hope everyone concerned about cancer and its treatment reads it. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Edmond G AddeoPublisher: Createspace Imprint: Createspace Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.10cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.272kg ISBN: 9781477405772ISBN 10: 1477405771 Pages: 200 Publication Date: 01 May 2012 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Not yet available This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationI was born at a very young age in the Flatbush section of Brooklyn, N.Y., the son of an Italian fireman and an Irish colleen from Lowell, Mass. I spent summers playing stickball and going to Ebbets Field and the rest of the year in Good Shepherd grammar school and with the saintly Christian Brothers at St. Augustine Diocesan High School. In those days one could graduate from high school on Feb. 1, which I did, and when my father announced he was retiring and moving us to Los Angeles, I worked on Wall Street until June, when my sister finished her semester at St. Brendan's High School. Although I had been accepted to Manhattan College and Notre Dame University, I decided I would go to Loyola University in L.A. However, when I took the exam for Loyola in August, I had forgotten one point's worth of high school information and flunked it. The rest of my education was spent in various local colleges studying pre-med and engineering. (If I'd managed to get anything higher than a C in chemistry, I'd be a doctor now.) I worked for a while for North American Aviation as a designer on the Atlas missile booster and sustainer engines, but knew deep down I was really F. Scott Fitzgerald, so I got a job at a local newspaper. I've been a newspaperman and movie columnist in Los Angeles; a science correspondent for McGraw-Hill World news; an editor of a trade journal; an acquisitions editor for Chilton Publishing; an advertising/public relations writer and executive for various agencies in San Francisco; and ran my own marketing communications agency for 10 years. Most recently I was the Executive Editor of five Marin County weekly newspapers. I live in Mill Valley, Calif. with my wife, Jovita, in the same house for 35 years, in which we raised two wonderful girls who turned into fabulous women and mothers. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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