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Lifestyle Show

What do corporations seek in the people they hire? That’s the question posed to 70 chief executives and other business world leaders in a recent New York Times survey. The five leading traits were passionate curiosity, battle-hardened confidence, team smarts, a simple mind-set and fearlessness.
“These traits for business success are developed from values that are closer to one’s core,” says Rakesh Malhotra, a world-traveled CEO and author of “Adventures of Tornado Kid, Whirling Back Home Towards Timeless Values,” (www.FiveGlobalValues.com). “Today, corporations of every stripe are demanding employees exhibit core values, but they don’t teach them in schools, whether it’s business school or grammar school. Students obviously need to learn them to succeed.”
Business school websites including Harvard’s say they’re looking for diverse students with aptitude and leadership qualities – more traits that spring from basic core values, Malhotra says.
“It will cost $87,200 for your son or daughter’s tuition and living expenses at Harvard Business School for both terms of 2014,” Malhotra says. “Before you think about investing that kind of money, first invest time in instilling the five global core values:
responsibility, integrity, peace, love and compassion, to ensure your child’s success.”

In 1869 Dmitri Mendeleev presented the world with the Periodic Table. It contained 63 elements, many more than the four—earth, water, fire, and air—established in the ancient world, but less than half the total in our modern table. Mendeleev believed there were many elements still to come.
He was right.
In this essential guide to the Periodic Table, we track the history of the powerful yet elegant tool that lays bare the building blocks of the Universe. The journey begins just as the first cities are forming, and follows the contributions made by philosophers, alchemists, industrialists, and great scientists as they gather force to create this masterpiece of accumulated knowledge. The story includes Democritus of ancient Greece who said that the four elements of nature—earth, water, fire, and air—must be made of atoms, otherwise our world is just an illusion, and the French aristocrat Antoine Lavoisier, who was the first to show that water is not an element at all. With over three hundred illustrations, it opens a window into the very stuff of nature—stars, rocks, life, and more

Rose Mary Stiffin credits her parents, Joe and Isabella Stiffin, with giving her the desire to leave behind the Mississippi cotton fields where she worked as a child. But, while she went on to earn a doctorate in biochemistry, Stiffin never abandoned those memories. She weaves them into a compelling novel about race and racism, sin and redemption, in “Walk in Bethel” (www.Rosestiffin.com). “I never knew of racism in the way that most people understand it today – not until I left Mississippi in my 20s, went to a northern state and experienced the hate-filled use of the n-word,” Stiffin says. “Of course, there was systematic racism in the South, but its character was different, not as free and out in the open.” She vividly remembers her life as a child, picking cotton in the same town from which blues legend B.B. King hails. Her early life is a slice of the culture that she writes about, a return to the Southern Gothic tradition. “My life is proof that the American Dream is still alive, and that Americana still exists,” she says. “I write about the dark passages of the human heart, as well as the well-lit corridors of freedom, forgiveness and love – the things to which Americans still aspire.”

It is 1962 and there are children at play in the White House for the first time since the presidency of William Howard Taft. Richard Nixon, the vigorous 49-year-old president, has been in office less than two years, having won election by a razor-thin margin over Senator John Kennedy. In Moscow, the wildly unpredictable Nikita Khrushchev is looking forward to visiting his cherished revolutionary leader, Fidel Castro. Just 90 miles from American shores, Khrushchev will announce an audacious and dangerous nuclear stunt to abruptly shift the balance of power: a secretly-built network of missiles across Cuba that put American cities in the atomic crosshairs. But President Nixon has his own announcement planned. A U.S. spy plane has discovered the missiles being set up in Cuba and Nixon will soon address the nation to announce his response. Meanwhile, First Lady Pat Nixon is in California to look at a San Clemente house the first couple may purchase. Seeing shoppers crowd around a store-window television, Pat gets her first inkling of trouble. Dick has always insisted she not listen to the news and she is happy, for now, to return to her correspondence. In the coming days, the confrontation between the U.S. and its nuclear foe will escalate. The president will weigh his determination to overthrow Castro against the risk of all-out war as Pat struggles to reconcile her proper role as a wife with her estrangement from the man who thrust her into a public life she despises.
Health Show
Joining me this afternoon is Dr. Mayer Eisenstein. We will talk about keeping healthy and happy! There have been so many developments this year with health and Dr. Mayer Eisenstein will be reviewing them. Dr. Mayer Eisenstein is a graduate of the University of Illinois Medical School, the Medical College of Wisconsin School of Public Health, and the John Marshall Law School. In his 35 years in medicine, he and his practice Homefirst® Health Services have cared for over 75,000 parents, grandparents and children www.homefirst.com Don’t miss this exciting interview

Fitness as an Art Form: New Book by Orthopedic Surgeon,
Dr. Levi Harrison, Perfect Holiday Gift to Bolster New Year’s ResolutionsIt is a fact that gym memberships go up after the first of the year, but it is also a fact, according to Dr. Levi Harrison, author of The Art of Fitness: A Journey to Self Enhancement and Los Angeles based Orthopedic Surgeon, that injuries from working out during in the first months of the year go up dramatically. It appears those ambitious folks with New Year’s Resolutions might be a little too gung ho in their approach to their exercise regimens. This is where Dr. Harrison’s book comes in, for he has been training his whole life and one of his mottos is, “The gym is where your body is!” Dr. Harrison, who donates his surgical skills to unprivileged children and military veterans, has a fascinating background as he earned degrees in engineering and romance languages before pursuing medicine. The goals of this book were forged in a lifetime of training, education and hard knocks. Too many of us start out with big fitness plans and quit after results don’t come quickly, which also makes this a long-term lifestyle book encouraging people to make steady progress while sticking to the game plan.

Dr. Janet Angel, Executive Vice President, of Nature’s Sources will be here to talk to us about the importance of enzymes. Dr. Angel has been involved in every faction of the natural health industry from formulations and manufacturing to retail, wholesale and distribution. Dr. Angel is a host and frequent guest on radio/TV and a speaker on various health topics around the country. Nature’s Sources is dedicated to enhancing the overall health of its customers by offering superior nutritional products, education, service and support, and at the same time being considerate of the environment by utilizing only sustainable products in its manufacturing and distribution efforts. The goal of Nature’s Sources is to provide the highest quality and most effective digestive enzyme formulas available in the world today by incorporating only the finest raw ingredient providers who adhere to FDA and GMP standards. AbsorbAid® is unique because it is a totally natural digestive aid made solely from plant sources. For more information on this amazing company please visit their site
www.naturessources.com
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