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The trend towards accountability for public schools continues to
grow creating new challenges for educational leaders. Demands for
vouchers, charter schools, home schools and private education are
creating increased competition for public schools. This toolkit
offers information, skill development, examples and questions to
guide school leaders when competing in the educational marketplace.
Franklin D. Roosevelt was the first politician to recognize the
power of radio. He appealed directly to the American people for
support of his New Deal and for his foreign policy. Roosevelt's
speeches and fireside chats were broadcast over networks only
recently equipped with newsrooms. Listeners immediately learned of
events they earlier would not have heard about for days. In those
newsrooms, commentators began to interpret the news for average
listeners, sometimes slanting it to reflect their own view. But it
fell to a young star to demonstrate the full power of the medium.
On October 30, 1938, Orson Welles' War of the Worlds broadcast
brought widespread panic with its fictional newscast of an alien
invasion. How Roosevelt used radio, how the news was reported, and
the changes Welles caused are all detailed.
A magical, true story, Bob Brown's beguiling memoir takes readers
behind the scenes of pivotal moments in recent history, where
lessons learned at his grandmother's knee helped him shape America
as we know it today. Called "a world-class power broker" by the
Washington Post, Robert Brown has been a sought-after counsellor
for an impressive array of the famous and powerful, including every
American president since John F. Kennedy. But as a child born into
poverty in the early twentieth century, Robert was raised by his
grandmother to think differently about success. For example, "If
you want to lead," she told him, "be invisible." And, "Before
entering a room, let God in the room first." Fuelled by these
lessons on humble, principled service, Brown went on to play a
pivotal, mostly unseen role alongside the great and the powerful of
our time: trailing the mob in 1950s Harlem with a young Robert F.
Kennedy; helping the all-white corporate titans at Woolworth
integrate their lunch counters; accompanying Coretta Scott King, at
her request, to Memphis the day after her husband had been shot;
advising Richard Nixon on how to defuse racially charged street
demonstrations; becoming the only person allowed to visit Nelson
Mandela in Pollsmoor prison in Cape Town. BECOMING MR. BROWN blends
a heartwarming, historically fascinating account with memorable
success principles that will speak to the Mr. Brown in all of us.
At age 75, Dr. Bob Brown is in the best shape of his life-with more
energy than most people half his age But before achieving radiant
health, he had to come face to face with debilitating disease and
the failures of modern medicine-for his family, his patients, and
himself. Why? The Question that Could Save Your Life exposes many
of the obstacles blocking the road to ideal health and medical
treatment-and how to overcome them. Dr. Bob shows you: - How to be
proactive with your health, participate in medical decisions-and
make sure your doctor is doing his or her job - Why treating
symptoms only will never allow you to achieve optimum health - The
astonishingly overlooked relationship between diet and disease Dr.
Bob is not afraid to tackle corruption and dysfunction within the
medical/pharmaceutical industry, including what he calls "legal
drug abuse" and the incompetence of our educational system to teach
true health. Fortunately for his readers, the goal of this book is
not only to save lives-but to make those lives really worth saving.
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R383
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