Professor Craig Morris is a 1981 graduate of Cleveland Chiropractic College, Los Angeles and later earned a post-graduate degree in rehabilitation. This was followed by years of training in manual medicine and rehabilitation with Professors’ Karel Lewit and Vladimir Janda at Charles University Department of Rehabilitation, Prague, Czech Republic. A former Professor of Clinical Sciences at Cleveland Chiropractic College, Los Angeles, he has lectured on all five continents on multiple occasions. Professor Morris has published numerous articles in peer-reviewed, indexed journals and served as a peer-reviewer for several journals many times. He is the editor of the text, “Low Back Syndromes, Integrated Clinical Management” (McGraw-Hill Publishers), a leading multidisciplinary text for the management of low back disorders that has been well-received internationally. In the world of sports, Professor Morris served as a medical board member for the World Powerlifting Association, treating athletes and serving as an event doctor at events that included world championships. He later served as director of rehabilitation for the Tampa Bay Lightning of the National Hockey League, in addition to being a consultant for the NHL Players’ Association. Still later, he worked for several years in men’s golf, traveling and treating players on both the Professional Golfers’ Association (PGA) and European Tour. Following the death of Professor Janda in 2002, he started assisting Professor Pavel Kolar, another Janda protégé, as he developed his clinical model that is now known as Dynamic Neuromuscular Stabilization (DNS). In 2008, he became one of the original five clinicians from around the world, to become an international certified DNS instructor. Following his retirement from organized academia and clinical practice of 40+ years, he now devotes his time to writing, performing research, post-graduate teaching of DNS and his own private courses, and traveling.